Review of prospective cohort study on post-diarrhea respiratory infections in children
This review summarizes a prospective cohort study examining respiratory tract infection (RTI) prevalence after medically-attended diarrhea (MAD) in children aged 6-35 months. The study was conducted at seven sites in Asia, Africa, and South America, with a sample size of 9,116 children and a three-month follow-up.
The authors report that 3.8% of children experienced an RTI within three months of MAD. Prevalence varied by subgroup: 8.7% in children aged 12-23 months, 16.1% in undernourished children, 4.0% in unvaccinated children, and 4.1% in those living in poor sanitation settings. However, after adjusting for age, sex, and study site, associations with vaccination status were not statistically significant.
The authors note that data on post-diarrhea RTI burden in low- and middle-income countries are limited. This observational study cannot establish causation, and the adjusted associations were not statistically significant. Practice relevance was not reported, and the findings should be interpreted cautiously.