TY - JOUR T1 - Vitamin A prophylaxis JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child SP - 191 LP - 194 DO - 10.1136/adc.77.3.191 VL - 77 IS - 3 AU - ALFRED SOMMER Y1 - 1997/09/01 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/77/3/191.abstract N2 - It has been little more than a decade since the initial observation of the dose dependent relation between the severity of vitamin A deficiency and childhood mortality,1 quickly followed by the publication of a controlled trial in which children of preschool age, randomised to receive large doses of vitamin A every six months, died at only two thirds (or less) the rate of control subjects.2 3 In the short interval since this trial, an initially sceptical scientific community has declared control of vitamin A deficiency a major international goal4-6 and potentially one of the most cost effective of all health interventions.7 Key messages Vitamin A deficiency increases the severity of and mortality from measles and diarrhoea Increased infectious morbidity and mortality is apparent even before the appearance of xerophthalmia Improving the vitamin A status of deficient children aged 6 months to 6 years can dramatically reduce their morbidity and mortality from infection Prompt administration of large doses of vitamin A to children with moderate to severe measles, particularly if they may be vitamin A deficient, can reduce individual mortality by 50% and prevent or moderate the severity of complications The story did not begin in the 1980s. A host of animal studies and anecdotal clinical reports during the first third of the century, soon after vitamin A was discovered, suggested a close, potentially causal relation between vitamin A status and morbidity and mortality from infection. These are detailed elsewhere.8 For ethical and logistic reasons the observational study1 has never been repeated, though a large number of intervention trials have been carried out. Eight were initially considered to be suitably rigorous for inclusion in an independently commissioned meta-analysis (table 1).9 The results were remarkably similar, particularly given the wide differences in culture, dietary … ER -