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1 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh).
2 aminated water is used for irrigation (e.g., Bangladesh).
3 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh).
4 lture University horticulture farm in Dhaka (Bangladesh).
5 014, in Viet Nam; April 20-June 23, 2014, in Bangladesh).
6 through surveillance of households in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
7 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh.
8 ty, five-arm, randomised controlled trial in Bangladesh.
9 endent study populations in South Africa and Bangladesh.
10 ren from 14 elementary schools in Araihazar, Bangladesh.
11 osses <24 wk of gestation) in women in rural Bangladesh.
12 igin for the aus variety in central India or Bangladesh.
13 mples spanning an age gradient in Araihazar, Bangladesh.
14 luster-randomised open-label trial in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
15 ce to all clinically relevant antibiotics in Bangladesh.
16 ays of symptom onset, in an urban setting in Bangladesh.
17 Malaria is endemic in 13 of 64 districts in Bangladesh.
18 to PM2.5 in a low-income community in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
19 n and NHP hosts living in close proximity in Bangladesh.
20 a link between ENSO patterns and cholera in Bangladesh.
21 nd economic assessment of malaria control in Bangladesh.
22 nant women (26-28 wk of gestation) in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
23 care facilities providing maternal health in Bangladesh.
24 ed trial in villages in the Matlab region of Bangladesh.
25 ural areas of Timor-Leste, India, Niger, and Bangladesh.
26 s were born in India, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Bangladesh.
27 udied SFV in free-ranging rhesus macaques in Bangladesh.
28 lth Effects of Arsenic Longitudinal Study in Bangladesh.
29 cs in the Pabna and Sirajdikhan districts of Bangladesh.
30 nd transmission of diverse picornaviruses in Bangladesh.
31 th to 1 year of age in 147 infants in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
32 on among those under five in rural and urban Bangladesh.
33 ival and health behavior indicators in rural Bangladesh.
34 collected and analysed from 29 sites across Bangladesh.
35 years of age in The Gambia, Mali, Kenya, and Bangladesh.
36 apid, recent demographic transition in rural Bangladesh.
37 spitals in Matlab (rural) and Dhaka (urban), Bangladesh.
38 as associated with increased risk of T2DM in Bangladesh.
39 virus-associated diarrhea at Dhaka Hospital, Bangladesh.
40 aquifers tapped by millions of tube-wells in Bangladesh.
41 household water treatment products in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
42 co and bidis were commonly used in India and Bangladesh.
43 ring a field campaign in six villages across Bangladesh.
44 , the drinking water standards for India and Bangladesh.
45 een 2000 and 2006 in 142 villages of Matlab, Bangladesh.
46 emains unabated for millions of villagers in Bangladesh.
47 overall) in China, India, Russia, Egypt, and Bangladesh.
48 on into the routine immunization schedule in Bangladesh.
49 Sundarban mangrove ecosystems, Bengal Delta, Bangladesh.
50 practices among Type 2 diabetic patients of Bangladesh.
51 d the Digital Arsenator in the laboratory in Bangladesh.
52 ehold characteristics in rural Indonesia and Bangladesh.
53 and fatal respiratory infectious diseases in Bangladesh.
54 lood pressure (BP) in coastal populations in Bangladesh.
55 tal, a secondary-level hospital in Mirzapur, Bangladesh.
56 ded to reduce injury deaths and morbidity in Bangladesh.
57 d child linear growth and head size in rural Bangladesh.
58 baseline 78% in women and 71% in children in Bangladesh.
59 mmon in many developing countries, including Bangladesh.
60 and manganese: a two-year follow-up study in Bangladesh.
61 nal transition among U5s has yet to occur in Bangladesh.
62 fluenza vaccine (LAIV) at two field sites in Bangladesh.
63 ected from different local markets in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
64 ted complications are high among children in Bangladesh.
65 oung children, within the megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
66 hea among infants in an urban slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
67 gth-for-age z score (LAZ) <-2] are common in Bangladesh.
68 tality rate in China was higher than that of Bangladesh.
69 ht reduce the burden of influenza illness in Bangladesh.
70 ife is considered to be a common practice in Bangladesh.
