The systematic failure to recognise and appropriately treat children with severe malnutrition has been attributed to the elevated case-fatality rates, often as high as 50%, that still prevail in many hospitals in Africa. Children admitted to Kilifi District Hospital, on the coast of Kenya, with severe malnutrition frequently have life-threatening features and complications, many of which are not adequately identified or treated by WHO guidelines. Four main areas have been identified for research: early identification and better supportive care of sepsis; evidence-based fluid management strategies; improved antimicrobial treatment; rational use of nutritional strategies. The present paper focuses on the identification of children with sepsis and on fluid management strategies.
CITATION STYLE
Maitland, K. (2009). Symposium 5: Joint BAPEN and Nutrition Society Symposium on Feeding size 0: The science of starvation Severe malnutrition: Therapeutic challenges and treatment of hypovolaemic shock. In Proceedings of the Nutrition Society (Vol. 68, pp. 274–280). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0029665109001359
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