32 results on '"Mason, Peter R."'
Search Results
2. Plagiarism in Scientific Publications.
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Mason, Peter R.
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PLAGIARISM , *RESEARCH , *COPYRIGHT infringement , *PIRACY (Copyright) , *PATENT infringement - Abstract
The author focuses on the issue regarding the existence of plagiarism in several publications dealing with scientific researches. The author discusses the definition of plagiarism and cites its seriousness in breaching the copyrighted articles and scientific researches. The author asserts to refrain from copyright infringement. Moreover, the author explains the responsibility of the authors in discouraging their respective writers from such violation.
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- 2009
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3. Value of Mandatory Testing for Human Immunodeficiency Virus in a Sub-Saharan Hospital Population.
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Palmer, Darwin L., Mason, Peter R., Pasi, Christopher, Tobiwa, Ocean, and Mayer, Kenneth H.
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HOSPITAL care , *HIV infections - Abstract
Presents a study that evaluated the effect on health care of HIV testing of patients routinely admitted to medical wards in the two major city hospitals in Harare, Zimbabwe. Reasons for the reluctance to perform HIV testing; Common diseases among patients in medical wards; Features of hospital care for HIV patients in Zimbabwe.
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- 2000
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4. HIV Testing: Voluntary or Mandatory?
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Palmer, Darwin L., Mason, Peter R., Pasi, Christopher, and Tobiwa, Ocean
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HIV-positive persons , *HOSPITAL patients , *LETTERS to the editor - Abstract
Presents a response from Darwin Palmer, Peter Mason, Christopher Pasi, and Ocean Tobiwa to a letter to the editor about their article on mandatory HIV testing for hospital patients in a sub-Saharan population.
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- 2001
5. Elevation and cholera: an epidemiological spatial analysis of the cholera epidemic in Harare, Zimbabwe, 2008-2009.
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Luque Fernandez, Miguel A., Schomaker, Michael, Mason, Peter R., Fesselet, Jean F., Baudot, Yves, Boulle, Andrew, and Maes, Peter
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CHOLERA , *EPIDEMICS , *PUBLIC health , *HEALTH & welfare funds - Abstract
Background: In highly populated African urban areas where access to clean water is a challenge, water source contamination is one of the most cited risk factors in a cholera epidemic. During the rainy season, where there is either no sewage disposal or working sewer system, runoff of rains follows the slopes and gets into the lower parts of towns where shallow wells could easily become contaminated by excretes. In cholera endemic areas, spatial information about topographical elevation could help to guide preventive interventions. This study aims to analyze the association between topographic elevation and the distribution of cholera cases in Harare during the cholera epidemic in 2008 and 2009. Methods: We developed an ecological study using secondary data. First, we described attack rates by suburb and then calculated rate ratios using whole Harare as reference. We illustrated the average elevation and cholera cases by suburbs using geographical information. Finally, we estimated a generalized linear mixed model (under the assumption of a Poisson distribution) with an Empirical Bayesian approach to model the relation between the risk of cholera and the elevation in meters in Harare. We used a random intercept to allow for spatial correlation of neighboring suburbs. Results: This study identifies a spatial pattern of the distribution of cholera cases in the Harare epidemic, characterized by a lower cholera risk in the highest elevation suburbs of Harare. The generalized linear mixed model showed that for each 100 meters of increase in the topographical elevation, the cholera risk was 30% lower with a rate ratio of 0.70 (95% confidence interval=0.66-0.76). Sensitivity analysis confirmed the risk reduction with an overall estimate of the rate ratio between 20% and 40%. Conclusion: This study highlights the importance of considering topographical elevation as a geographical and environmental risk factor in order to plan cholera preventive activities linked with water and sanitation in endemic areas. Furthermore, elevation information, among other risk factors, could help to spatially orientate cholera control interventions during an epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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6. Individual Level Injection History: A Lack of Association with HIV Incidence in Rural Zimbabwe.
