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Doli Goswami

Researcher at International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh

Publications -  52
Citations -  4785

Doli Goswami is an academic researcher from International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Pneumonia. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 50 publications receiving 3660 citations. Previous affiliations of Doli Goswami include Johns Hopkins University.

Papers
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Global, regional, and national disease burden estimates of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children in 2015: a systematic review and modelling study

Ting Shi, +138 more
- 02 Sep 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated the incidence and hospital admission rate of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory infection (RSV-ALRI) in children younger than 5 years stratified by age and World Bank income regions.
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Global burden of respiratory infections due to seasonal influenza in young children: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Harish Nair, +52 more
- 03 Dec 2011 - 
TL;DR: The role of influenza in childhood mortality from ALRI is estimated by combining incidence estimates with case fatality ratios from hospital-based reports and identifying studies with population-based data for influenza seasonality and monthly ALRI mortality.
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Causes of severe pneumonia requiring hospital admission in children without HIV infection from Africa and Asia: the PERCH multi-country case-control study

TL;DR: Estimating causes of pneumonia in young African and Asian children, using novel analytical methods applied to clinical and microbiological findings, estimated that viruses accounted for 61·4% (95% credible interval [CrI] 57·3–65·6) of causes, whereas bacteria accounted for 27·3% (23·3-31·6).
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Bacteremic typhoid fever in children in an urban slum, Bangladesh.

TL;DR: A regression model showed that children in a Dhaka urban slum with a bacteremic typhoid fever incidence of 3.9 episodes/1,000 person-years were clinically ill, which suggests a role for preschool immunization.
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Effect of weekly zinc supplements on incidence of pneumonia and diarrhoea in children younger than 2 years in an urban, low-income population in Bangladesh: randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: 70 mg of zinc weekly reduces pneumonia and mortality in young children, however, compliance with weekly intake might be problematic outside a research programme.