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  • Title: 500,000 lives saved each year. ORT 10 years after.
    Author: Drucker G.
    Journal: Int Health News; 1988; 9(6):2. PubMed ID: 12179878.
    Abstract:
    Oral rehydration therapy (ORT) was hailed 10 years ago as potentially the most significant medical advance of the century. ORT is a simple and inexpensive means of treating diarrheal dehydration, which killed approximately 5 million children each year in the late 1970s. Today 25% of the world's children have access to ORT, and it is estimated that every year it saves 500,000 lives. Where ORT is not widely available, diarrheal dehydration remains the leading killer of children. It is still responsible for 25% of the 250,000 worldwide child deaths each week. Because there have been problems with acceptance of the ORT formula of salt, sugar, and water, researchers have been experimenting with cereal-based oral rehydration formulas that are much like traditional home remedies for diarrhea. In addition to relieving dehydration, these cereal-based formulas lessen severity and duration of diarrheal illness. Critics, however, claim that they fail to provide a child with sufficient calories, and call for a combination of ORT with early feeding--4-8 hours after completion of rehydration. Even with growing evidence of the benefits of early feeding, the practice of withholding food from children with diarrhea persists in the developing world and in the U.S. Problems in developing countries are greater, but each year 14 of every 1,000 American infants are hospitalized because of acute diarrhea. The major hurdle that ORT faces in the U.S. is that it is a simple form of therapy attempting to displace a higher technology. As long the U.S. health care system serves as a model for developing countries, distrust of ORT by American doctors will hamper efforts to spread ORT in the developing world.
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