scholarly journals Child Health Problems in Agricultural Setting

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lantin Sulistyorini ◽  
Peni Perdani Juliningrum ◽  
Ira Rahmawati ◽  
Eka Afdi

Besuki Residency well known at agricultural feld. Child and infant mortality in this area is high. Child healthproblems of agricultural-oriented at Besuki Residency no one has research yet. This research uses quantitativemethods that are retrospectives that include child health problems since 2017 until 2018. Quantitative methodis used to collect data on patient characteristics (gender, disease, nursing problems, and age criteria) and illnessto the children’s disease based on agricultural that arise due to activities or agricultural climate. The sampleincluded 807 children at seven hospital scattered in several residency areas using quota sampling technic. Dataanalysis uses confrmatory factor analyze (CFA), with parameter data estimation uses analysis of momentstructures. The result of p-values for health problems to gender = 0.033 (p<0.05), health problems to disease= 0.008 (p<0.05), health problems to nursing problems = 0.000 (p<0.05), health problems to age criteria =0.000 (p<0.05). Fit model value indicates that the model is perfect ft. Child health problems, especially such aspneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria in the agricultural area with an agricultural perspective in the Besuki Residencycan affect gender, disease, nursing problems, and age criteria. So that these health problems require specifchealth interventions or programs according to the characteristics of gender, disease, nursing problems, and agecriteria. The nurse should have a mapping of nursing problems and special agriculture-oriented interventions.

2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 50
Author(s):  
Mitra Andini Sigilipoe ◽  
Katrin Tsang

Background: Several studies have mentioned about health problems of people who lives within a landfll area, especially for pregnant mothers and the health outcomes such as low birth weight, spontaneous abortion, infant mortality, and other health issues. In Prek Torl-Pnomh Penh-Cambodia, about 200 households, who are living under poverty line, dwell in a slum surrounded by heaps of decaying wastes. These households consist of women within productive age of 18-49 years old, and they are exposed to the hazard of wastes every single day. Objectives: The study is aimed to assess the need of Prek Toul's population, especially health problems regarding maternal and child health. Methods: Household surveys were carried out in June 2012 and 2013. In 3 days, a team from S.H. Ho College, under supervision of Prof. Katrina Tsang, conducted the survey to 88 and 90 households, respectfully. Data was analyzed using frequency and compared with Cambodia's 2010 Demographic and Household survey result. Statistical tests were also used to see if there was any correlation or association between household income, education level or status, antenatal service, and infant mortality. Conclusion: The fndings of this study suggested that low level of education and income is connected with the uptake of antenatal service. The perception of access to health care is not in line with the uptake of antenatal service. More qualitative studies might be needed to explore the reason for that issue. Further studies may shed more light on the reason of why women did not use antenatal service, and in time may help in designing new interventions for delivering more suitable maternal and child health care for the particular population


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 690-701
Author(s):  
A. Frederick North

