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Institution

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh

FacilityDhaka, Bangladesh
About: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh is a facility organization based out in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Vibrio cholerae. The organization has 3103 authors who have published 5238 publications receiving 226880 citations. The organization is also known as: SEATO Cholera Research Laboratory & Bangladesh International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that younger age, decreased serum protein, altered consciousness, and thrombocytopenia were predictive of death in Shigella-infected patients.
Abstract: The total number of admissions and deaths of patients with shigellosis were ascertained at the Dhaka Treatment Centre of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, 1974-1988, and the characteristics of 67 patients who died were compared with those of 134 discharged alive. Of 9780 Shigella-infected inpatients, 889 (9.1%) died; 32.3% of deaths occurred in children less than 1 year of age. Fatality rates were highest (10.3%) in Shigella sonnei-infected patients and lowest (6.7%) in Shigella dysenteriae type 1-infected patients. Age less than 1 year, lack of breast feeding in patients 1-2 years of age, hypothermia, severe malnutrition, severe dehydration, altered consciousness, abdominal distension, thrombocytopenia, hypoproteinemia, hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, renal failure, and bacteremia were all significantly more common in case patients. In a multivariate analysis, younger age, decreased serum protein, altered consciousness, and thrombocytopenia were predictive of death. Thus in Bangladesh the fatality rate for hospitalized patients infected with any species of Shigella remains high despite relatively intensive inpatient care, and young, hypoproteinemic patients are at greatest risk of fatal illness.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed planform changes of the Ganges and the Padma within Bangladesh using multitemporal Landsat images and long-term flow data in eight epochs with an average duration of 4.5 years.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that education and remittance flows, but not gender or working status of the household head, are significant predictors of food insecurity in the study area and indicate the need to focus scholarly and policy attention on reducing wealth inequalities in tropical deltas in the context of the global sustainable deltAs initiative and the proposed Sustainable Development Goals.
Abstract: As a creeping process, salinisation represents a significant long-term environmental risk in coastal and deltaic environments. Excess soil salinity may exacerbate existing risks of food insecurity in densely populated tropical deltas, which is likely to have a negative effect on human and ecological sustainability of these regions and beyond. This study focuses on the coastal regions of the Ganges–Brahmaputra delta in Bangladesh, and uses data from the 2010 Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Soil Resource Development Institute to investigate the effect of soil salinity and wealth on household food security. The outcome variables are two widely used measures of food security: calorie availability and household expenditure on food items. The main explanatory variables tested include indicators of soil salinity and household-level socio-economic characteristics. The results of logistic regression show that in unadjusted models, soil salinisation has a significant negative effect on household food security. However, this impact becomes statistically insignificant when households’ wealth is taken into account. The results further suggest that education and remittance flows, but not gender or working status of the household head, are significant predictors of food insecurity in the study area. The findings indicate the need to focus scholarly and policy attention on reducing wealth inequalities in tropical deltas in the context of the global sustainable deltas initiative and the proposed Sustainable Development Goals.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A technical review of factors that can lead to false-positive and -negative errors in the surveillance of SARS-CoV-2, culminating in recommendations and strategies that can be implemented to identify and mitigate these errors.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings provide the first indication of the effect of delivering an oral killed whole-cell cholera vaccine to poor urban populations with endemicCholera using routine government services and will help policy makers to formulate vaccination strategies to reduce the burden of severely dehydrating cholERA in such populations.

116 citations


Authors

Showing all 3121 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Stanley Falkow13434962461
Myron M. Levine12378960865
Roger I. Glass11647449151
Robert F. Breiman10547343927
Harry B. Greenberg10043334941
Barbara J. Stoll10039042107
Andrew M. Prentice9955046628
Robert H. Gilman9690343750
Robert E. Black9220156887
Johan Ärnlöv9138690490
Juan Jesus Carrero8952266970
John D. Clemens8950628981
William A. Petri8550726906
Toshifumi Hibi8280828674
David A. Sack8043723320
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20235
202234
2021494
2020414
2019391
2018334