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Lopman, Ben A., Garnett, Geoff P., Mason, Peter R., Gregson, Simon, and Binagwaho, Agnes
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INJECTIONS , *HIV infection transmission , *HIV-positive persons , *HIV - Abstract
Background It has recently been argued that unsafe medical injections are a major transmission route of HIV infection in the generalised epidemics of sub-Saharan Africa. Methods and Findings We have analysed the pattern of injections in relation to HIV incidence in a population cohort in Manicaland in a rural area of Zimbabwe. In Poisson regression models, injections were not found to be associated with HIV in males (rate ratio = 0.33; 95% confidence interval: 0.07 to 1.46) or females (rate ratio = 1.04; 95% confidence interval: 0.59 to 1.85). Conclusion It is important that unsafe medical injections can be confidently excluded as a major source of HIV infection. In rural Zimbabwe the evidence is that they can. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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7. Reduction in Malaria Incidence following Indoor Residual Spraying with Actellic 300 CS in a Setting with Pyrethroid Resistance: Mutasa District, Zimbabwe.
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Kanyangarara, Mufaro, Mamini, Edmore, Mharakurwa, Sungano, Munyati, Shungu, Gwanzura, Lovemore, Kobayashi, Tamaki, Shields, Timothy, Mullany, Luke C., Mutambu, Susan, Mason, Peter R., Curriero, Frank C., Moss, William J., and null, null
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MALARIA prevention , *PYRETHROIDS , *MOSQUITO vectors , *EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Background: More than half of malaria cases in Zimbabwe are concentrated in Manicaland Province, where seasonal malaria epidemics occur despite intensified control strategies. Recently, high levels of pyrethroid and carbamate resistance were detected in Anopheles funestus, the major malaria vector in eastern Zimbabwe. In response, a single round of indoor residual spraying (IRS) using pirimiphos-methyl (an organophosphate) was implemented in four high burden districts of Manicaland Province from November 1, 2014 to December 19, 2014. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of this programmatic switch in insecticides on malaria morbidity reported from health care facilities in Mutasa District, one of the worst affected districts in Manicaland Province. Methods: The number of weekly malaria cases for each health facility 24 months prior to the 2014 IRS campaign and in the subsequent high transmission season were obtained from passive case surveillance. Environmental variables were extracted from remote-sensing data sources and linked to each health care facility. Negative binomial regression was used to model the weekly number of malaria cases, adjusted for seasonality and environmental variables. Results: From December 2012 to May 2015, 124,206 malaria cases were reported from 42 health care facilities in Mutasa District. Based on a higher burden of malaria, 20 out of 31 municipal wards were sprayed in the district. Overall, 87.3% of target structures were sprayed and 92.1% of the target population protected. During the 6 months after the 2014 IRS campaign, a period when transmission would have otherwise peaked, the incidence of malaria was 38% lower than the preceding 24 months at health facilities in the sprayed wards. Conclusions: Pirimiphos-methyl had a measurable impact on malaria incidence and is an effective insecticide for the control of An. funestus in eastern Zimbabwe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. Changes in the burden of malaria following scale up of malaria control interventions in Mutasa District, Zimbabwe.
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Mharakurwa, Sungano, Mutambu, Susan L., Mberikunashe, Joseph, Thuma, Philip E., Moss, William J., and Mason, Peter R.
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MALARIA , *VECTOR control , *DISEASE prevalence , *CHLOROQUINE - Abstract
Background: To better understand trends in the burden of malaria and their temporal relationship to control activities, a survey was conducted to assess reported cases of malaria and malaria control activities in Mutasa District, Zimbabwe. Methods: Data on reported malaria cases were abstracted from available records at all three district hospitals, three rural hospitals and 25 rural health clinics in Mutasa District from 2003 to 2011. Results: Malaria control interventions were scaled up through the support of the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and The President's Malaria Initiative. The recommended first-line treatment regimen changed from chloroquine or a combination of chloroquine plus sulphadoxine/ pyrimethamine to artemisinin-based combination therapy, the latter adopted by 70%, 95% and 100% of health clinics by 2008, 2009 and 2010, respectively. Diagnostic capacity improved, with rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) available in all health clinics by 2008. Vector control consisted of indoor residual spraying and distribution of longlasting insecticidal nets. The number of reported malaria cases initially increased from levels in 2003 to a peak in 2008 but then declined 39% from 2008 to 2010. The proportion of suspected cases of malaria in older children and adults remained high, ranging from 75% to 80%. From 2008 to 2010, the number of RDT positive cases of malaria decreased 35% but the decrease was greater for children younger than five years of age (60%) compared to older children and adults (26%). Conclusions: The burden of malaria in Mutasa District decreased following the scale up of malaria control interventions. However, the persistent high number of cases in older children and adults highlights the need for strategies to identify locally effective control measures that target all age groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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9. Increasing Adolescent HIV Prevalence in Eastern Zimbabwe – Evidence of Long-Term Survivors of Mother-to-Child Transmission?
