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Management of severe acute malnutrition in children
- Source :
- Lancet (London, England). 368(9551)
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) is defined as a weight-for-height measurement of 70% or less below the median, or three SD or more below the mean National Centre for Health Statistics reference values, the presence of bilateral pitting oedema of nutritional origin, or a mid-upper-arm circumference of less than 110 mm in children age 1-5 years. 13 million children under age 5 years have SAM, and the disorder is associated with 1 million to 2 million preventable child deaths each year. Despite this global importance, child-survival programmes have ignored SAM, and WHO does not recognise the term "acute malnutrition". Inpatient treatment is resource intensive and requires many skilled and motivated staff. Where SAM is common, the number of cases exceeds available inpatient capacity, which limits the effect of treatment; case-fatality rates are 20-30% and coverage is commonly under 10%. Programmes of community-based therapeutic care substantially reduce case-fatality rates and increase coverage rates. These programmes use new, ready-to-use, therapeutic foods and are designed to increase access to services, reduce opportunity costs, encourage early presentation and compliance, and thereby increase coverage and recovery rates. In community-based therapeutic care, all patients with SAM without complications are treated as outpatients. This approach promises to be a successful and cost-effective treatment strategy.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Pediatrics
Cost effectiveness
Population
Severe Acute Malnutrition
HIV Infections
Global Health
Severity of Illness Index
Severity of illness
medicine
Global health
Prevalence
Humans
Community Health Services
education
education.field_of_study
business.industry
Mortality rate
Malnutrition
Infant
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Therapeutic food
Child, Preschool
Emergency medicine
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1474547X
- Volume :
- 368
- Issue :
- 9551
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Lancet (London, England)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....21b8d7541320cad699237b2eb2609253