Drivers of the reduction in childhood diarrhea mortality 1980-2015 and interventions to eliminate preventable diarrhea deaths by 2030.

dc.contributor.author

Black, Robert

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Fontaine, Olivier

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Lamberti, Laura

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Bhan, Maharaj

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Huicho, Luis

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El Arifeen, Shams

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Masanja, Honorati

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Walker, Christa Fischer

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Mengestu, Tigest Ketsela

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Pearson, Luwei

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Young, Mark

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Orobaton, Nosa

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Chu, Yue

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Jackson, Bianca

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Bateman, Massee

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Walker, Neff

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Merson, Michael

dc.date.accessioned

2023-08-04T21:42:26Z

dc.date.available

2023-08-04T21:42:26Z

dc.date.issued

2019-12

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2023-08-04T21:42:25Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Childhood diarrhea deaths have declined more than 80% from 1980 to 2015, in spite of an increase in the number of children in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Possible drivers of this remarkable accomplishment can guide the further reduction of the half million annual child deaths from diarrhea that still occur.

Methods

We used the Lives Saved Tool, which models effects on mortality due to changes in coverage of preventive or therapeutic interventions or risk factors, for 50 LMIC to determine the proximal drivers of the diarrhea mortality reduction.

Results

Diarrhea treatment (oral rehydration solution [ORS], zinc, antibiotics for dysentery and management of persistent diarrhea) and use of rotavirus vaccine accounted for 49.7% of the diarrhea mortality reduction from 1980 to 2015. Improvements in nutrition (stunting, wasting, breastfeeding practices, vitamin A) accounted for 38.8% and improvements in water, sanitation and handwashing for 11.5%. The contribution of ORS was greater from 1980 to 2000 (58.0% of the reduction) than from 2000 to 2015 (30.7%); coverage of ORS increased from zero in 1980 to 29.5% in 2000 and more slowly to 44.1% by 2015. To eliminate the remaining childhood diarrhea deaths globally, all these interventions will be needed. Scaling up diarrhea treatment and rotavirus vaccine, to 90% coverage could reduce global child diarrhea mortality by 74.1% from 2015 levels by 2030. Adding improved nutrition could increase that to 89.1%. Finally, adding increased use of improved water sources, sanitation and handwashing could result in a 92.8% reduction from the 2015 level.

Conclusions

Employing the interventions that have resulted in such a large reduction in diarrhea mortality in the last 35 years can virtually eliminate remaining childhood diarrhea deaths by 2030.
dc.identifier

jogh-09-020801

dc.identifier.issn

2047-2978

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2047-2986

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28677

dc.language

eng

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International Global Health Society

dc.relation.ispartof

Journal of global health

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10.7189/jogh.09.020801

dc.subject

Humans

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Diarrhea

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Child Mortality

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Infant Mortality

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Developing Countries

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Child, Preschool

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Infant

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Infant, Newborn

dc.title

Drivers of the reduction in childhood diarrhea mortality 1980-2015 and interventions to eliminate preventable diarrhea deaths by 2030.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

020801

pubs.issue

2

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Global Health Institute

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Initiatives

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Duke - Margolis Center For Health Policy

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

9

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