71 velopment of a food composition database for Bangladesh, 10 minor indigenous fruits were analysed for
73 au, 1987-1990; Guinea-Bissau, 1996-1997; and Bangladesh, 1993-1996), we evaluated the lagged relation
74 dia (2 trials), urban India (1 trial), rural Bangladesh (2 trials), rural Nepal (1 trial), and rural
77 a (6.2% [95% CI, 5.9% to 6.5%]), followed by Bangladesh (3.9% [95% CI, 3.4% to 4.3%]), Madagascar (3.
79 sectional surveys of women with live births (Bangladesh 398, Malawi: 900, Nepal: 615), generalized li
80 emission of methane from irrigation water in Bangladesh, a currently unaccounted-for methane source.
82 s for long-term population mobility in rural Bangladesh, a region particularly vulnerable to environm
83 the assay to samples from infants in Dhaka, Bangladesh, after the administration of trivalent OPV (t
84 head and neck cancer in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, along with an economic concept termed the va
85 ally of -0.52% (95% CI, -0.58% to -0.46%) in Bangladesh and -0.11% (95% CI, -0.12% to -0.10%) in Indi
86 s analysis comprised 1) 9131 children across Bangladesh and 2) 18,636 children enrolled in a surveill
87 r the evaluation sample, 20 sub-districts in Bangladesh and 40 communes in Viet Nam were randomized t
89 h severe cholera caused by V. cholerae O1 in Bangladesh and age-, sex-, and ABO-matched Bangladeshi c
90 ound in As-contaminated groundwater wells in Bangladesh and Cambodia wherein they might influence the
91 Six field trials were conducted (one each in Bangladesh and China, two in Arkansas, USA over 2 yr, an
92 ies were funded by the UN Population Fund in Bangladesh and China, UN Women in Cambodia and Indonesia
94 as evaluated by blindly testing 123 wells in Bangladesh and comparing with laboratory measurements; 6
97 through routine government services in urban Bangladesh and evaluated the benefit of adding behaviour
99 ria elimination is an achievable prospect in Bangladesh and failure to push for elimination nearly en
100 cholera patient stool samples from Haiti and Bangladesh and found that phage predation can drive the
102 sible additional undetected cases throughout Bangladesh and highlights the importance of surveillance
103 sure must remain a public health priority in Bangladesh and in other regions affected by arsenic-cont
107 performance from the Indian state of Bihar, Bangladesh and Nepal to parameterize a mathematical mode
113 ium levels in rice grain were the highest in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, with both these countries also
114 y (1996-2011) among U5s and their mothers in Bangladesh and to examine how the association between ma
115 e sample macaque faeces across nine sites in Bangladesh and use consensus PCR and sequencing to disco
116 oundwater As concentration measurements from Bangladesh and verified using 78 As measurements from so
117 sitive impacts on breastfeeding practices in Bangladesh and Viet Nam than standard counseling with le
119 010, in Viet Nam; April 28-June 26, 2010, in Bangladesh) and endline (June 16-August 30, 2014, in Vie
120 y would need to be 0.051 per 1000 infants in Bangladesh, and 0.018 per 1000 in Nigeria, to cost 0.5 p
121 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, and a representative strain from the 2010 Ha
122 n cholera dynamics in the megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh, and afford a basis for cholera forecasts at
123 virus in the US, Nipah virus in Malaysia and Bangladesh, and also present a non-zoonotic example (cho
124 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, and Centre for International Child Health, U
125 study was to identify children with PIDD in Bangladesh, and estimate the proportion with chronic pol
127 The growth kinetics of NiV-Malaysia, NiV-Bangladesh, and HeV were determined in bronchial/trachea
128 ge z score (WAZ) <-2] aged 6-23 mo in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and identified by active community surveilla
129 ousehold level, controlled trials in Matlab, Bangladesh, and Navrongo, Ghana, have shown that increas
131 n of health and socioeconomic development in Bangladesh, and the implementation attributes of scale,
132 ., the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Mehta Basin within Bangladesh, and the Mekong Delta in Cambodia, along with
133 tribution of groundwater As contamination of Bangladesh, and the predictions also indicate high risk
136 break of chikungunya in a rural community in Bangladesh as a case study to obtain a more comprehensiv
138 ed population-based surveys from Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belarus, Pakistan, and South Africa to inves
140 d in relevant border regions in Thailand and Bangladesh, between January, 2013, and September, 2014.
