Results 231 to 240 of about 142,937 (351)

Estimating the minimal cost of delivering nutrition‐specific and nutrition‐sensitive interventions in Ethiopia

open access: yesMaternal &Child Nutrition, EarlyView.
The minimum cost of the 10 years on identified nutrition‐specific and nutrition‐sensitive interventions of the National Food and Nutrition Strategy in Ethiopia is estimated to be US$ 2.55bn with an average annual cost of $250 million over 10 years (2021–2030), which is only 2.3% of the Ethiopian Annual GDP 111.27 billion US dollars in 2021 (World bank).
Yetayesh Maru   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source

Prevalence, radio-clinical patterns and factors associated with pulmonary tuberculosis among children with severe acute malnutrition: a cross-sectional study in Uganda. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Health Popul Nutr
Asiimwe O   +9 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Neurodevelopmental Status of Children aged 6-30 months with Severe Acute Malnutrition

open access: hybrid, 2018
Deepak Dwivedi   +4 more
openalex   +1 more source

Unveiling Disparities and Missed Opportunities in Vitamin A Supplementation Among Children Under Five in Ethiopia

open access: yesMaternal &Child Nutrition, EarlyView.
Vitamin A supplementation (VAS) coverage in Ethiopia remains low (21%), with substantial inequities favoring wealthier, urban, and agrarian households, and missed opportunities to integrate VAS with health services like measles vaccination. Improving coverage, equity, and resilience requires expanding access, tailoring delivery approaches, and ...
Tsedey Moges   +16 more
wiley   +1 more source

Nutrition Intervention Coverage and Inequities Along the Continuum of Care: Results From the Eighth Demographic and Health Survey in Six Sub‐Saharan African Countries

open access: yesMaternal &Child Nutrition, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Many countries rely on national household surveys to monitor coverage of nutrition interventions. Following a multi‐year consultative effort, 14 new and revised nutrition coverage indicators were included in the Round 8 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS‐8) core questionnaire.
Erica Phillips   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

From Insult to Injury: Exploring the Associations Between Severe Malnutrition in Childhood, Rehabilitation Weight Gain and Adult Adiposity in a Prospective Cohort Study

open access: yesMaternal &Child Nutrition, EarlyView.
Emerging evidence links childhood severe malnutrition to adult cardiometabolic disease risk. Higher admission weight and nutritional oedema predicted adult adiposity while faster rehabilitation weight gain predicted adult adiposity in males only. Rehabilitation weight gain itself was a partial mediator of long‐term adiposity risk.
Debbie S. Thompson   +10 more
wiley   +1 more source

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