sài đẹn

sài đẹn

Một em bé bị sài đẹn được mẹ chăm sóc.

Definition
  1. Noun (Archaic / Folk Medicine):
    • A traditional Vietnamese folk illness: Refers to a persistent or stubborn childhood ailment, often characterized by chronic, difficult-to-treat symptoms like poor digestion, malnutrition, and slow development.
    • A wasting disease in children: Describes a condition where a child fails to thrive, appears sickly, and does not grow properly despite care.
Usage Examples
  • Noun:
    • Đứa trẻ bị sài đẹn nên còi cọc mãi. (The child has sài đẹn, so remains stunted.)
    • Ngày xưa, nhiều trẻ em chết các chứng như sài đẹn. (In the past, many children died from illnesses like sài đẹn.)
Advanced Usage
  • This term is primarily found in historical texts or discussions of traditional folk medicine beliefs. It is not a diagnosis used in modern Western medicine.
Variants and Related Words
  • Sài (n, archaic): Often a root in terms for certain traditional childhood illnesses.
  • Đẹn (n, archaic): Sometimes used separately to refer to thrush (oral candidiasis) in infants, which can be part of the folk concept of a wasting illness.
Synonyms
  • Failure to thrive: A modern medical term describing inadequate growth in children.
  • Wasting disease: A general term for conditions causing progressive weight loss and weakness.
  • Chronic childhood ailment: A descriptive phrase for a long-lasting illness in a child.
Cultural Note
  • "Sài đẹn" represents a historical folk medical concept used to explain chronic sickness in children before the advent of modern pediatrics. Treatments were often based on traditional practices and herbal remedies.