143 services and health systems in 6 countries: Bangladesh, Brazil, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Tajikistan, and
144 n 14 low-income and middle-income countries (Bangladesh, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Mexico, Philipp
145 ols (EC) from high leprosy-prevalence areas (Bangladesh, Brazil, Ethiopia) and from South Korea, wher
147 ent in a harmonious manner across 8 sites in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Peru, South
148 lciparum malaria hospitalized in Chittagong, Bangladesh, bulk RCD was measured using a laser diffract
149 own only during the summer (aman) monsoon in Bangladesh but more than half is now grown during the dr
150 eral leishmaniasis (VL) in India, Nepal, and Bangladesh, but high rates of clinical failures have bee
151 itted between humans and synanthropic NHP in Bangladesh, but the directionality of transmission is un
152 ention can effectively reduce As exposure in Bangladesh by motivating teachers, children, and parents
153 emand for nontraditional cookstoves in rural Bangladesh by using both stated preference (from a natio
154 nfections from artesunate efficacy trials in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam were ge
155 rsenic exposure via drinking water span from Bangladesh, Chile, and Taiwan to the United States.
156 nce sites in tropical and subtropical areas (Bangladesh, China, Egypt, Guatemala, Kenya, South Africa
157 higher than expected (Afghanistan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, China, Egypt, India, Iran, Jordan, Nepal, an
160 -five low-income or middle-income countries (Bangladesh, Colombia, India, Jordan and Sri Lanka), and
162 lic of Korea, Nepal, Mongolia, Cambodia, and Bangladesh could significantly reduce the ED100000 and A
163 mortality ratio (MMR) and from these and six Bangladesh Demographic and Health Surveys to measure cha
164 from Drowning project, implemented in rural Bangladesh, did a census on 1.2 million people to fill t
165 analyses suggesting that the women in rural Bangladesh do not perceive indoor air pollution as a sig
166 ecimens from five NHP taxa at16 locations in Bangladesh during five field sessions, from January 2007
167 were deemed qualified to do fieldwork (15 in Bangladesh, eight in Guatemala, nine in Mexico, and ten
168 ct revisited these places but looked anew at Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kyrgyzstan, Thailand, and the Indi
172 s were collected from mother-infant pairs in Bangladesh from the third trimester of pregnancy to 72 w
173 of bans in six countries-Jordan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Greece [Crete], South Korea, and Taiwan) or
176 in climates with high annual precipitation (Bangladesh, Guatemala, and Thailand) during wet months,
178 his Series, we present evidence to show that Bangladesh has achieved substantial health advances, but
180 e suggests that the prevalence of malaria in Bangladesh has decreased since the the Global Fund to Fi
182 be captured simplistically because health in Bangladesh has the paradox of steep and sustained reduct
184 recently, wheat blast (in South America and Bangladesh) have become diseases of major importance in
187 ed to 211 human stool specimens collected in Bangladesh in 2007 to 2008 for acute flaccid paralysis s
189 e occurred in an urban community near Dhaka, Bangladesh, in late 2008 and were reported to authoritie
190 als of artesunate efficacy were conducted in Bangladesh, in northwestern Thailand near the Myanmar bo
191 luster-randomised controlled trials in rural Bangladesh, India, and Nepal to examine the association
194 s in rice, research has primarily focused on Bangladesh, India, China, and the United States with lim
195 ific gathered leading hepatitis experts from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Ph
196 deaths among adults aged >/=45 y in 2004 in Bangladesh, India, mainland China, Japan, Republic of Ko
197 f randomised controlled trials undertaken in Bangladesh, India, Malawi, and Nepal in which the effect
198 enya, Mali, Mozambique) and 3 in South Asia (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan), with each site linked to a
201 8 years or older (face-to-face interviews in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Peru, and Tanzania; telephone int
202 a 2-y community trust intervention in rural Bangladesh involving 121 union councils (the smallest ru
205 clones of V. cholerae from surface waters in Bangladesh is dramatically improved by using enrichment
206 ealth and Development (MAL-ED) study site in Bangladesh is located in the capital city of Dhaka in an
208 den of fatal and non-fatal injuries in rural Bangladesh is substantial, accounting for 44 050 deaths
213 eropathogens associated with malnutrition in Bangladesh.Malnourished children [weight-for-age z score
215 e collected from infants in an urban slum in Bangladesh (Mirpur, Dhaka) as part of the performance of
