학술논문

Burden of Diarrhea in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, 1990-2013 : Findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013
Document Type
Author
Khalil, IbrahimColombara, Danny VForouzanfar, Mohammad HosseinTroeger, ChristopherDaoud, FarahMoradi-Lakeh, MaziarBcheraoui, Charbel ElRao, Puja CAfshin, AshkanCharara, RaghidAbate, Kalkidan HassenRazek, Mohammed Magdy Abd ElAbd-Allah, FoadAbu-Elyazeed, RemonKiadaliri, Aliasghar AhmadAkanda, Ali ShafqatAkseer, NadiaAlam, KhurshidAlasfoor, DeenaAli, RaghibAlMazroa, Mohammad AAlomari, Mahmoud AAl-Raddadi, Rajaa Mohammad SalemAlsharif, UbaiAlsowaidi, ShirinaAltirkawi, Khalid AAlvis-Guzman, NelsonAmmar, WalidAntonio, Carl Abelardo TAsayesh, HamidAsghar, Rana JawadAtique, SulemanAwasthi, AshishBacha, UmarBadawi, AlaaBarac, AleksandraBedi, NeerajBekele, TolesaBensenor, Isabela MBetsu, Balem DemtsuBhutta, ZulfiqarAbdulhak, Aref A BinButt, Zahid ADanawi, HadiDubey, ManishaEndries, Aman YesufFaghmous, Imad D AFarid, TalhaFarvid, Maryam SFarzadfar, FarshadFereshtehnejad, Seyed-MohammadFischer, FlorianFitchett, Joseph Robert AndersonGibney, Katherine BGinawi, Ibrahim Abdelmageem MohamedGishu, Melkamu DedefoGugnani, Harish ChanderGupta, RahulHailu, Gessessew BugssaHamadeh, Randah RibhiHamidi, SamerHarb, Hilda LHedayati, Mohammad THsairi, MohamedHusseini, AbdullatifJahanmehr, NaderJavanbakht, MehdiJibat, TarikuJonas, Jost BKasaeian, AmirKhader, Yousef SalehKhan, Abdur RahmanKhan, Ejaz AhmadKhan, GulfarazKhoja, Tawfik Ahmed MuthaferKinfu, YohannesKissoon, NiranjanKoyanagi, AiLal, AparnaLatif, Asma Abdul AbdulLunevicius, RaimundasRazek, Hassan Magdy Abd ElMajeed, AzeemMalekzadeh, RezaMehari, AlemMekonnen, Alemayehu BMelaku, Yohannes AdamaMemish, Ziad AMendoza, WalterMisganaw, AwokeMohamed, Layla Abdalla IbrahimNachega, Jean BNguyen, Quyen LeNisar, Muhammad ImranPeprah, Emmanuel KwamePlatts-Mills, James APourmalek, FarshadQorbani, MostafaRafay, AnwarRahimi-Movaghar, VafaRahman, Sajjad UrRai, Rajesh KumarRana, Saleem MRanabhat, Chhabi LRao, Sowmya RRefaat, Amany HRiddle, MarkRoshandel, GholamrezaRuhago, George MugambageSaleh, Muhammad MuhammadSanabria, Juan RSawhney, MonikaSepanlou, Sadaf GSetegn, TesfayeSliwa, KarenSreeramareddy, Chandrashekhar TSykes, Bryan LTavakkoli, MohammadTedla, Bemnet AmareTerkawi, Abdullah SUkwaja, KingsleyUthman, Olalekan AWesterman, RonnyWubshet, MamoYenesew, Muluken AYonemoto, NaohiroYounis, Mustafa ZZaidi, ZoubidaZaki, Maysaa El SayedRabeeah, Abdullah A AlWang, HaidongNaghavi, MohsenVos, TheoLopez, Alan DMurray, Christopher J LMokdad, Ali H
Source
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 95(6):1319-1329
Subject
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Hälsovetenskap
Folkhälsovetenskap
global hälsa
socialmedicin och epidemiologi
Medical and Health Sciences
Health Sciences
Public Health
Global Health
Social Medicine and Epidemiology
Language
English
ISSN
1476-1645
Abstract
Diarrheal diseases (DD) are leading causes of disease burden, death, and disability, especially in children in low-income settings. DD can also impact a child's potential livelihood through stunted physical growth, cognitive impairment, and other sequelae. As part of the Global Burden of Disease Study, we estimated DD burden, and the burden attributable to specific risk factors and particular etiologies, in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) between 1990 and 2013. For both sexes and all ages, we calculated disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), which are the sum of years of life lost and years lived with disability. We estimate that over 125,000 deaths (3.6% of total deaths) were due to DD in the EMR in 2013, with a greater burden of DD in low- and middle-income countries. Diarrhea deaths per 100,000 children under 5 years of age ranged from one (95% uncertainty interval [UI] = 0-1) in Bahrain and Oman to 471 (95% UI = 245-763) in Somalia. The pattern for diarrhea DALYs among those under 5 years of age closely followed that for diarrheal deaths. DALYs per 100,000 ranged from 739 (95% UI = 520-989) in Syria to 40,869 (95% UI = 21,540-65,823) in Somalia. Our results highlighted a highly inequitable burden of DD in EMR, mainly driven by the lack of access to proper resources such as water and sanitation. Our findings will guide preventive and treatment interventions which are based on evidence and which follow the ultimate goal of reducing the DD burden.