Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study

Abstract Background Despite the available interventions to tackle nutritional problems, there is scarce information on time to recovery and its determinants among children with SAM in Ethiopia. Objective This study was aimed at finding the time to recovery and determinants among 6–59 months children...

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Main Authors: Worku Nigussu Mamo, Terefe Derso, Kassahun Alemu Gelaye, Temesgen Yihunie Akalu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-11-01
Series:Italian Journal of Pediatrics
Subjects:
SAM
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13052-019-0732-9
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spelling doaj-1260b61109bc4623afaca67d1f958cbb2020-11-25T04:08:02ZengBMCItalian Journal of Pediatrics1824-72882019-11-014511810.1186/s13052-019-0732-9Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up studyWorku Nigussu Mamo0Terefe Derso1Kassahun Alemu Gelaye2Temesgen Yihunie Akalu3Abrhajira Primary HospitalDepartment of Human Nutrition, Institute of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of GondarDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of GondarDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of GondarAbstract Background Despite the available interventions to tackle nutritional problems, there is scarce information on time to recovery and its determinants among children with SAM in Ethiopia. Objective This study was aimed at finding the time to recovery and determinants among 6–59 months children with severe acute malnutrition treated at an outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, northwest Ethiopia. Methods Facility based prospective follow up study was conducted from March 24 to May 24, 2017. A total of 408 children with the age of 6–59 months were included in the study. Structured interviewer administered questionnaire was used. Anthropometric measurements were conducted every week. The median time of recovery, Kaplan Meier (KM) curve, and log rank test were computed. Both bi-variable and multivariable Cox regression model was fitted. To establish an association between time to recovery and its determinants 95% confidence interval (CI) and p-value < 0.05 were used. Proportional hazard assumption was checked graphically and using Schoenfeld residual test. Results Out of 389 children, 254 (65.3%) recovered. The median time to recovery was 38.5 ± IQR of 14 days. Children with diarrhoea AHR = 0.81 with 95% CI (0.73, 0.99), children taken amoxicillin AHR = 2.304 with 95% CI (1.68–3.161), and had vomiting at admission AHR = 0.430 with 95% CI (0.205, 0.904) were significant predictors of time to recovery. Conclusions and recommendations The overall time to recovery has not met the minimum sphere international standard which was lower than 75%. It is advisable to give emphasis to patients with diarrhoea and vomiting.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13052-019-0732-9SAMTime to recoveryNorth Gondar
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Worku Nigussu Mamo
Terefe Derso
Kassahun Alemu Gelaye
Temesgen Yihunie Akalu
spellingShingle Worku Nigussu Mamo
Terefe Derso
Kassahun Alemu Gelaye
Temesgen Yihunie Akalu
Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
Italian Journal of Pediatrics
SAM
Time to recovery
North Gondar
author_facet Worku Nigussu Mamo
Terefe Derso
Kassahun Alemu Gelaye
Temesgen Yihunie Akalu
author_sort Worku Nigussu Mamo
title Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
title_short Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
title_full Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
title_fullStr Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
title_full_unstemmed Time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, Northwest Ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
title_sort time to recovery and determinants of severe acute malnutrition among 6–59 months children treated at outpatient therapeutic programme in north gondar zone, northwest ethiopia: a prospective follow up study
publisher BMC
series Italian Journal of Pediatrics
issn 1824-7288
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Background Despite the available interventions to tackle nutritional problems, there is scarce information on time to recovery and its determinants among children with SAM in Ethiopia. Objective This study was aimed at finding the time to recovery and determinants among 6–59 months children with severe acute malnutrition treated at an outpatient therapeutic programme in North Gondar zone, northwest Ethiopia. Methods Facility based prospective follow up study was conducted from March 24 to May 24, 2017. A total of 408 children with the age of 6–59 months were included in the study. Structured interviewer administered questionnaire was used. Anthropometric measurements were conducted every week. The median time of recovery, Kaplan Meier (KM) curve, and log rank test were computed. Both bi-variable and multivariable Cox regression model was fitted. To establish an association between time to recovery and its determinants 95% confidence interval (CI) and p-value < 0.05 were used. Proportional hazard assumption was checked graphically and using Schoenfeld residual test. Results Out of 389 children, 254 (65.3%) recovered. The median time to recovery was 38.5 ± IQR of 14 days. Children with diarrhoea AHR = 0.81 with 95% CI (0.73, 0.99), children taken amoxicillin AHR = 2.304 with 95% CI (1.68–3.161), and had vomiting at admission AHR = 0.430 with 95% CI (0.205, 0.904) were significant predictors of time to recovery. Conclusions and recommendations The overall time to recovery has not met the minimum sphere international standard which was lower than 75%. It is advisable to give emphasis to patients with diarrhoea and vomiting.
topic SAM
Time to recovery
North Gondar
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13052-019-0732-9
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