Authors
James A Wright, Stephen W Gundry, Ronan Conroy, Daniel Wood, Martella Du Preez, Anna Ferro-Luzzi, Bettina Genthe, Misheck Kirimi, Sibonginkosi Moyo, Charles Mutisi, Jerikias Ndamba, Natasha Potgieter
Publication date
2006/3/1
Journal
Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition
Pages
8-16
Publisher
ICDDR, B: Centre for Health and Population Research
Description
The study was conducted to assess the effect of definition of episode on diarrhoeal morbidity and to develop a means of adjusting estimates of morbidity for the definition of episode used. This paper reports on a cohort study of 374 children, aged 9-32 months, in three African countries, which recorded frequency and consistency of stool over a seven-month period. Different definitions of episode were applied to these data to assess their effect on annualized diarrhoeal morbidity. Adjustment factors were then derived that corrected morbidity for non-standard definitions of episode. Applying non-standard definitions of episode gave estimates of an annualized number of episodes between 38% and 137% of the internationally-accepted definition. Researchers should be encouraged to use the standard definition of episode of diarrhoea and to use appropriate field protocols. Where this is not possible, correction factors …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JA Wright, SW Gundry, R Conroy, D Wood, MD Preez… - Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition, 2006