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Eaton, Jeffrey W., Garnett, Geoffrey P., Takavarasha, Felicia R., Mason, Peter R., Robertson, Laura, Schumacher, Christina M., Nyamukapa, Constance A., and Gregson, Simon
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HIV infections , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *DISEASES in teenagers , *DISEASE prevalence , *MOTHER-child relationship , *ACQUISITION of data , *MEDICAL statistics , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Recent data from the Manicaland HIV/STD Prevention Project, a general-population open HIV cohort study, suggested that between 2004 and 2007 HIV prevalence amongst males aged 15–17 years in eastern Zimbabwe increased from 1.20% to 2.23%, and in females remained unchanged at 2.23% to 2.39%, while prevalence continued to decline in the rest of the adult population. We assess whether the more likely source of the increase in adolescent HIV prevalence is recent sexual HIV acquisition, or the aging of long-term survivors of perinatal HIV acquisition that occurred during the early growth of the epidemic. Using data collected between August 2006 and November 2008, we investigated associations between adolescent HIV and (1) maternal orphanhood and maternal HIV status, (2) reported sexual behaviour, and (3) reporting recurring sickness or chronic illness, suggesting infected adolescents might be in a late stage of HIV infection. HIV-infected adolescent males were more likely to be maternal orphans (RR = 2.97, p<0.001) and both HIV-infected adolescent males and females were more likely to be maternal orphans or have an HIV-infected mother (male RR = 1.83, p<0.001; female RR = 16.6, p<0.001). None of 22 HIV-infected adolescent males and only three of 23 HIV-infected females reported ever having had sex. HIV-infected adolescents were 60% more likely to report illness than HIV-infected young adults. Taken together, all three hypotheses suggest that recent increases in adolescent HIV prevalence in eastern Zimbabwe are more likely attributable to long-term survival of mother-to-child transmission rather than increases in risky sexual behaviour. HIV prevalence in adolescents and young adults cannot be used as a surrogate for recent HIV incidence, and health systems should prepare for increasing numbers of long-term infected adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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10. Challenges and prospects for malaria elimination in the Southern Africa region
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Moss, William J., Norris, Douglas E., Mharakurwa, Sungano, Scott, Alan, Mulenga, Modest, Mason, Peter R., Chipeta, James, and Thuma, Philip E.
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MALARIA treatment , *PLASMODIUM , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *HEALTH programs - Abstract
Abstract: The burden of malaria has decreased dramatically within the past several years in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, including regions of Southern Africa. Important to effective regional malaria control in Southern Africa is the appreciation that the reductions in malaria have not been achieved uniformly, with some countries experiencing resurgence. Understanding the reasons for sustained low-level malaria transmission in the face of control efforts, why malaria control efforts have not been successful in particular epidemiological settings and the epidemiological and transmission patterns following resurgence are critical to improving further malaria control and possible elimination. The overall goal of the International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research in Southern Africa is to contribute to regional malaria control efforts that can be sustained beyond the duration of the project. This goal will be achieved through a combination of: (1) state-of-the-art research on malaria epidemiology, vector biology and the genetics of the malaria parasite in three different epidemiological settings; (2) collaborations with national malaria control programs to develop locally adapted and sustainable control strategies; and (3) training, career development and capacity building at research institutions throughout the region. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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11. Malaria epidemiology and control in Southern Africa
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Mharakurwa, Sungano, Thuma, Philip E., Norris, Douglas E., Mulenga, Modest, Chalwe, Victor, Chipeta, James, Munyati, Shungu, Mutambu, Susan, and Mason, Peter R.
