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Pakistan - Karachi Global Enteric Multicenter Study 2008-2011

General Info

Original or alternative title 
Global Enteric Mutli-Center Study / GEMS-1
Provider 
Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland
Microdata access: Request
Geography 
Pakistan (PAK)
Sindh
Coverage type 
Subnational
Time period covered 
March, 2008 - May, 2011
Data type
Survey: Exam - Health facility - Household - Individual - Interview
Summary 

The Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS-1) was a multi-country case-control study of diarrheal disease in children under five years of age. Study sites in each country were required to have access to some type of demographic surveillance system for tracking participants and at least one healthcare facility that provided care to children of that population with diarrhea. A Health Utilization and Attitudes Survey (HUAS) of 1,100 households in the selected population was conducted in each country prior to starting the case-control portion of the study, in which 660 children with mild-to-severe diarrhea (cases) and a matching 660 of children without diarrhea (controls) were enrolled in the study in each of 3 age strata (0-11, 12-23, and 24-59 months). Participants were examined at initial enrollment and again after approximately 60 days; anthropometric measurements were collected at both the enrollment exam and followup home visit, and stool samples were collected at the enrollment exam.

Keywords 
Adenovirus, Aeromonas, Antibiotics, Antimalarials, Assets, Breastfeeding, Breathing difficulty, Campylobacter enteritis, Child anthropometry, Child mortality, Children, Cholera, Clostridium difficile, Community health clinics, Cooking fuels, Cough, Cryptosporidiosis, Diarrhea, Diarrheal diseases, E. coli, Edema, Education, Electricity, Family size, Fatigue, Fever, Health care access, Health care use, Hospitals, Household air pollution, Household water treatment, Housing conditions, Housing materials, Hygiene, Length of stay, Livestock, Lower respiratory infections, Malaria, Malnutrition, Mass media, Medicines, Meningitis, Mortality, Oral rehydration therapy, Pain, Personal health expenditures, Pharmacies, Place of death, Prescriptions, Rotavirus, Salmonella infections, Sanitation, Seizures, Shigellosis, Stool tests, Telephones, Traditional medicine, Transportation, Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers, Vomiting, Water supply, Zinc

Citation

Contributors 
Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland
Perry Point Cooperative Studies Program Coordinating Center, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
International Vaccine Institute
Center for Vaccine Development (Chile)
University of Chile
School of Medicine, University of Virginia
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Göteborg University
Aga Khan University
Funders 
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF)
Publisher 
Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland
Suggested citation 
Aga Khan University, Center for Vaccine Development (Chile), Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Göteborg University, International Vaccine Institute, Perry Point Cooperative Studies Program Coordinating Center, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, University of Chile. Pakistan - Karachi Global Enteric Multicenter Study 2008-2011. Baltimore, MD, United States of America: Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland.

Source URL:https://ghdx.healthdata.org/record/pakistan-karachi-global-enteric-multicenter-study-2008-2011