The answers to four questions one must ask in planning to meet the health needs of any group of children define some of the most important research issues in child health. 1. What are the functionally important health problems to be found with some frequency in a group of children? Many are well defined and easy to count, and for some of these we have relatively good counts. While we know that the prevalence of many health problems is related to socioeconomic status, we know practically nothing about the mechanisms by which this relationship is mediated. There are certain health findings—for example, anemia, poor dietary history, and certain deviations of behavior and speech—that we are reluctant to label as health problems until we have much more evidence about their actual functional consequences. There are certain health problems, especially the behavior and learning problems of school-aged children, that we would like to be able to define in terms of findings at a much earlier age. 2. What techniques will efficiently identify those children who have functionally important health problems? We have a handful of effective and efficient screening tests, as well as several that are widely used but need much further definition in terms of reliability and validity. The series of tests and questionnaire items strung together in a physician's history and physical examination certainly falls into the category of tests whose reliability and validity needs vastly more study. All of the descriptive and predictive tests of behavior and learning, as well as those of nutrition and speech, need much further validation before they can be recommended for routine use. 3. What treatment or intervention techniques will be most effective in remedying these problems? Because this is the realm of traditional medical research, we know a great deal about many of the specific health problems which are to be found in children. We are, however, rarely able to critically weigh costs and benefits of one form of treatment against costs and benefits of another form of treatment or of no treatment at all. Many of the data we will need to make such logical decisions will come from studies of the natural history of illness and from double blind studies of various forms of intervention. A continuing problem is the perpetuation of ineffective intervention techniques—bed rest, tonsillectomy, much psychotherapy—because of the humanistic urge to "do something to help," even when we do not know that what we do actually helps. 4. What resources—financial, manpower, administrative, organizational—will be necessary to prevent, identify, and remedy these problems in a population of children? Given current techniques and organizations, we seem to require one children's physician for every 1,000 families with children and between $100 and $200 a year for each child. The opportunity for reallocation of tasks between the doctor and his helpers and for new organizational and financial settings is enormous. The tools to measure the effectiveness and efficiency of such changes are weak and need much greater development. We do know that use of whatever services are available can be greatly enhanced by making these services responsive to the real needs of the recipients or clients. With so many gaps in basic knowledge, it is hardly surprising that methods to best achieve better health and function for young children are criticized and debated. But, gaps in knowledge and lack of organizational models of proven usefulness do not preclude pragmatic decisions about the content and organization of programs to meet the health needs of pre-school children. Such imperfect knowledge does, however, dictate that practical decisions must be tentative, and that diversity of program content and organization is highly desirable, both in adapting to local conditions and in testing and proving new methods. It also dictates that each of the many diverse patterns and programs which develop must build into itself evaluation and monitoring systems leading both to program improvement and to more definite knowledge about effectiveness of treatment techniques and organizational plans. Perhaps the greatest research need is for tools and motivational arrangements that will assure that every practitioner of child health and every organization involved in the promotion of child health can and does fully evaluate his own results in terms which describe the real issues and modifies his programs in terms of this evaluation. John Gardner20 has described the seff-renewing individual or institution as one who is constantly aware of his actual problems and operating results and is constantly developing new resources to deal with the ever-changing situation. Perhaps the Gardner concept of self-renewal is what we need most, both in providing today's services and in defining tomorrow's research issues in child health.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 2053-2054
Author(s):  
Jack Wilkinson ◽  
Sonsoles Navarro-Rubio Coello de Portugal ◽  
Jonathan Huang ◽  
Francisco Güell

2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (12) ◽  
pp. e4671-e4687
Author(s):  
Karlijn Pellikaan ◽  
Anna G W Rosenberg ◽  
Anja A Kattentidt-Mouravieva ◽  
Rogier Kersseboom ◽  
Anja G Bos-Roubos ◽  
...  

Abstract Context Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a complex hypothalamic disorder, combining hyperphagia, hypotonia, intellectual disability, and pituitary hormone deficiencies. Annual mortality of patients with PWS is high (3%). In half of the patients, the cause of death is obesity related and/or of cardiopulmonary origin. Health problems leading to this increased mortality often remain undetected due to the complexity and rareness of the syndrome. Objective To assess the prevalence of health problems in adults with PWS retrospectively. Patients, Design, and Setting We systematically screened 115 PWS adults for undiagnosed health problems. All patients visited the multidisciplinary outpatient clinic for rare endocrine syndromes at the Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands. We collected the results of medical questionnaires, interviews, physical examinations, biochemical measurements, polygraphy, polysomnography, and radiology. Main outcome measures Presence or absence of endocrine and nonendocrine comorbidities in relation to living situation, body mass index, genotype, and demographic factors. Results Seventy patients (61%) had undiagnosed health problems, while 1 in every 4 patients had multiple undiagnosed health problems simultaneously. All males and 93% of females had hypogonadism, 74% had scoliosis, 18% had hypertension, 19% had hypercholesterolemia, 17% had type 2 diabetes mellitus, and 17% had hypothyroidism. Unfavorable lifestyles were common: 22% exercised too little (according to PWS criteria) and 37% did not see a dietitian. Conclusions Systematic screening revealed many undiagnosed health problems in PWS adults. Based on patient characteristics, we provide an algorithm for diagnostics and treatment, with the aim to prevent early complications and reduce mortality in this vulnerable patient group.


2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 357-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yolanda Ogbolu

Almost all of the millions of babies who die worldwide in the first four weeks of life are in low- and middle-income countries. The socioeconomic status of developing countries adversely affects maternal-child health because it limits access to adequate nutrition, quality health care, medications, safe water, adequate sanitation, and other basic social services. The factors associated with high infant mortality rates transcend national boundaries, making infant mortality a critical global health problem. Poverty is one of the most important factors affecting the infant mortality rate in Nigeria. This examination of infant mortality in Nigeria exemplifies the multifactorial national and international issues underlying infant mortality in developing countries. Infant mortality in these countries will not improve without global attention and intervention. By finding creative ways to share expert knowledge about caring for neonates, neonatal nurses can contribute to global improvements in maternal-child health care.


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