View clinical trials related to Diarrhea.
Filter by:This study modified and contextualized a community mobilization approach in a bid to find a solution to reduce the high incidence and prevalence of child morbidity and mortality in Zimbabwe.The developed model will be tested for its effectiveness in reducing child morbidity and mortality at community level by comparing the effect of the intervention to that of the conventional community interventions.
This intervention will experimentally test the hypothesis that sanitation can be improved in a peri-urban setting using state-of-the-art behaviour change communications. Formative research indicated that landlords are the effective decision-makers about investments in sanitation on their plots (which can include a number of tenant households as well). Landlords will therefore be the primary targets of the intervention. The study will take the form of a randomized controlled trial of the intervention evaluated at the plot level. The intervention will invite enrolled landlords to a series of meetings in which various mechanisms will be used, each designed to increase their likelihood of improving the toilet(s) on their plot. These meetings will be the main vehicle for a status-building campaign associated with increasing wealth by improving plot sanitation, understanding tenants' implicit demand, understanding the processes by which toilets can be improved, and a competition rewarding landlords that make the greatest improvements to the improvement of their toilet(s). The desired improvements will be measured via multiple primary outcomes that measure aspects of changes to hardware and software components, including indicators of hygienic quality, psychological desirability, accessibility, and ecological sustainability. This is because the investigators argue that, to have a significant impact on population-level diarrheal disease indicators, any sanitation solution must be: - effective at reducing exposure to pathogens (i.e., hygienic), - desirable (i.e., seen as valuable or humane), and - accessible (i.e., no one excluded), so that it can be used by all - for a reasonably long time (i.e., sustainable)
Diarrhea is one of the most common reasons for people to seek medical advice - but it can range from being a mild, temporary condition, to be life threading condition. It is estimated that there are 2 billion cases of diarrheal disease every year globally, and that 1.9 million children below the age of 5 years, mostly in developing countries, die annually.
The study hypothesis is that clinical decision-support on a smartphone for the management of diarrheal disease will improve the assessment of dehydration, reduce IV fluid usage, and increase guideline adherence for the use of zinc and antibiotics. To test this hypothesis we will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial in the diarrhea wards of 10 hospitals in Bangladesh. A 6-week pre-intervention period will establish a baseline at all sites, and in the intervention, hospitals will be randomized to use a paper versus smartphone adaptation of the WHO guidelines by the admitting physician. Inclusion criteria are patients 2 months and older that have uncomplicated acute diarrheal disease; estimated enrollment is 7893 patients. The primary outcome measure is use of IV fluids. This project may have broad impact that will include opportunities to provide improved decision-support for the assessment of dehydration, decreased use intravenous fluids and more prudent use of antibiotics.
The primary objective is to obtain stool samples from subjects diagnosed with , and displaying signs and/or symptoms of IBD and/or IBS will be evaluated in this study. Eligible subjects require a diagnostic colonoscopy with possible biopsy and clinical evaluation.
Although the current World Health Organization (WHO) recommended management package for acute diarrhoea (ORS, zinc and feeding advice) has contributed to significant reductions in diarrhoea associated mortality, over half a million children continue to die annually as a result of acute diarrhoeal episodes. In addition, rates of mortality in young children in the 90 days following an episode of acute diarrhoea appear at least as high as mortality that occurs during the acute episode. The long-term benefits of antibiotic administration may result from direct antimicrobial effects on pathogens or from other incompletely understood mechanisms including improved nutrition, alterations in immune tolerance or improved enteric function. Optimizing antibiotic treatment of acute diarrhoea episodes in very young children with severe disease may offer the opportunity to significantly reduce diarrhoea associated deaths in the 180 days following presentation for acute diarrhoea and may also improve growth. The investigators propose to evaluate the efficacy of an antibiotic (azithromycin) delivered in a specific, targeted fashion to young children (< 2 years of age) at high risk of diarrhoea associated mortality in a multi-site randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. The study will evaluate the ability of the intervention to reduce mortality within 180 days of the acute diarrhoeal episode, and improve nutritional status over the first 90 days.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy Rifamycin SV-MMX® 600 mg tablets for patients with diarrhoea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome when administered two to three times daily.
This phase II trial studies the incidence and severity of diarrhea in patients with stage II-IIIC HER2 Positive breast cancer treated with trastuzumab and neratinib. Trastuzumab is a form of targeted therapy because it attaches itself to specific molecules (receptors) on the surface of cancer cells, known as HER2 receptors. When trastuzumab attaches to HER2 receptors, the signals that tell the cells to grow are blocked and the cancer cell may be marked for destruction by the body's immune system. Neratinib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Giving trastuzumab and neratinib may work better in treating patients with stage II-IIIC HER2 positive breast cancer.
Diarrhoea continues to be a major cause of child deaths. Current treatment of acute watery diarrhoea includes oral rehydration solution (ORS), zinc and continued feeding. The use of zinc is based on a number of studies that showed that zinc reduces the duration and severity of diarrhoea. The recommended dose of zinc in 6-59 month old children is 20mg/day for 10-14 days. This dose is associated with an increased risk of vomiting. No dosing studies are available to determine the optimal dose of zinc, which while maintaining the benefits also has a low risk of vomiting. The investigators will conduct a double-blind randomized controlled trial of three doses of zinc (20mg/day, 10mg/day and 5mg/day) in two settings - one in Sub-Saharan Africa and the other in South Asia. The study population will be 4500 children with diarrhoea of less than 72 hours duration who are aged 6-59 months. They will be recruited from outpatient health facilities. All enrolled children will receive ORS and continued feeding as recommended by the World Health Organization. Those allocated to the standard zinc dose will receive an oral dispersible tablet with 20mg zinc daily for 14 days. Those allocated to lower dose zinc will receive identical tablets with either 10mg or 5mg zinc daily for 14 days. Enrolled children will be followed by until recovery from diarrhoea or 15 days after enrolment, whichever is later. In addition, study children will be assessed again at thirty (30), forty-five (45), and sixty (60) days to estimate impact on post illness outcomes. Primary outcomes will be mean duration of diarrhoea, proportion of episodes that last longer than 5 days, mean number of stools and proportion of children with vomiting.
This study aims to validate a possible diagnostic test for bile acid diarrhoea prospectively compared to the SeHCAT scintigraphy. Fasting participants are given a standard meal and 1,250 mg chenodeoxycholic acid. The investigators measure fasting FGF19, bile acids species including 7-alpha-CHO and serial blood samples after the stimulation.