View clinical trials related to Anemia.
Filter by:The causes of malnutrition are complex and addressing the problem requires integrated action among various sectors. Globally, much attention has been given to nutrition-specific interventions to address the immediate causes of undernutrition. But undernutrition prevalence is decreasing at a very slow rate. Nutrition-specific interventions address the immediate determinants of child undernutrition, such as inadequate food and nutrient intake, but do not consider the underlying causes such as food insecurity, poverty, and limited access to clean water, hygienic environments, and health services. Ethiopia still has a high prevalence of undernutrition. The current situation of food insecurity and malnutrition in Ethiopia has pressurized the government in pursuing a number of nutritional-sensitive interventions to increase diversified food production and consumption like the Sustainable Undernutrition Reduction Program (SURE). This study aims to investigate whether joint nutrition specific and sensitive interventions can lead to improved household food security, dietary diversification and improved nutritional status in Ethiopian mothers and their young children. The study will be a community based longitudinal design and will use multistage cluster sampling at the Kebele and household levels in Amhara, Oromia, and Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region (SNNPR) regions. Households will be randomly selected from the intervention and the non-intervention arms at Kebele level, with 15 households per Kebele. The same children whose baseline are available who were 0-23 months of age at the time of the baseline assessment in 2016 will be recruited as well as their mothers. This represents approximately third of the total sample size at baseline.
This study will evaluate the safety and tolerability of ANX005 in participants with Warm Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia (wAIHA).
This is a Phase 1, Open-label, Single Dose, Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics of Desidustat for treatment of anemia in patients receiving chemotherapy.
Problem description: low compliance with iron supplementation of Saudi pregnant women with anemia is a serious public health concern. The objectives of the study are to determine the effectiveness of the Health Information Package Program (HIP program) in Saudi anemic pregnant women on their compliance with iron supplementation, and level of hemoglobin. Methodology: Randomized Controlled Trial will be conducted on 196 Saudi anemic pregnant women attending the Maternity and Children Hospital in Saudi Arabia their gestational age between 14 and less than 20 weeks. All participants will receive iron supplementation and they will learn how to take tablets. They will randomly assign to two intervention and control groups (98 each) using a computer-generated table of random numbers. The intervention group will receive a PowerPoint presentation of the Health Information Package Program (HIP program) that will be introduced by the principal investigator, combined with PowerPoint slides to educate women about anemia in pregnancy and send it to them via Whatsapp application while the control group will receive usual care. The participants will be informed about the nature and aim of the study with assuring confidentiality and anonymity. Expected outcome: Health Information Package Program (HIP program) will be effective in terms of increasing women's knowledge regarding anemia during pregnancy, increase compliance with iron supplementation, and hemoglobin level.
This purpose of this study is to assess effects of iron and folic acid supplementation and multiple micronutrient supplementation on anemia status, school performance/attendance and development outcomes among adolescents in Burkina Faso.
This is a Phase IV, randomized, active-controlled, open-label, parallel design, multicenter prospective study to evaluate the effect of roxadustat versus rHuEPO treatment on the gastrointestinal (GI) iron absorption in patients with anemia of Stage 4 and Stage 5 CKD.
This pilot aims to generate data that are critical for informing the design of a planned, more detailed study to evaluate the effect of multiple micronutrient (MN)-fortified bouillon cube on biomarkers of nutrient status of women and children. Data collection includes measures of nutritional status and dietary intake among women and children and their households in communities in northern Ghana.
The study is a pilot study, which involves cardiothoracic patients. Patients, who are scheduled for elective cardiosurgical procedure, will be seen in multidisciplinary anesthesia/Patient Blood Management (PBM) clinic and screened for anemia prior to surgery. Anemic patients will eventually be treated with 500mg of ferric carboxymaltose 1 to 4 days prior to surgery. A high blood loss is expected in these procedures (>500ml). Blood is collected and re-transfused to the patient via use of cell savers/ autologous blood restoration. The investigators will examine how fast intravenous ferric carboxymaltose is stored within the iron storage cells of the body, and how much remains within the patients blood at the time point of surgery. Next, the investigators will assess the wash out effect of iron via cell salvage. The hypothesis of this trial is that ferric carboxymaltose is washed out of the collected patient's blood by cell caver usage (Wash-Out Effect).
The overall goal of this study is to generate new knowledge regarding the nutritional and environmental determinants of physical activity in young children living in a densely populated urban community in Bangladesh. The investigators hypothesize that low levels of preschooler physical activity are associated with a lack of play-oriented physical attributes (i.e., total area of indoor floor space, presence and count of unsafe physical hazards, and presence and count of stationary and portable gross motor activity-oriented items) within the homes in urban Bangladesh. The investigators also hypothesized that low Hb may be associated with low physical activity levels in this population.
The objective of this randomized efficacy feeding trial was to determine the effects of consuming iron-biofortified rice on iron status in women, compared to non-biofortified rice. A randomized trial of biofortified rice (IR68144-2B-2-2-3), bred to enhance iron content, was conducted among women living in convents in the greater area of Manila, Philippines for 9 months.