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1.
J Indian Med Assoc ; 109(3): 174-6, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22010587

ABSTRACT

In the present study, the total goitre rate was assessed in children aged 8-12 years, attending a rural primary school along with a longitudinal, educational intervention study undertaken among them, regarding proper comsumption of iodised salt and percolating this to their families through them. It was carried over a period of four months and 110 children, studying in a rural primary school, were the study population. The total goitre rate among the surveyed school children was found to be 6%, indicating mild Iodine deficiency disorder prevalence, according to accepted recommendations. Before health education was given, 100% salt as collected on first fortnight was iodised, but optimum iodisation was present only in 80.4% of the samples tested. In view of all these, it emerges that the area is in a transitional phase of iodine deficiency to iodine sufficiency. Over the period of study, during which educational input was provided, there was increase in the voluntary participation of the students regarding bringing of salt for iodine estimation (p < 0.05). On analysis the children were very good at percolating the health education to the parents and significant change was observed in their practice as well.


Subject(s)
Diet , Goiter, Endemic/epidemiology , Goiter, Endemic/prevention & control , Health Education , Iodine , Rural Health , Sodium Chloride, Dietary , Child , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , India , Longitudinal Studies , Male
2.
J Indian Med Assoc ; 109(8): 543-5, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22315859

ABSTRACT

Rapid diagnosis of dengue infection is essential to patient management and disease control. In a rural tertiary health setting and diagnostic laboratories, dengue suspect cases were assessed with a rapid (15 minutes) immunochromatographic test and compared to an IgM capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) (2-3 days) and the reliability of the rapid test was tested. The objectives were to evaluate dengue rapid test against dengue IgM capture ELISA and to assess the scopes of such rapid tests in peripheral setting. A rapid immunochromatographic card test was compared with an IgM capture ELISA (National Institute of Virology, Pune, India) as the reference gold standard. The sensitivity and specificity of the test was compared over a period of five years in a rural tertiary hospital among 158 dengue suspects. The rapid test showed good sensitivity in the diagnosis of both primary and secondary dengue infection. The rapid test as confirmed by IgM capture ELISA was found to have specificity of 98.4% and a sensitivity of 96.4%.The positive predictive value was 93.1% and negative predictive value of 99.2%.The positive likelihood ratio worked out to be 62.6,with negative likelihood ratio was 0.036,signifying large impact. The rapid tests may be useful aid in screening in case of clinical diagnosis of dengue infection,particularly valuable in peripheral health settings,where it can hasten the initiation of firstline of management; while the ELISA has a place in central testing laboratories, aiding in resource optimisation.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Affinity , Dengue/diagnosis , Chromatography, Affinity/methods , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Humans , Reproducibility of Results
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