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MALARIA treatment , *PLASMODIUM , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *HEALTH programs - Abstract
Abstract: The burden of malaria has decreased dramatically within the past several years in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, following the scale-up of interventions supported by the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, the President''s Malaria Initiative and other partners. It is important to appreciate that the reductions in malaria have not been uniform between and within countries, with some areas experiencing resurgence instead. Furthermore, while interventions have greatly reduced the burden of malaria in many countries, it is also recognized that the malaria decline pre-dated widespread intervention efforts, at least in some cases where data are available. This raises more questions as what other factors may have been contributing to the reduction in malaria transmission and to what extent. The International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research (ICEMR) in Southern Africa aims to better understand the underlying malaria epidemiology, vector ecology and parasite genomics using three contrasting settings of malaria transmission in Zambia and Zimbabwe: an area of successful malaria control, an area of resurgent malaria and an area where interventions have not been effective. The Southern Africa ICEMR will capitalize on the opportunity to investigate the complexities of malaria transmission while adapting to intervention and establish the evidence-base to guide effective and sustainable malaria intervention strategies. Key approaches to attain this goal for the region will include close collaboration with national malaria control programs and contribution to capacity building at the individual, institutional and national levels. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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12. Evaluation of "Cyscope", a novel fluorescence-based microscopy technique for the detection of malaria.
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Gwanzura, Lovemore, Mayini, Justin, Mabhanga, Katherine, Chipinduro, Joseph, Mashamba, Kansomba, Mutenherwa, Menard, Mutambu, Susan L., Mutsvangwa, Junior, and Mason, Peter R.
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MALARIA diagnosis , *FLUORESCENCE microscopy , *PLASMODIUM , *BLOOD testing , *PARASITIC diseases , *SYMPTOMS , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
Introduction: This study was designed to compare the detection of malaria parasites in peripheral blood smears using the Cyscope malaria rapid fluorescent microscopic technique and light microscopy of Giemsa-stained smears. Methodology: A total of 295 blood smears were collected from patients of all age groups presenting with clinical signs and symptoms of malaria to 10 City Health Clinics in Harare. For each patient two blood films were prepared. Microscopic examination was done independently in two laboratories, with one performing the Giemsa stain and the other the Cyscope method. After the tests were completed, the results were then matched and recorded without any alterations. Results: An equal number of men and women were malaria positive and their ages ranged from five to 66 years. Concordance in the detection of parasites (positive or negative) was 98.6% (291/295). In all four cases of discordance, malaria parasites were detected using the Cyscope but not with conventional microscopy. The Cyscope gave a 100% sensitivity and a specificity of 98.6%. Conclusion: The Cyscope may be a valuable addition to diagnostics of malaria in resource-limited settings such as Zimbabwe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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13. Comparison of two active case-finding strategies for community-based diagnosis of symptomatic smear-positive tuberculosis and control of infectious tuberculosis in Harare, Zimbabwe (DETECTB): a cluster-randomised trial.
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Corbett, Elizabeth L., Bandason, Tsitsi, Duong, Trinh, Dauya, Ethel, Makamure, Beauty, Churchyard, Gavin J., Williams, Brian G., Munyati, Shungu S., Butterworth, Anthony E., Mason, Peter R., Mungofa, Stanley, and Hayes, Richard J.
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,TUBERCULOSIS transmission - Abstract
The article discusses a study which compared the effectiveness of two active case-finding strategies for community-based diagnosis of symptomatic smear-positive tuberculosis and control of infectious tuberculosis in Harare, Zimbabwe. The cluster-randomised trial involved neighborhoods in the high-density residential suburbs of Harare. It was concluded that wide implementation of active case finding could have significant effects on the transmission of tuberculosis.
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- 2010
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14. Measuring and correcting biased child mortality statistics in countries with generalized epidemics of HIV infection.
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Hallett, Timothy B., Gregson, Simon, Kurwa, Felicia, Garnett, Geoffrey P., Dube, Sabada, Chawira, Godwin, Mason, Peter R., and Nyamukapa, Constance A.
