Diarrhea
in sentence
151 examples of Diarrhea in a sentence
No, I'm just disappointed that I wasted roughly an hour and a half (twice) waiting for this
diarrhea
to gel into a reasonable movie.
I watched this movie and then, boom,
diarrhea.
If you sometimes have diarrhea, I would not recommend this movie.
If you like
diarrhea.
So hard in fact that
diarrhea
shot out of my butt and onto the guy sitting next to me.
Over all this movie was terrible like my mom's sexual meatloaf; which has been known to cause excessive diarrhea, some might even say explosive.
Death rates from hunger, diarrhea, and pneumonia are soaring.
For about $1 billion a year, vaccination programs could be expanded to prevent childhood pneumonia and diarrhea, saving another million lives annually.
In low-income countries, nine million people, mostly children, die each year from infectious diseases, including malaria, diarrhea, and AIDS.
Earlier this month, we used them to vaccinate children against pneumonia for the first time in Mozambique’s history, and we hope that next year we will begin to address rotavirus, which causes
diarrhea
and is the number one killer for children under five years old.
One evening, when the boy was violently ill with diarrhea, his mother called a taxi to take him to the nearest clinic.
They die from diseases like measles, diarrhea, and malaria that are easy and inexpensive to treat or prevent.
For starters, breastfed babies are less likely to contract ear infections and meningitis, or to suffer gastrointestinal illnesses and
diarrhea.
The morbidity and mortality caused by diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, schistosomiasis, and pediatric pneumonia and
diarrhea
certainly justify such priorities.
Copenhagen Consensus researchers calculate that for about $1 billion a year, vaccination programs could be expanded to prevent childhood pneumonia and diarrhea, saving an additional one million lives annually.
I then point out that by donating to a charity that protects children in developing countries from malaria, diarrhea, measles, or inadequate nutrition, we can all save a child’s life.
Health-Care Innovation in the Global SouthDHAKA – Children die from preventable and treatable conditions like
diarrhea
and pneumonia every day, with the developing world accounting for the majority of victims.
Once grown and harvested, the rice kernel is processed to extract and purify the proteins for use in oral rehydration solution for treating diarrhea, which is surpassed only by respiratory diseases as the leading infectious killer of children under the age of five in developing countries.
Research in Peru showed that fortifying an oral-rehydration solution with the proteins extracted from Ventria’s rice substantially lessens the duration of
diarrhea
and reduces the rate of recurrence – a near-miraculous advance for people in the developing world.
The benefits –time saved, more and better quality water, and reduced
diarrhea
– are likely in many locations to be three times higher than the costs, often exceeding $7 per month.
Three-quarters of them could have survived
diarrhea
or malaria if they had been properly nourished.
But, with millions of children under the age of five dying each year from preventable and treatable diseases like
diarrhea
and pneumonia, the job is far from finished.
In fact,
diarrhea
and pneumonia top the charts as the biggest threats to child survival – as they have for the more than 30 years that we have been tracking them.
Just 15 countries account for 72% of childhood deaths from pneumonia and
diarrhea.
To change this, governments need to step up their efforts to prevent pneumonia and diarrhea, including by ensuring that parents have access to the information they need to protect their children.
An age-old, no-cost intervention, breastfeeding exclusively for the first six months of a baby’s life is one of the easiest ways to prevent both
diarrhea
and pneumonia.
The Progress Report estimates that about half of all
diarrhea
episodes, and about a third of respiratory infections, could be averted by breastfeeding.
UNICEF reports that something as simple as hand washing with soap can cut rates of
diarrhea
and respiratory infections by more than 40% and 25%, respectively.
By investing not only in systems to provide clean drinking water and sanitation, but also in educational programs that encourage better hygiene practices and toilet use, governments can break a vicious cycle of
diarrhea
and malnutrition that causes irreversible physical and cognitive damage.
Vaccines represent the most cost-effective intervention for preventing childhood illness, and they already exist for most common bacterial causes of pneumonia (pneumococcus and Hib) and for the leading causes of
diarrhea
(rotavirus).
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