Browsing by Author "Thapa, Abhishek"
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Publication Dietary Diversity and its Associated Factors among Children Aged 6-59 Months in Madhyapur Thimi Municipality, Nepal(Central Department of Public Health, 2025) Thapa, Abhishek; Baral, Dipesh; Dahal, Pragati; Kharel, Jiban; Dangal, Archana; Baral, Swastika; Thapa, Rupa; Paudel, Pratiksha; Khadka, RenuBackground: Minimum dietary diversity for children (MDD-C) is a benchmark developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) to assess diet diversity in infants and young children worldwide. The lack of such diet diversity among growing children, which often leads to malnutrition, has been considered a significant public health concern in Nepal. This study is to assess the dietary diversity and associated factors among children aged 6-59 months in wards 2 and 3 of Madhyapur Thimi Municipality. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study was carried out by measuring the research variables in 2023 among the residents of wards number 2 (Jatigaal) and 3 (Kaushaltar) of Madhyapur Thimi Municipality. The survey was created and administered by the researchers themselves. The sample size of the study was 385. The survey includes a structured questionnaire to assess dietary diversity and associated factors among children aged 6-59 months. The association between the factors was measured by using Fisher’s Exact test. Results: 73.5% of the study population fulfilled the minimum requirement of dietary diversity. Factors such as the mother’s educational status (p=0.002), mother’s ethnicity (p=0.015), monthly expenditure on food (p=0.001), awareness of communicable diseases (p=0.001), feeding times a day (p=0.001), personal hygiene practices status (p=0.004), and awareness of junk foods (p=0.001) showed a significant association with MDD-C. Conclusion: Increasing mothers’ awareness about junk food, communicable diseases, and the importance of their hygiene practices via formal or informal education campaigns is necessary to increase the proportion of children meeting the MDD-C benchmark and prevent malnutrition.Publication Effectiveness of Topical Steroid in Phimosis: A longitudinal Observational Study(Nepal Paediatric Society (JNPS), 2022) Dhungel, Sushil; Dhakal, Ajay; Koirala, Kamal; Mukhia, Rupesh; Bhusal, Narayan; Thapa, AbhishekAbstract: Introduction: Most non-retractile foreskins have been diagnosed with phimosis and referred for circumcision. However, many patients can be managed with corticosteroid cream. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the topical application of corticosteroid cream and manual prepucial stretching in the treatment of phimosis. Methods: This was a longitudinal observational study carried out among children aged six months to 10 years with the diagnosis of phimosis between 1st September 2019 to 31st August 2020. The patients were advised to apply 1% Hydrocortisone cream together with manual prepucial stretching twice daily for four weeks. Patients were assessed at four weeks and six months at the outpatient clinic using Kirkos grading for retractability. Results: A total of 110 patients were diagnosed with phimosis during the study period. Fourteen patients had pathological phimosis out of which four had balanitis xerotica obliterans and were excluded from the analysis. Ninetysix patients with physiological phimosis were treated conservatively with 1% hydrocortisone and manual prepucial stretching. Among them, 87 cases were successfully treated whereas five patients had a partial response with treatment failure in four cases. Those five cases with partial response underwent adhesiolysis while circumcision was performed in the remaining four patients with treatment failure. Prepucial retraction was possible in four weeks in most of the patients with physiological phimosis with successful results in 90.6% of cases. Conclusions: All non-retractile prepuce are not pathological phimosis and doesn’t need circumcision. Local application of a potent corticoid cream and foreskin stretching is a safe, simple, and effective long-term treatment for physiological unretractable foreskin in children.