Overview
- Editors:
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Lincoln C. Chen
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Ford Foundation, New Delhi, India
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Nevin S. Scrimshaw
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Massachustts Institute of Technology, USA
MIT/Harvard International Food and Nutrition Program, USA
World Hunger Program, United Nations University, USA
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Table of contents (19 chapters)
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Policy, Planning, and Implementation
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Front Matter
Pages 267-267
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- Nevin S. Scrimshaw, Oscar Brunser, Gerald Keusch, Ayesha Molla, Imran Ozalp, Benjamin Torún
Pages 269-286
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- Jon E. Rohde, Richard A. Cash, Richard L. Guerrant, Dilip Mahalanabis, A. M. Molla, Aree Valyasevi
Pages 287-295
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- Robert E. Black, Lincoln C. Chen, Oscar Harkavy, M. Mujibur Rahaman, M. G. M. Rowland
Pages 297-303
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- Ranjit K. Chandra, William B. Greenough, Richard L. Guerrant, Reynaldo Martorell, Leonardo J. Mata, Kenneth S. Warren et al.
Pages 305-308
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Back Matter
Pages 309-318
About this book
There are several reasons why a consolidation of recent advances in our understanding of the interaction of diarrhea and malnutrition is indi cated and timely. It is now widely recognized that diarrhea is a major cause of morbidity and mortality among children of poor countries. Due to recent advances in laboratory and field diagnostic techniques, many of the previously unrecognized etiologic agents responsible for diarrhea have been identified, thereby providing new scientific knowledge for rational control strategies. Increasingly these advances suggest that the morbidity burden of diarrhea may be of equal, if not greater, public health consequence than mortality. Diarrhea only rarely causes disease severe enough to require institutionalized medical care. The vast major ity of diseases are of mild or moderate severity, and because of high prev alence, diarrhea imposes an enormous morbidity burden and exerts a sig nificant negative impact on child growth and development. Moreover, the effects of successive episodes of diarrhea are likely to be cumulative. In contrast to several other childhood infections, the treatment of the diarrheal diseases is feasible because it uses simple, effective, and low cost medical technologies. Within the context of these developments, there has been a major resurgence of international interest in, and commitment to, the control of the diarrheal diseases. The World Health Organization recently has launched a global program for the control of diarrhea, and simulta neously, an independent international research center on diarrhea has been established in Bangladesh.
Editors and Affiliations
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Ford Foundation, New Delhi, India
Lincoln C. Chen
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Massachustts Institute of Technology, USA
Nevin S. Scrimshaw
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MIT/Harvard International Food and Nutrition Program, USA
Nevin S. Scrimshaw
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World Hunger Program, United Nations University, USA
Nevin S. Scrimshaw