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1 (0% in rural Puno, Peru, to 7.8% in Matlab, Bangladesh).
2 lture University horticulture farm in Dhaka (Bangladesh).
3 014, in Viet Nam; April 20-June 23, 2014, in Bangladesh).
4 c enteric fever (typhoid and paratyphoid) in Bangladesh.
5 adesh suggest connectivity with bats east of Bangladesh.
6 n Mozambique, South Africa, Kenya, Mali, and Bangladesh.
7 ntry study conducted in Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh.
8 ses were detected in live poultry markets in Bangladesh.
9 cluster-randomized controlled trial in rural Bangladesh.
10 design of serosurveys and tackling dengue in Bangladesh.
11 hingya leaders displaced to refugee camps in Bangladesh.
12 eir families across economic strata in rural Bangladesh.
13 nutrition intervention and control areas in Bangladesh.
14 cines in children <2 years of age in Matlab, Bangladesh.
15 generated from medication-vendor surveys in Bangladesh.
16 V in a geographically defined area in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
17 nteric fever among children aged <5 years in Bangladesh.
18 and anemia among children in rural Kenya and Bangladesh.
19 prevalences were 48.8% in Kenya and 17.4% in Bangladesh.
20 tive study for dengue from 70 communities in Bangladesh.
21 (n = 71), and healthy controls (n = 48) from Bangladesh.
22 ial spread of malaria parasites in southeast Bangladesh.
23 impact after the nationwide introduction in Bangladesh.
24 ern Rakhine State who have been displaced to Bangladesh.
25 n-inferiority trial in two clinics in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
26 ems existing for up to 20 years in India and Bangladesh.
27 96 villages (population roughly 125 000) in Bangladesh.
28 ine State, displacing thousands of people to Bangladesh.
29 s in children growing up in an urban slum in Bangladesh.
30 rom community clinics in Narsingdi district, Bangladesh.
31 n, age-descending, phase 1/2 trial in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
32 ines in the Galachipa subdistrict of coastal Bangladesh.
33 identify risk factors for hospitalization in Bangladesh.
34 worldwide, including [Formula: see text] in Bangladesh.
35 eloped in Ontario, Canada in infants born in Bangladesh.
36 together affect roughly a third of adults in Bangladesh.
37 trolled trial in two subdistricts of Sylhet, Bangladesh.
38 tial to greatly reduce the typhoid burden in Bangladesh.
39 not reduce the incidence of preterm birth in Bangladesh.
40 argeted for elimination in India, Nepal, and Bangladesh.
41 sis within an urban and a rural community in Bangladesh.
42 come, densely populated communities in urban Bangladesh.
43 evealed the growing burden of the disease in Bangladesh.
44 a link between ENSO patterns and cholera in Bangladesh.
45 ed trial in villages in the Matlab region of Bangladesh.
46 cs in the Pabna and Sirajdikhan districts of Bangladesh.
47 on into the routine immunization schedule in Bangladesh.
48 practices among Type 2 diabetic patients of Bangladesh.
49 and fatal respiratory infectious diseases in Bangladesh.
50 lood pressure (BP) in coastal populations in Bangladesh.
51 tal, a secondary-level hospital in Mirzapur, Bangladesh.
52 e impact of cholera-control interventions in Bangladesh.
53 ded to reduce injury deaths and morbidity in Bangladesh.
54 d child linear growth and head size in rural Bangladesh.
55 baseline 78% in women and 71% in children in Bangladesh.
56 mmon in many developing countries, including Bangladesh.
57 and manganese: a two-year follow-up study in Bangladesh.
58 nal transition among U5s has yet to occur in Bangladesh.
59 fluenza vaccine (LAIV) at two field sites in Bangladesh.
60 ected from different local markets in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
61 ted complications are high among children in Bangladesh.
62 oung children, within the megacity of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
63 hea among infants in an urban slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
64 gth-for-age z score (LAZ) <-2] are common in Bangladesh.
65 tality rate in China was higher than that of Bangladesh.
66 ht reduce the burden of influenza illness in Bangladesh.
67 sh, due in part to the high risks present in Bangladesh.
68 undernutrition among slum-dwelling adults in Bangladesh.
69 ge and intergenerational households, such as Bangladesh.
70 2 from Nepal, 4 from Pakistan, and none from Bangladesh.
71 orders on women and their families in rural Bangladesh.
72 ase were enrolled at two remote hospitals in Bangladesh.