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CHILD mortality statistics , *HIV infections , *STATISTICAL methods in health surveys , *DATA analysis , *STATISTICAL bias , *ESTIMATION bias , *MEASUREMENT errors , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective: Under Millennium Development Goal 4, countries are required to reduce child mortality by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015. In countries with generalized epidemics of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, standard statistics based on fertility history may misrepresent progress towards this target owing to the correlation between deaths among mothers and early childhood deaths from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Methods: To empirically estimate this bias, child mortality data and fertility history, including births to deceased women, were collected through prospective household surveys in eastern Zimbabwe during 1998-2005. A mathematical model was then used to investigate the determinants and temporal dynamics of the bias, first in Zimbabwe and then in other countries with different background mortality rates and HIV-related epidemic profiles. Findings: According to the empirical data, standard cross-sectional survey statistics underestimated true infant and under-5 mortality by 6.7% and 9.8%, respectively. These estimates were in agreement with the output from the model, in which the bias varied according to the magnitude and stage of the epidemic of HIV infection and background mortality rates. The bias was greater the longer the period elapsed before the survey and in later stages of the epidemic. Bias could substantially distort the measured effect of interventions to reduce non-HIV-related mortality and of programmes to prevent mother-to-child transmission, especially when trends are based on data from a single survey. Conclusion: The correlation between the HIV-related deaths of mothers and their children can bias survey estimates of early child mortality. A mathematical model with a user-friendly interface is available to correct for this bias when measuring progress towards Millennium Development Goal 4 in countries with generalized epidemics of HIV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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15. The Risk and Timing of Tuberculosis Diagnosed in Smear-Negative TB Suspects: A 12 Month Cohort Study in Harare, Zimbabwe.
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Dimairo, Munyaradzi, MacPherson, Peter, Bandason, Tsitsi, Zezai, Abbas, Munyati, Shungu S., Butterworth, Anthony E., Mungofa, Stanley, Rusikaniko, Simba, Fielding, Katherine, Mason, Peter R., and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis , *COHORT analysis , *PAP test , *SPUTUM , *HIV , *DISEASE prevalence , *NONINVASIVE diagnostic tests , *RADIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: Cases of smear-negative TB have increased dramatically in high prevalence HIV settings and pose considerable diagnostic and management challenges. Methods and Findings: Between February 2006 and July 2007, a cohort study nested within a cluster-randomised trial of community-based case finding strategies for TB in Harare, Zimbabwe was undertaken. Participants who had negative sputum smears and remained symptomatic of TB were follow-up for one year with standardised investigations including HIV testing, repeat sputum smears, TB culture and chest radiography. Defaulters were actively traced to the community. The objectives were to investigate the incidence and risk factors for TB. TB was diagnosed in 218 (18.2%) participants, of which 39.4% was bacteriologically confirmed. Most cases (84.2%) were diagnosed within 3 months, but TB incidence remained high thereafter (111.3 per 1000 person-years, 95% CI: 86.6 to 146.3). HIV prevalence was 63.3%, and HIV-infected individuals had a 3.5-fold higher risk of tuberculosis than HIV-negative individuals. Conclusion: We found that diagnosis of TB was insensitive and slow, even with early radiography and culture. Until more sensitive and rapid diagnostic tests become widely available, a much more proactive and integrated approach towards prompt initiation of ART, ideally from within TB clinics and without waiting for TB to be excluded, is needed to minimise the risk and consequences of diagnostic delay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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16. Identifying recent Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission in the setting of high HIV and TB burden.
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Mutsvangwa, Junior, Millington, Kerry A., Chaka, Kathryn, Mavhudzi, Tafadzwa, Cheung, Yin-Bun, Mason, Peter R., Butterworth, Anthony E., Corbett, Elizabeth L., and Lalvani, Ajit
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MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *HIV infection risk factors , *TUBERCULOSIS risk factors , *DISEASE progression , *TUBERCULIN test , *HIV infections , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Background Accurate diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) in recently exposed HIV-infected tuberculosis (TB) contacts is a public health priority because of the high risk of progression to active TB but is hampered by the high background prevalence of LTBI in high-burden populations and poor sensitivity of tuberculin skin testing (TST) in HIV co-infection. Methods The prevalence of LTBI in 222 recent household contacts of TB cases and 176 household contacts of community controls without TB in Harare, Zimbabwe were compared using TST and interferon g enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISpot) responses to ESAT- 6 (early secretory antigenic target-6) and CFP-10 (culture filtrate protein-10). TST and ELISpot results were correlated with markers of recent TB exposure and the impact of HIV co-infection was assessed. Results In this high-incidence population, the proportion of ELISpot-positive contacts was not significantly different from community controls. However, ELISpot, unlike TST, revealed a higher prevalence of LTBI in recent contacts of sputum smear-positive cases than in contacts of controls. ELISpot results correlated significantly with positive sputum smear and culture status of the index case (adjusted OR 2.40, CI 1.12 to 5.14), even in the subgroup of HIV-infected contacts (adjusted OR 5.36, CI 1.11 to 25.93). and were independent of contacts' HIV status. TST results were also associated with positive smear and culture status of the index case (adjusted OR 4.41, CI 1.82 to 10.67) but were negatively associated with contacts' HIV status (adjusted OR 0.25, CI 0.10 to 0.60). Conclusions Contact investigations in high-burden populations should focus on contacts of sputum smearpositive cases in whom recent infection can be detected by ELISpot, even in the presence of HIV co-infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. Provider-initiated symptom screening for tuberculosis in Zimbabwe: diagnostic value and the effect of HIV status.
