1.Non-Cereal Food Consumption, Food Insecurity and Nutritional Status of Children and Mothers: A Case Study in Bangladesh
Rabiul Islam GM ; Jahangir Alam M ; Buysse J
Malaysian Journal of Nutrition 2012;18(1):77-88
Aim: The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of food insecurity derived from non-cereal food consumption on nutritional status of children and mothers
in a poverty-prone region in Bangladesh. Methods: Data from the Bangladesh Nutritional Surveillance Project, 2005 of Helen Keller International were used to relate non-cereal food consumption and household food insecurity to
nutritional status of children and their mothers. Multiple regressions were used to determine the association between the nutritional outcomes and the explanatory variables. In the case of binary and multi-level outcomes, logistic
regressions were used as well. Results: Non-cereal dietary diversity was found to have little predictive power on BMI and MUAC of mothers and on the nutritional status of the children. Maternal education is strongly associated
with mothers’ and children’s nutritional status. Conclusion: Dietary diversity based on non-cereal food consumption can be a useful tool to investigate the
nutritional status of poor households, but more studies are needed to verify these findings.
2.Enterococcal species distribution, antibiotic susceptibility and Van gene frequency among patients at a tertiary hospital in Sabah
Nur Nashyiroh Izayati Mastor ; Vijay Kumar Subbiah ; Wan Nazirah Wan Abu Bakar ; Khurshida Begum ; M. Jahangir Alam ; Mohammad Zahirul Hoque
Malaysian Journal of Microbiology 2023;19(no.6):628-635
Aims:
Enterococcus bacteria, including some strains that are resistant to antibiotics like vancomycin can pose a threat to public health. The purpose of this study is to identify the species, antibiotic susceptibility profile and VanA/VanB gene frequencies in Enterococci isolated from patients at a tertiary hospital in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah.
Methodology and results :
Various bodily fluid specimens were collected from 162 patients between July 2019 and June 2021. Species confirmation and susceptibility testing were performed using an automated system. Subsequently, PCR was used to determine the presence of VanA and VanB genes. Species identification revealed the presence of five enterococcal species, namely E. faecalis (91), E. faecium (64), E. gallinarum (3) E. casseliflavus (2), along with one isolate each of E. hirae and E. avium. Overall, resistance to antibiotics like ampicillin, quinolones, tetracycline, gentamicin-syn, nitrofurantoin, glycopeptides and linezolid was generally low (<50%). However, a significant number of isolates displayed high resistance to erythromycin (>50% of samples), while resistance to tetracycline was more moderate. The frequencies of VanA and VanB genes were low (0.6 and 0%, respectively) and they were only detected in E. faecium.
Conclusion, significance and impact of study
The results indicate that while the prevalence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) may be low, there is an increasing incidence of multidrug-resistant enterococci, particularly with regards to erythromycin.