73 care in Rohingya refugees and caregivers in Bangladesh.
74 glycemic control specially in urban areas of Bangladesh.
75 Rohingya refugee population in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
76 sis (PKDL), in a highly endemic community in Bangladesh.
77 erent environmental parameters in Uganda and Bangladesh.
78 effective for reducing human rabies cases in Bangladesh.
79 491 individuals from a case-control study in Bangladesh.
80 s conducted in the Bauniabadh area of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
81 wildlife reservoir, Pteropus medius bats, in Bangladesh.
82 Cholera occurs throughout a large part of Bangladesh.
83 isplaced Rohingyas crossed into Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
84 rrhea patient households conducted in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
85 ctious diarrhea requiring hospitalization in Bangladesh.
86 dely used in intensive poultry production in Bangladesh.
87 based surveillance system for Nipah virus in Bangladesh.
88 ve panel survey of the Matlab subdistrict of Bangladesh.
89 spitals experienced a clinical complication (Bangladesh, 0.6% [18/3032]; Nepal, 2.3% [12/531]; Pakist
91 firmed enteric fever cases: 4,873 (56%) from Bangladesh, 1,602 (18%) from Nepal and 2,230 (26%) from
94 a mean +/- SD age of 22.1 +/- 1.8 mo, and in Bangladesh 1470 participants were measured at a mean +/-
95 k cluster random household surveys in Dhaka, Bangladesh (2 sites); Karachi, Pakistan; Kathmandu, Nepa
96 dia (2 trials), urban India (1 trial), rural Bangladesh (2 trials), rural Nepal (1 trial), and rural
98 olled 31 841 households (53 926 children) in Bangladesh, 25 510 households (84 196 children and adult
99 talization data available were hospitalized (Bangladesh, 27% [1295/4868]; Nepal, 29% [455/1595]; Paki
103 on-susceptibility was detected in 77 (2%) in Bangladesh, 9 (.67%) in Nepal and 9 (.59%) isolates in P
104 30, 2018, 2472 patients (1527 patients from Bangladesh; 945 patients from Pakistan) were enrolled an
106 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh; a University of Oxford research review; and
107 ible patients were adults (aged >18 years in Bangladesh; aged >15 years in Pakistan) with pulmonary t
109 s analysis comprised 1) 9131 children across Bangladesh and 2) 18,636 children enrolled in a surveill
110 r the evaluation sample, 20 sub-districts in Bangladesh and 40 communes in Viet Nam were randomized t
111 impacts of MDV on human rabies incidence in Bangladesh and a subset of rabies death data (422) for c
112 h severe cholera caused by V. cholerae O1 in Bangladesh and age-, sex-, and ABO-matched Bangladeshi c
113 s would enrich the food composition table of Bangladesh and allow the population to consume more wild
114 and heel prick blood spots were collected in Bangladesh and analyzed at a newborn screening facility
115 ies were funded by the UN Population Fund in Bangladesh and China, UN Women in Cambodia and Indonesia
116 ru in Kenya; Kumasi in Ghana; and Rangpur in Bangladesh and compared three to five sanitation approac
118 sible additional undetected cases throughout Bangladesh and highlights the importance of surveillance
120 continues to cause outbreaks in South Asia (Bangladesh and India), and these viruses have remained t
121 era remains a major public health problem in Bangladesh and little is known about cholera outside of
127 le illnesses, and healthy controls in Dhaka, Bangladesh and performed Tubex and Typhidot tests, the W
128 estigated the gut microbiomes of humans from Bangladesh and Tanzania, two African baboon social group
129 sitive impacts on breastfeeding practices in Bangladesh and Viet Nam than standard counseling with le
131 010, in Viet Nam; April 28-June 26, 2010, in Bangladesh) and endline (June 16-August 30, 2014, in Vie
132 y would need to be 0.051 per 1000 infants in Bangladesh, and 0.018 per 1000 in Nigeria, to cost 0.5 p
135 Rohingya and host population in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, and characterize the burden of vision impair
137 g who were living in an urban slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and had not benefited from a nutritional int
138 were recruited from 2 hospitals in India and Bangladesh, and healthy participants (N = 44) underwent
139 ge z score (WAZ) <-2] aged 6-23 mo in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and identified by active community surveilla
140 e migrant youths from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Iran who arrived in Greece as UAMs but h
141 tiary hospitals located in Dhaka and Sylhet, Bangladesh, and is focused on comparing their genomic ch
142 Ethiopia, IgangaMayuge in Uganda, Matlab in Bangladesh, and Kintampo in Ghana) were randomly assigne
145 ve HDSSs: Mozambique, Mali, Ethiopia, Kenya, Bangladesh, and South Africa; the seventh, in Sierra Leo
146 unique to toddlers with stunted growth from Bangladesh, and that confer the capacity to similarly ta
147 ., the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Mehta Basin within Bangladesh, and the Mekong Delta in Cambodia, along with
148 among the general adult population in rural Bangladesh, and to assess the effect of these interventi
149 d ICP3, commonly shed by cholera patients in Bangladesh, as models to understand the predation dynami
150 ected from poultry shops in Sylhet division, Bangladesh, as well as to determine correlation between
151 were available from 6 countries (Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belarus, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Sout
154 urban and rural communities in 11 countries (Bangladesh, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, India, Pakis
158 from near birth until 5 y of age at sites in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Nepal, Peru, South Africa, an
159 lciparum malaria hospitalized in Chittagong, Bangladesh, bulk RCD was measured using a laser diffract
160 ts in WSH also reduced the risk of anemia in Bangladesh but did not provide added benefit over the nu
161 own only during the summer (aman) monsoon in Bangladesh but more than half is now grown during the dr
162 s and maternal micronutrient status in rural Bangladesh, but effects on newborn status are unknown.
