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Oral narrative intervention with children with autism spectrum disorder and language disorder ...
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Oral narrative intervention with children with autism spectrum disorder and language disorder ...
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Monolinguals and Bilinguals’ Visual Recognition Memory of Socially Relevant Stimuli at 8-10 Months. ...
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Metaphors they lived by in Ancient Egypt: analysing the prophecy of Neferty & the admonitions of Ipuwer ...
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Metaphors they lived by in Ancient Egypt: analysing the prophecy of Neferty & the admonitions of Ipuwer ...
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Él Code-Switches More Than tú y yo: New Data for the Subject Pronoun-Verb Switch Constraint
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In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 1; Pages: 22 (2022)
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Stigma and Sentiment: The Perception of Terms Related to Sex Industry Participants
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Example of Narrative Recall produced by a child with DLD ...
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Example of Narrative Recall produced by a child with DLD ...
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The use of telepractice to administer norm referenced communication and cognition assessments in children with hearing impairment: A rapid review ...
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Early years and key stage 1 teachers’ attitudes towards outdoor and online play
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Early years and key stage 1 teachers’ attitudes towards outdoor and online play
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The influence of the temporal characteristics of events on adults' and children's pronoun resolution
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Children born during the hunger season are at a higher risk of severe acute malnutrition: findings from a Guinea Sahelian ecological zone in Northern Ghana.
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Abstract:
Heightened food insecurity in the hunger season increases the risk of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in childhood. This study examined the association of season of birth with SAM in a Guinean Sahelian ecological zone. We analyzed routine health and sociodemographic surveillance data from the Navrongo Health and Sociodemographic Surveillance System collected between 2011 and 2018. January–June, the period of highest food insecurity, was defined as the hunger season. We defined moderate acute malnutrition as child mid‐upper arm circumference (MUAC) between 115 mm and 135 mm and SAM as MAUC ≤ 115 mm. We used adjusted logistic regression to quantify the association between the season of birth and SAM in children aged 6–35 months. From the 29,452 children studied, 24% had moderate acute malnutrition. Overall, 1.4% had SAM, with a higher prevalence (1.8%) in the hunger season of birth. Compared with those born October–December, adjusted odds ratios (aOR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) for SAM were increased for children born in the hunger season: January–March (1.77 [1.31–2.39]) and April–June (1.92 [1.44–2.56]). Low birth weight, age at an assessment of nutritional status, and ethno‐linguistic group were also significantly associated with SAM in adjusted analyses. Our study established that being born in the hunger season is associated with a higher risk of severe acute malnutrition. The result implies improvement in the food supply to pregnant and lactating mothers through sustainable agriculture or food system change targeting the hunger season may reduce the burden of severe acute malnutrition.
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URL: https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/453083/1/Main_manuscript_document_Accepted_version.docx https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/453083/2/Maternal_Child_Nutrition_2022_Nonterah_Children_born_during_the_hunger_season_are_at_a_higher_risk_of_severe_acute.pdf https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/453083/
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Peer to Peer Deaf Multiliteracies:A new concept of accessibility
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For the Record: Questioning transcription processes in legal contexts
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The ASCEND study: protocol for a feasibility study to evaluate an early social communication intervention for young children with Down syndrome
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