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Corbett, Elizabeth L., Zezai, Abbas, Yin Bun Cheung, Bandason, Tsitsi, Dauya, Ethel, Munyati, Shungu S., Butterworth, Anthony E., Rusikaniko, Simba, Churchyard, Gavin J., Mungofa, Stanley, Hayes, Richard J., and Mason, Peter R.
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis , *HIV , *REGRESSION analysis , *SYMPTOMS , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
Objective To assess the diagnostic value of provider-initiated symptom screening for tuberculosis (TB) and how HIV status affects it. Methods We performed a secondary analysis of randomly selected participants in a community-based TB-HIV prevalence survey in Harare, Zimbabwe. All completed a five-symptom questionnaire and underwent sputum TB culture and HIV testing. We calculated the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of various symptoms and used regression analysis to investigate the relationship between symptoms and TB disease. Findings We found one or more symptoms of TB in 21.2% of 1858 HIV-positive (HIV+) and 9.9% of 7121 HIV-negative (HIV-) participants (P< 0.001 ). TB was subsequently diagnosed in 48 HIV+ and 31 HIV- participants. TB was asymptomatic in 18 culture-positive individuals, 8 of whom (4 in each HIV status group) had positive sputum smears. Cough of any duration, weight loss and, for HIV+ participants only, drenching night sweats were independent predictors of TB. In HIV+- participants, cough of a 2 weeks' duration, any symptom and a positive sputum culture had sensitivities of 48%, 81% and 65%, respectively; in HIV- participants, the sensitivities were 45%, 71 % and 74%, respectively. Symptoms had a similar sensitivity and specificity in HIV+ and HIV- participants, but in HIV+ participants they had a higher positive and a lower negative predictive value. Conclusion Even smear-positive TB may be missed by provider-initiated symptom screening, especially in HIV+ individuals. Symptom screening is useful for ruling out TB, but better TB diagnostics are urgently needed for resource-poor settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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18. Female genital schistosomiasis – a differential diagnosis to sexually transmitted disease: genital itch and vaginal discharge as indicators of genital Schistosoma haematobium morbidity in a cross-sectional study in endemic rural Zimbabwe.
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Kjetland, Eyrun Floerecke, Kurewa, Edith Nyaradzai, Ndhlovu, Patricia D., Midzi, Nicholas, Gwanzura, Lovemore, Mason, Peter R., Gomo, Exnevia, Sandvik, Leiv, Mduluza, Takafira, Friis, Henrik, and Gundersen, Svein Gunnar
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SCHISTOSOMIASIS diagnosis , *SCHISTOSOMA haematobium , *CROSS-sectional method , *PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis - Abstract
Objective To examine the association between schistosomiasis and reproductive tract symptoms. Method A cross-sectional study was conducted in a Schistosoma haematobium-endemic area of rural Zimbabwe. A total of 483 permanently resident adult women of Mupfure Ward aged 20–49 were interviewed and examined clinically, each providing three consecutive urine samples. Logistic regression analysis was used to control for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). Results Women with genital sandy patches had significantly more genital itch ( P = 0.009) and perceived their discharge as abnormal ( P = 0.003). Eighty percent of the women who had genital itch, yellow discharge, and childhood or current waterbody contact had sandy patches. Fifty-two percent of the women with genital sandy patches did not have detectable S. haematobium ova in urine. Genital schistosomiasis was associated with stress incontinence and pollakisuria, but not with menstrual irregularities, current or previous ulcers, or tumours. Conclusion Genital schistosomiasis may be a differential diagnosis to the STDs in women who have been exposed to fresh water in endemic areas. Because of the chronic nature of the disease in adults, we suggest to pay special attention to the prevention of morbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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19. Impact and Process Evaluation of Integrated Community and Clinic-Based HIV-1 Control: A Cluster-Randomised Trial in Eastern Zimbabwe.