165 ective cohort study at tertiary hospitals in Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, Ghana, India, Lebanon, Nepa
166 -five low-income or middle-income countries (Bangladesh, Colombia, India, Jordan and Sri Lanka), and
167 visited participants six times per month in Bangladesh compared with monthly in Kenya and Zimbabwe;
170 from Drowning project, implemented in rural Bangladesh, did a census on 1.2 million people to fill t
172 y risks compared to respondents remaining in Bangladesh, due in part to the high risks present in Ban
173 d October 2018, the laboratories of 7 sites (Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Sierra Le
174 in many of the countries where CHAMPS works-Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Sierra Le
176 hine State, Myanmar to Cox's Bazar District, Bangladesh, following escalated violence by Myanmar secu
177 We conducted enteric fever surveillance in Bangladesh from 2004 through 2016 in the inpatient depar
178 hea who were admitted in a rural hospital in Bangladesh from 2010-2012 and from matched, healthy cont
180 identified during outbreak investigations in Bangladesh from April 2001 through April 2014 to investi
182 of bans in six countries-Jordan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Greece [Crete], South Korea, and Taiwan) or
183 2017 in ten countries across three regions (Bangladesh, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Namibia, Nepal, Rwanda
184 hed at sites in seven countries (Baliakandi, Bangladesh; Harar and Kersa, Ethiopia; Siaya and Kisumu,
189 in 5 CHAMPS sites in sub-Saharan Africa and Bangladesh have been incorporated into the DeCoDe proces
191 although the A(H5N1) viruses circulating in Bangladesh have the capacity to infect and replicate in
192 recently, wheat blast (in South America and Bangladesh) have become diseases of major importance in
193 andomized, controlled trial (CRT) in Matlab, Bangladesh, HRV was included in Matlab's routine immuniz
194 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh [icddr,b] service area [ISA] and government s
195 albertii was first isolated from infants in Bangladesh in 1991, although the bacterium was initially
198 We used data from a community-based trial in Bangladesh in which we enrolled pregnant women from 2013
199 .0% of soil from houses of leprosy patients (Bangladesh), in 10.7% from armadillos' holes (Suriname)
200 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Bangladesh, including interviews, water point observatio
201 quine plus mefloquine; and in Laos, Myanmar, Bangladesh, India, and the Democratic Republic of the Co
202 ific gathered leading hepatitis experts from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Ph
203 condary- and tertiary-level hospitals across Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Nigeria, and Pakistan underwen
207 a 2-y community trust intervention in rural Bangladesh involving 121 union councils (the smallest ru
209 at undernutrition in slum-dwelling adults in Bangladesh is associated with numerous physiological and
211 den of fatal and non-fatal injuries in rural Bangladesh is substantial, accounting for 44 050 deaths
212 The prevalence of adult undernutrition in Bangladesh is substantial, but there have been few studi
213 uch, endemic to the southern saline coast of Bangladesh, is known to have salt tolerance traits and c
215 ca, Mozambique; Basse, The Gambia; Mirzapur, Bangladesh; Kolkata, India; and Bin Qasim Town, Karachi,
218 eropathogens associated with malnutrition in Bangladesh.Malnourished children [weight-for-age z score
219 e collected from infants in an urban slum in Bangladesh (Mirpur, Dhaka) as part of the performance of
222 +N: 27.3%; PR: 0.56; 95% CI: 0.42, 0.75] and Bangladesh (N: 8.7%; PR: 0.50; 95% CI: 0.32, 0.78; WSH+N
226 cted enteric fever cases from 6 hospitals in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan, and enrolled patients i
232 control study among children <2 years old in Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, and Vietnam to evaluate inf
235 r personal experience with the appearance in Bangladesh of a destructive new fungal disease called wh
