BMJ 1992;304:207-210 (25 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.304.6821.207
Childhood mortality after a high dose of vitamin A in a high risk population.
N. M. Daulaire,
E. S. Starbuck,
R. M. Houston,
M. S. Church,
T. A. Stukel,
M. R. Pandey
International Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Major Childhood Disease (INTERCEPT), Hanover, New Hampshire 03755.
OBJECTIVES--To determine whether a single high dose of vitamin
A given to all children in communities with high mortality and
malnutrition could affect mortality and to assess whether periodic
community wide supplementation could be readily incorporated
into an ongoing primary health programme. DESIGN--Opportunistic
controlled trial. SETTING--Jumla district, Nepal. SUBJECTS--All
children aged under 5 years; 3786 in eight subdistricts given
single dose of vitamin A and 3411 in remaining eight subdistricts
given no supplementation. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Mortality and
cause of death in the five months after supplementation. RESULTS--Risk
of death for children aged 1-59 months in supplemented communities
was 26% lower (relative risk 0.74, 95% confidence interval 0.55
to 0.99) than in unsupplemented communities. The reduction in
mortality was greatest among children aged 6-11 months: death
rate (deaths/1000 child years at risk) was 133.8 in supplemented
children and 260.8 in unsupplemented children (relative risk
0.51, 0.30 to 0.89). The death rate from diarrhoea was also
reduced (63.5 supplemented v 97.5 unsupplemented; relative risk
0.65, 0.44 to 0.95). The extra cost per death averted was about
$11. CONCLUSION--The results support a role for Vitamin A in
increasing child survival. The supplementation programme was
readily integrated with the ongoing community health programme
at little extra cost.

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