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Gregson, Simon, Adamson, Saina, Papaya, Spiwe, Mundondo, Jephias, Nyamukapa, Constance A., Mason, Peter R., Garnett, Geoffrey P., Chandiwana, Stephen K., Foster, Geoff, and Anderson, Roy M.
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HIV prevention , *HEALTH promotion , *CONDOMS , *SEXUALLY transmitted disease treatment - Abstract
Background HIV-1 control in sub-Saharan Africa requires cost-effective and sustainable programmes that promote behaviour change and reduce cofactor sexually transmitted infections (STIs) at the population and individual levels. Methods and Findings We measured the feasibility of community-based peer education, free condom distribution, income-generating projects, and clinic-based STI treatment and counselling services and evaluated their impact on the incidence of HIV-1 measured over a 3-y period in a cluster-randomised controlled trial in eastern Zimbabwe. Analysis of primary outcomes was on an intention-to-treat basis. The income-generating projects proved impossible to implement in the prevailing economic climate. Despite greater programme activity and knowledge in the intervention communities, the incidence rate ratio of HIV-1 was 1.27 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.92-1.75) compared to the control communities. No evidence was found for reduced incidence of self-reported STI symptoms or high-risk sexual behaviour in the intervention communities. Males who attended programme meetings had lower HIV-1 incidence (incidence rate ratio 0.48, 95% CI 0.24-0.98), and fewer men who attended programme meetings reported unprotected sex with casual partners (odds ratio 0.45, 95% CI 0.28-0.75). More male STI patients in the intervention communities reported cessation of symptoms (odds ratio 2.49, 95% CI 1.21-5.12). Conclusions Integrated peer education, condom distribution, and syndromic STI management did not reduce population-level HIV-1 incidence in a declining epidemic, despite reducing HIV-1 incidence in the immediate male target group. Our results highlight the need to assess the community-level impact of interventions that are effective amongst targeted population subgroups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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20. Nursing and Community Rates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection among Students in Harare, Zimbabwe.
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Corbett, Elizabeth L., Muzangwa, Joyce, Chaka, Kathryn, Dauya, Ethel, Yin Bun Cheung, Munyati, Shungu S., Reid, Andrew, Hakim, James, Chandiwana, Steven, Mason, Peter R., Butterworth, Anthony E., and Houston, Stan
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NURSING , *MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *BACTERIAL diseases , *TUBERCULIN , *BACTERIAL antigens - Abstract
Background. African hospitals have experienced major increases in admissions for tuberculosis, but they are ill-equipped to prevent institutional transmission. We compared institutional rates and community rates of tuberculin skin test (TST) conversion in Harare, Zimbabwe Methods. We conducted a cohort study of TST conversion 6, 12, and 18 months into training among 159 nursing and 195 polytechnic school students in Harare. Students had negative TST results (induration diameter, ⩽9 mm) with 2-step testing at the start of training. Results. Nursing students experienced 19.3 TST conversions (increase in induration diameter, ⩾10 mm) per 100 person-years (95% confidence interval [CI], 14.2–26.2 conversions per 100 person-years), and polytechnic school students experienced 6.0 (95% CI, 3.5–10.4) conversions per 100 person-years. The rate of difference was 13.2 conversions (95% CI, 6.5–20.0) per 100 person-years. With a more stringent definition of conversion (increase in the induration diameter of ⩾10 mm to at least 15 mm), which is likely to increase specificity but decrease sensitivity, conversion rates were 12.5 and 2.8 conversions per 100 person-years in nursing and polytechnic school students, respectively (rate difference, 9.7 conversions per 100 person-years; 95% CI, 4.5–14.8 conversions per 100 person-years). Nursing students reportedly nursed 20,868 inpatients with tuberculosis during 315 person-years of training. Conclusions. Both groups had high TST conversion rates, but the extremely high rates among nursing students imply high occupational exposure to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Intense exposure to inpatients with tuberculosis was reported during training. Better prevention, surveillance, and management of institutional M. tuberculosis transmission need to be supported as part of the international response to the severe human immunodeficiency virus infection epidemic and health care worker crisis in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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21. Chronic Cough in Primary Health Care Attendees, Harare, Zimbabwe: Diagnosis and Impact of HIV Infection.