236 es (representing 30 agro-ecological zones of Bangladesh) of six prioritized key dietary protein sourc
242 cted from families in Rupganj upazila, rural Bangladesh (randomly selected from participants in a ran
244 inding that the 9-11 month injectable-based 'Bangladesh' regimen was non-inferior to longer regimens,
246 1P[8] rotavirus vaccine (RotarixTM) trial in Bangladesh, rotavirus-specific plasma IgA antibody seroc
248 5N1) viruses have circulated continuously in Bangladesh since 2007, and active surveillance has detec
251 stituted mouse model, we showed that the NiV Bangladesh strain induced cytopathic lesions in lung gra
252 we challenged African green monkeys with the Bangladesh strain of NiV by the intranasal route using t
254 ry of a Malaysia-clade NiV strain in eastern Bangladesh suggest connectivity with bats east of Bangla
255 E. coli populations from broiler chickens in Bangladesh suggesting a massive horizontal spread of mcr
257 omes of 27 phages from the United States and Bangladesh that infect the prevalent human gut bacterium
258 ERCH is a case-control study in 7 countries: Bangladesh, The Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thail
259 evere pneumonia from 9 sites in 7 countries (Bangladesh, the Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thail
262 illage-based rice processing plants in rural Bangladesh, this study considered how parboiling rice co
263 a, Mali, South Africa, Zambia, Thailand, and Bangladesh), through 32 on-site courses and a training w
265 bstantially from 0.47 (95% UI: 0.34-0.58) in Bangladesh to 5.6 (95% UI: 4.6-6.1) in the Czech Republi
266 with these environmental reservoirs in rural Bangladesh to assess the relative contribution of differ
267 from 11 geographically diverse hospitals in Bangladesh to describe pathogen-specific burdens of diar
268 contacts of 94 Nipah virus case patients in Bangladesh to determine how contact patterns (physical a
269 pril-May 2018 among Rohingya in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, to assess polio immunity and inform vaccinat
270 n-based active surveillance for influenza in Bangladesh, to assess transmission and contain further s
272 (n = 107) and healthy controls (n = 45) from Bangladesh using high-resolution liquid chromatography-m
273 female) living in Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh, using convenience sampling to recruit partic
274 nation sessions in 8 districts and cities of Bangladesh, using purposive sampling during August-Octob
276 al of HeV and both strains of NiV (Malaysia, Bangladesh) was assessed in cynomolgus monkeys and compa
277 rkuch, endemic to the saline coastal area of Bangladesh, was used in this study as the source of tole
279 In the context of groundwater arsenic in Bangladesh, we challenge this notion here by showing tha
281 luster-randomized, controlled trial in rural Bangladesh, we enrolled pregnant women in 4 arms: contro
283 sistance against MoT isolates in Bolivia and Bangladesh, we performed a large genome-wide association
285 fish, shrimp and prawn from local markets in Bangladesh were analysed for concentrations of total Fe,
286 ters) in two low-income urban communities in Bangladesh were randomly assigned (1:1) to have their dr
287 of 480 9-month-old participants from Matlab, Bangladesh, were enrolled in a study with a primary obje
290 4 years in urban Kamalapur and rural Matlab, Bangladesh, were randomly assigned in a 2:1 ratio, accor
291 with high reduction potential include India, Bangladesh, western Europe, China, several countries in
295 onal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, with acute diarrhoea (defined by WHO as thre
296 recruited women from 16 pairs of villages in Bangladesh, with each pair comprising similar villages f
297 e host community of all ages in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, with fixed vision screening locations establ
298 stantial economic burden of enteric fever in Bangladesh, with higher costs for patients receiving inp
299 eposition in the summer Indian subcontinent, Bangladesh, with inorganic arsenic dominating, accountin
300 ve longitudinal birth cohort study in Dhaka, Bangladesh, with monthly Giardia and continuous diarrhea