Approximately 10 million children aged <5 years die each year in developing countries. The leading infectious causes of these deaths include acute respiratory infections, diarrhea, measles, and malaria; malnutrition contributes to approximately 50% of these deaths. To address multiple conditions that contribute to mortality, child-survival programs require effective interventions and implementation strategies. To assess the effectiveness of multiple interventions, CDC has joined with partners to create the Nyando Integrated Child Health and Education (NICHE) project to combine several proven approaches to child survival in an impoverished rural district of western Kenya. During March-April 2007, CDC began the NICHE project with a baseline survey. This report summarizes preliminary data from that survey, which determined that 1) 86.1% of surveyed households were in the poorest Kenya socioeconomic quintile and 2) among children aged 6-35 months, 21.5% had experienced an acute respiratory infection and 9.1% had experienced diarrhea in the preceding 24 hours, 28.0% had chronic malnutrition, 66.2% had anemia, and 19.8% had a positive malaria smear. Comprehensive interventions will be needed to improve living conditions and reduce the risk for death before age 5 years among children in this population.
Baseline data from the Nyando Integrated Child Health and Education Project–Kenya, 2007
2007년 케냐 나얀도 통합 아동 건강 및 교육 프로젝트의 기초 데이터
[Category] 말라리아,
[Source] pubmed
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