220 es (representing 30 agro-ecological zones of Bangladesh) of six prioritized key dietary protein sourc
221 zed trial with a factorial design in Matlab, Bangladesh, of 4436 pregnant women, recruited between No
226 e [Indonesia (OR: 2.32; 95% CI: 2.25, 2.40); Bangladesh (OR: 2.11; 95% CI: 1.96, 2.26)], and older ag
227 By disaggregating gains in child health in Bangladesh over the past several decades, significant im
230 cluster-randomized controlled trial in rural Bangladesh, prenatal MM supplementation compared with ir
231 strains, collected in Ghana, Mali, Kenya and Bangladesh, providing the largest data set of P[6] rotav
235 ) based SONO household filters, developed in Bangladesh, remove As by corrosion of locally available
237 nt SFV proviruses found in blood cells of 30 Bangladesh rhesus macaques to RNA sequences of transcrip
238 tural disasters, warrant careful analysis of Bangladesh's approach to health-service delivery in the
242 nnium Development Goals agenda for health in Bangladesh should be defined to encourage a second gener
243 a for achieving universal health coverage in Bangladesh should include development of a long-term nat
244 rage of 1 group per 1414 population in rural Bangladesh showed no effect on neonatal mortality, despi
246 ere initially drinking from high-As wells (> Bangladesh standard of 50 mug/L) and significantly impro
248 stituted mouse model, we showed that the NiV Bangladesh strain induced cytopathic lesions in lung gra
253 ERCH is a case-control study in 7 countries: Bangladesh, The Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thail
254 evere pneumonia from 9 sites in 7 countries (Bangladesh, the Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thail
255 for the size of their respective economies, Bangladesh, the poorest of the three countries, incurred
258 a, Mali, South Africa, Zambia, Thailand, and Bangladesh), through 32 on-site courses and a training w
261 urban hospitals and one rural field site in Bangladesh to determine whether two alternative antibiot
262 trines, we assigned 380 communities in rural Bangladesh to different marketing treatments-community m
263 three distinctive features that have enabled Bangladesh to improve health-service coverage and health
264 n-based active surveillance for influenza in Bangladesh, to assess transmission and contain further s
265 Among pregnant women in poor communities in Bangladesh, treatment with multiple micronutrients, incl
266 nation sessions in 8 districts and cities of Bangladesh, using purposive sampling during August-Octob
267 rkuch, endemic to the saline coastal area of Bangladesh, was used in this study as the source of tole
270 based on 1,505 mother-infant pairs in rural Bangladesh, we evaluated the associations between early-
273 dwelling infants enrolled at birth in Dhaka, Bangladesh, we observed that common measures of healthy
275 ndomised, placebo-controlled trial in Dhaka, Bangladesh, we showed that oseltamivir treatment of inde
276 tudy of acute febrile respiratory illness in Bangladesh, we tested paired serum specimens from 852 ch
277 The main arsenic mitigation measures in Bangladesh, well-switching and deep tube wells, have red
278 fish, shrimp and prawn from local markets in Bangladesh were analysed for concentrations of total Fe,
281 rasitemia admitted to a referral hospital in Bangladesh were randomized to receive a single dose of l
282 by surveillance of households in Kamalapur, Bangladesh were randomly allocated on a 1:1 basis to rec
283 of 480 9-month-old participants from Matlab, Bangladesh, were enrolled in a study with a primary obje
286 Healthy infants 4-6 weeks old in Sylhet, Bangladesh, were randomized to receive tOPV with or with
287 4 years in urban Kamalapur and rural Matlab, Bangladesh, were randomly assigned in a 2:1 ratio, accor
288 with high reduction potential include India, Bangladesh, western Europe, China, several countries in
289 st to our findings among synanthropic NHP in Bangladesh where 100% of the picornaviruses detected wer
291 f children living in an urban slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh, who exhibited consistently healthy growth.
295 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, with acute diarrhoea (defined by WHO as thre
296 eposition in the summer Indian subcontinent, Bangladesh, with inorganic arsenic dominating, accountin
297 ve longitudinal birth cohort study in Dhaka, Bangladesh, with monthly Giardia and continuous diarrhea
298 <59 months from the Gambia, Mali, Kenya, and Bangladesh, with or without moderate-to-severe diarrhea
299 Cluster randomized, double-masked trial in Bangladesh, with pregnancy surveillance starting Decembe
300 tional drinking water standard for India and Bangladesh would place many people above the safety thre
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