Acute and Persistent Diarrhea - 04/08/11
, David A. Forbes, MBBS, FRACP d, e, fRésumé |
Socially disadvantaged Indigenous infants and children living in western industrialized countries experience high rates of infectious diarrhea, no more so than Aboriginal children from remote and rural regions of Northern Australia. Diarrheal disease, poor nutrition, and intestinal enteropathy reflect household crowding, inadequate water and poor sanitation and hygiene. Acute episodes of watery diarrhea are often best managed by oral glucose-electrolyte solutions with continuation of breastfeeding and early reintroduction of feeding. Selective use of lactose-free milk formula, short-term zinc supplementation and antibiotics may be necessary for ill children with poor nutrition, persistent symptoms, or dysentery. Education, high standards of environmental hygiene, breastfeeding, and immunization with newly licensed rotavirus vaccines are all needed to reduce the unacceptably high burden of diarrheal disease encountered in young children from Indigenous communities.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Diarrhea, Enteropathy, Indigenous, Aboriginal, Child, Management
Plan
Vol 56 - N° 6
P. 1343-1361 - décembre 2009 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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