- Health and hygiene, schools and other non-household settings
- Nutrition and WASH (including stunted growth)
- Research on WASH & Nutrition, including environmental enteropathy
- Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
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Re: Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
I would love to have your draft book, conference papers and newly discovered references.
Regards,
F H Mughal
Karachi, Pakistan
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Re: Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
I am currently writing a book on the effects of EE/EED on nutritional outcomes and lifelong welfare. I'm happy to post draft chapters, conference papers and newly discovered references if there is interest.
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- I am working in the field of environmental and sustainability issues, professionally and privately. Waste and wastewater are some of my main topics.
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Re: Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
according to your suggestion and since there haven't been other thoughts, I replaced the Humphrey paper from 2009 by the one that you proposed. Since it is the most recent one, it's on the top of the list now.
Best,
milli
M.Sc. Environmental and Resource Management
Gießen, Germany
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- I am working in the field of environmental and sustainability issues, professionally and privately. Waste and wastewater are some of my main topics.
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Re: Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
Peter, the paper you proposed sounds quite interesting and from 2015 it is also a really new one. What do you (and everyone else) think, which one of the documents should be replaced by the Mbuya review paper?
Best,
milli
M.Sc. Environmental and Resource Management
Gießen, Germany
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F H Mughal
Karachi, Pakistan
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I love this thread! It's a great source of information.
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You need to login to reply- Elisabeth
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Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/10-gen...d-sub-category-level
++++++++++++++
This thread is a "sticky thread" which means it will always remain at the top of this sub-category.
It contains a recommendation and orientation for newcomers regarding the most important 3-5 documents and website links in this thematic area.
Recommended top 5 documents in the thematic area of "Environmental enteropathy", in reverse chronological order:
(1)
Mbuya, M. N., Humphrey, J. H. (2015). Preventing environmental enteric dysfunction through improved water, sanitation and hygiene: an opportunity for stunting reduction in developing countries. Maternal & Child Nutrition, Early View (DOI: 10.1111/mcn.12220)
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mcn.12220/full
In 2011, one in every four (26%) children under 5 years of age worldwide was stunted. The realization that most stunting cannot be explained by poor diet or by diarrhoea, nor completely reversed by optimized diet and reduced diarrhoea has led to the hypothesis that a primary underlying cause of stunting is subclinical gut disease. Essentially, ingested microbes set in motion two overlapping and interacting pathways that result in linear growth impairment.
(2)
Chambers, R., von Medeazza, G. (2014). Reframing undernutrition: faecally-transmitted Infections and the 5 As. IDS Working Paper 450, Institue of Development Studies (IDS), Brighton, UK (ISBN: 978-1-78118-205-5)
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2386
When it comes to malnutrition, reductionist focus on the diarrhoeas, which are serious, dramatic, visible and measurable, but has led to the relative neglect of many other often subclinical and continuously debilitating faecally-transmitted infections (FTIs) including environmental enteropathy (EE), other intestinal infections, and parasites. These are harder to measure but together affect nutrition much more.
(3)
Schmidt, C. W. (2014). Beyond Malnutrition - The Role of Sanitation in Stunted Growth. Environmental Health Perspectives, volume 122, issue 11, pages A298-A303
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2151
Researchers are exploring the possibility that poor hygiene and a lack of sanitation induce a gut disorder called environmental enteropathy (EE) that diverts energy from growth toward an ongoing fight against subclinical infection. Nutritionists are now collaborating with experts in a field known as water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), and their combined efforts are helping to galvanize regional programs to improve hygiene in countries afflicted with high stunting rates.
(4)
Ngure, F. M., Reid, B. M., Humphrey, J. H., Mbuya, M. N., Pelto, G., Stoltzfus, R. J. (2014). Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), environmental enteropathy, nutrition, and early child development: making the links. The New York Academy of Science
www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/2121
Environmental enteropathy, a prevalent subclinical condition of the gut, may be a keymediating pathway linking poor hygiene to developmental deficits. Current early child development research and programs lack evidence-based interventions to provide a clean play and infant feeding environment in addition to established priorities of nutrition, stimulation, and child protection. This report proposes the concept of baby WASH as an additional component of early childhood development programs.
(5)
Prendergast, A., Kelly, P. (2012). Enteropathies in the Developing World: Neglected Effects on Global Health. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, volume 86, issue 5, pages 756-763
www.ajtmh.org/content/86/5/756.full
A spectrum of enteropathies, characterized by small intestinal inflammation, reduced absorptive capacity, and increased intestinal permeability, commonly affect people in developing countries. Environmental enteropathy (EE), ubiquitous among people living in unhygienic conditions, likely mediates two interlinked public health problems of childhood, stunting and anemia, and underlies poor oral vaccine efficacy in developing countries. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) enteropathy, which frequently overlaps with EE, may contribute to immune activation and modulate HIV disease progression.
Or (to be decided upon!):
(5b)
Korpe, P. S., Petri, W. A. (2012). Environmental Enteropathy: Critical implications of a poorly understood condition. Trends in Molecular Medicine, volume 18, issue 6, pages 328–336
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3372657/
Environmental enteropathy (also called tropical enteropathy) is a subclinical condition caused by constant fecal-oral contamination and resulting in blunting of intestinal villi and intestinal inflammation. Although these histological changes were discovered decades ago, the clinical impact of environmental enteropathy is just starting to be recognized. This review examines literature and potential mechanisms of pathogenesis for this poorly understood condition.
You can find further important documents and website links dealing with this topic here:
- Put as a search term "Environmental enteropathy" in the SuSanA library search field, which brings up these results: www.susana.org/en/resources/library?sear...onmental+enteropathy
- Kris Makowka has listed some important recent publications on environmental enteropathy on the talk page of the Wikipedia article on this topic: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Environmental_enteropathy
- Wikipedia pages on topics concerning environmental enteropathy:
- Environmental enteropathy: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_enteropathy
- Tropical sprue: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropical_sprue
- Stunted growth: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stunted_growth
Regards,
Elisabeth
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
My Wikipedia user profile: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:EMsmile
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/elisabethvonmuench/
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You need to login to reply- Health and hygiene, schools and other non-household settings
- Nutrition and WASH (including stunted growth)
- Research on WASH & Nutrition, including environmental enteropathy
- Key documents for the sub-category on environmental enteropathy