Zinc and Low Osmolarity Oral Rehydration Salts for Diarrhoea: A Renewed Call to Action

 In 2004, WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) released a joint statement recommending a new lower osmolarity oral rehydration salts (ORS) formulation and zinc supplementation for diarrhoea management. More than 5 years later, diarrhoea remains the second leading cause of death and few children in developing countries are receiving these life-saving interventions. Many countries are stalled in the technicalities of adapting national policy, while others struggle to find the funds for start-up activities. For nearly all countries, zinc supplements for children are not available locally; thus, zinc procurement continues to be a major obstacle. Global resources have not been sufficient to bring diarrhoea management to the forefront; thus, the introduction of these new recommendations has remained slow. Revitalizing diarrhoea management must become an international priority if we are going to reduce the burden of diarrhoea deaths and overall child mortality around the world.

This paper was contributed as a resource for the SHOPS Zinc e-Conference held on June 1-2, 2011.

Author

Christa L. Fischer Walker, Olivier Fontaine, Mark W. Young, and Robert E. Black

Contributor

Bulletin of the World Health Organization

Published
June 2011
Resource Types
Journal Publication
Health Area
Child Health
Keywords
zinc
oral rehydration therapy
oral rehydration solutions
oral rehydration salts
oral rehydration
maternal and child health
diarrhea
Current Downloads
4

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