| Literature DB >> 25305305 |
Estomih R Mduma1, Jean Gratz2, Crystal Patil3, Kristine Matson2, Mary Dakay1, Sarah Liu4, John Pascal1, Lauren McQuillin2, Emmanuel Mighay1, Elizabeth Hinken2, Alexandra Ernst5, Caroline Amour1, Regisiana Mvungi1, Eliwaza Bayyo1, Yeconia Zakaria1, Sokoine Kivuyo6, Eric R Houpt2, Erling Svensen7.
Abstract
The Haydom, Tanzania, site (TZH) of The Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) Study is in north-central Tanzania, 300 km from the nearest urban center. TZH is in a remote rural district where most of the population are agropastoralists and grow maize as the staple food. The average household size is 7. The average woman achieves a parity of 6 and has 1 child death. Socioeconomic indicators are poor, with essentially no household having access to electricity, piped water, or improved sanitary facilities (compared with 14%, 7%, and 12%, respectively, reported nationally). The Demographic Health Survey Tanzania 2004 indicated that the region had high rates of stunting and underweight (40% and 31% of children aged <5 years had a height-for-age z score and weight-for-age z score, respectively, of <-2 ) and an under-5 child mortality rate of 5.8%. Human immunodeficiency virus prevalence among 18-month-old children is <0.5%. TZH represents a remote rural African population with profound poverty and malnutrition, but a strong community-based research infrastructure.Entities:
Keywords: MAL-ED; Tanzania; child development; enteric infections; malnutrition
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25305305 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciu439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079