Literature DB >> 16045465

Effects of vitamin A supplementation on child mortality: evidence from Nepal's 2001 Demographic and Health Survey.

Shyam Thapa1, Minja Kim Choe, Robert D Retherford.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of Nepal's vitamin A supplementation programme on child mortality at age 12-59 months.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Logistic regression, applied to retrospective data from Nepal's 2001 Demographic and Health Survey.
RESULTS: After a number of potentially confounding variables are controlled, the effect of 100% community-level vitamin A coverage since the child's birth, relative to no coverage, is to reduce the odds of dying at age 12-59 months by slightly more than half (OR = 0.47, P = 0.03).
CONCLUSIONS: The estimated beneficial effect of vitamin A supplementation on child mortality is larger than that found in most earlier clinical studies. This larger effect may be due mainly to the other health-related activities undertaken by the female community health volunteers who distribute vitamin A capsules.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16045465     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2005.01448.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trop Med Int Health        ISSN: 1360-2276            Impact factor:   2.622


  1 in total

1.  To see, hear, and live: 25 years of the vitamin A programme in Nepal.

Authors:  Andrew L Thorne-Lyman; Kedar Parajuli; Naveen Paudyal; Stanley Chitekwe; Ram Shrestha; Dibya Laxmi Manandhar; Keith P West
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2020-02-27       Impact factor: 3.092

  1 in total

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