News Lifestyle India continues to be the hot bed of diarrhoeal deaths, Lancet

India continues to be the hot bed of diarrhoeal deaths, Lancet

More than 100,000 under-five children died due to diarrhoea in 2015 in India and it still continues to be a hotbed of diarrhoeal deaths in the world

diarrhoeal deaths india India remains the home of diarrhoeal deaths, Lancet

More than 100,000 under-five children died due to diarrhoea in 2015 in India and it still continues to be a hotbed of diarrhoeal deaths in the world, a new research has suggested. India and Nigeria combined saw 42 per cent of the 499,000 total global under-five deaths due to Diarrhoea in 2015, according to a study published in the journal Lancet Infectious Diseases showed. Diarrhoea has caused more than 1-3 million of deaths worldwide in the year 2015. It was the fourth leading cause of death among children under five. 

"Globally, in 2015, we estimate that diarrhoea was a leading cause of death among all ages," said the researchers who analysed data from the Global Burden of Diseases study. This study assessed cases, deaths, and etiologies spanning the past 25 years.

The study also revealed that at the global level, deaths due to diarrhoeal diseases have decreased substantially in the past 25 years, although progress has been faster in some countries than others.Between 2005 and 2015, the number of deaths due to diarrhoea decreased by 34·3 per cent among children younger than 5 years and decreased by 20·8 per cent among all ages.

 

Under-five mortality from diarrhoea was highest in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia. The researchers estimated diarrhoeal mortality by age, sex, geography, and year using the Cause of Death Ensemble Model (CODEm), a modelling platform shared across most causes of death in the GBD 2015 study. 

"Diarrhoea remains a largely preventable disease and cause of death, and continued efforts to improve access to safe water, sanitation, and childhood nutrition will be important in reducing the global burden of diarrhoea," the researchers said.

(With IANS Inputs)