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Methodological issues in diarrhoeal diseases epidemiology: definition of diarrhoeal episodes
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Published
1991-12
Author(s)
Baqui, Abdullah H.
Black, Robert E.
Yunus, Md.
Hoque, AR Azimul
Chowdhury, HR.
Sack, R Bradley
Metadata
A review of the diarrhoeal disease literature reveals considerable variability in
the definition of diarrhoeal episodes. The use of various definitions of
diarrhoea and episodes leads to misclassification, affects the estimates of the
disease burden in communities and reduces comparability of the findings from
different studies. This study is an attempt to validate the definition of
diarrhoeal episodes using prospectively collected community-based surveillance
data. In comparative validation analyses, three or more loose stools or any
number of loose stools containing blood in a 24-hour period seemed to be the best
definition of diarrhoea. Three intervening diarrhoea-free days seemed to be the
optimum to define a new episode. The implications of using differing definitions
and the importance of using a validated definition are discussed.
Citation
Int J Epidemiol 1991 Dec;20(4):1057-63