Childhood Diarrhoea in a Low — Income Urban Community in Bangkok: Incidence, Clinical Features, and Child Caretaker's Behaviours

A one — year surveillance study of childhood diarrhoea in a low — income urban community in Bangkok revealed an annual incidence of 2.2 episodes per child among infants, and that the overall annual incidence among children under five years of age was 0.9 per child. Rotavirus, Salmonella and Campylob...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of diarrhoeal diseases research 1991-09, Vol.9 (3), p.244-249
Hauptverfasser: Punyaratabandhu, Porapan, Vathanophas, Kanda, Varavithya, Wandee, Sangchai, Rawiwan, Athipanyakom, Suthi, Echeverria, Peter, Wasi, Chantapong
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container_end_page 249
container_issue 3
container_start_page 244
container_title Journal of diarrhoeal diseases research
container_volume 9
creator Punyaratabandhu, Porapan
Vathanophas, Kanda
Varavithya, Wandee
Sangchai, Rawiwan
Athipanyakom, Suthi
Echeverria, Peter
Wasi, Chantapong
description A one — year surveillance study of childhood diarrhoea in a low — income urban community in Bangkok revealed an annual incidence of 2.2 episodes per child among infants, and that the overall annual incidence among children under five years of age was 0.9 per child. Rotavirus, Salmonella and Campylobacter jejuni were common aetiologic agents. In children less than one year, diarrhoea was caused mostly by rotavirus and Salmonella. In 1 — 2 year old children, the major causative agent was rotavirus while E. coli, Campylobacter jejuni and Shigella were subsequent aetiologic agents. In grown up children (aged 2 — 5 years), the more common diarrhoeal pathogens were Shigella and E. coli. The clinical characteristics of diarrhoeal illness due to different pathogens were shown. The sources of drugs and the usage of available facilities in treating diarrhoea are also described. Caretakers treated childhood diarrhoea with ORS (53%), antibiotics (10%), and a combination of these in 15% of cases. These findings imply that the available facilities in this community can be better utilised to obtain more effective control of diarrhoeal morbidity and mortality.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE
subjects Antibiotics
Child care
Child, Preschool
Childhood
Children
Cohort Studies
Diarrhea
Diarrhea - epidemiology
Diarrhea - therapy
Diarrhea, Infantile - epidemiology
Diarrhea, Infantile - therapy
Epidemiology
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Incidence
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Male
Pathogens
Poverty
Rotavirus
Salmonella
Shigella
Thailand - epidemiology
Urban Population
title Childhood Diarrhoea in a Low — Income Urban Community in Bangkok: Incidence, Clinical Features, and Child Caretaker's Behaviours
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