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Munyati, Shungu S., Dhoba, Temba, Makanza, Evelyn D., Munqofa, Stanley, ellington, Maureen, Mutsvangwa, Junior, Gwanzura, Lovemore, Hakim, James, Nyakabau, Morgan, Mason, Peter R., Robertson, Valerie, Rusakaniko, Simba, Butterworth, Anthony E., and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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TUBERCULOSIS , *HIV infections , *COUGH , *PATIENTS , *CHEST diseases - Abstract
Background. Cough lasting for ≧3 weeks (i.e., chronic cough) indicates that a patient has suspected tuberculosis (TB). At the primary health care level, the spectrum of disease that causes chronic cough has not been previously investigated in a setting with a high prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Methods. A total of 544 adults with chronic cough were recruited systematically from 2 primary health care clinics, and they were evaluated using preset first- and second-line investigations and diagnostic case definitions. Results. The overall prevalence of HIV infection among the study cohort was 83%. TB was the most common diagnosis, with 207 HI V-positive patients (46%) and 27 HIV-negative patients (3 0%) having confirmed or probable TB. Of these, 145 HIV-positive patients with TB (70%) and 20 HIV-negative patients with TB (74%) had smear- positive cases of TB. Only 17 HIV-positive and 2 HIV-negative patients had smear-negative but culture-positive cases of TB. Lower respiratory tract infections (n = 178; HIV prevalence, 79%) and pneumonia (n = 87; HIV prevalence, 89%) were the next most common diagnoses. Asthma (n = 26; HIV prevalence, 46%), posttuberculous disease and other fibrotic lung disease (n = 34; HIV prevalence, 88%), and cardiac disease (n = 15; HIV prevalence, 93%) were more common than were Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia and cryptococcosis (n = 8 and n = 5, respectively; HIV prevalence, 100%), and we found no cases of nocardiosis or histoplasmosis. Conclusions. TB was diagnosed for 43% of patients who presented with chronic cough to primary health care clinics in Harare, with 71% having smear-positive disease. The findings of TB culture added relatively little to the findings of fluorescent microscopy of concentrated sputum specimens. The prevalence of HIV infection was high across a range of diagnoses, suggesting that an HIV test should be recommended in the initial investigation of chronic cough. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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22. Mycobacterium tuberculosis/HIV-1 Coinfection and Disease: Role of Human Leukocyte Antigen Variation.
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Louie, Leslie G., Hartogensis, Wendy E., Jackman, Rachael P., Schultz, Kathleen A., Zijenah, Lynn S., Yiu, Carina H.-Y., Nguyen, Viet D., Sohsman, Marie Y., Katzenstein, David K., and Mason, Peter R.
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MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *IMMUNOREGULATION , *IMMUNOSUPPRESSION , *LEUCOCYTES , *HIV infections , *PLEURAL effusions , *ANTIGENS - Abstract
Genetic variation influences immune responses and may contribute to differential development of tuberculosis (TB), particularly in immunosuppressed individuals. To examine the risk of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection progressing to disease in the context of M. tuberculosis/human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 coinfection, HIV-1 RNA load and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genotypes were determined among subjects from Harare, Zimbabwe, an area where both TB and HIV-1 are endemic. Patients with TB were compared with control subjects, stratified by HIV-1 infection status and progression of TB disease. Alleles of class I HLA-A and -c were associated with risk of developing active TB, depending on HIV-I status. Among HIV- positive subjects, HIV-1 load was independently associated with increased risk of developing pulmonary TB. HLA DRB1 homozygosity among HIV-positive subjects was associated with reduced risk of developing pulmonary TB but increased risk of rapid progression to pleural effusion TB. These observations suggest that HLA plays a role in risk of developing symptomatic TB at various stages of disease and that these effects are modified by HIV-1 coinfection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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23. The contribution of HIV to fertility decline in rural Zimbabwe, 1985-2000.
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Terceira, Nicola, Gregson, Simon, Zaba, Basia, and Mason, Peter R.
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HIV , *FERTILITY , *AIDS , *FERTILITY decline , *HIV-positive women , *BIRTH rate , *POPULATION , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys - Abstract
HIV-related sub-fertility has been reported for those populations in sub-Saharan Africa in which contraceptive use is low. We use data from a retrospective survey in rural Zimbabwe and multivariate logistic regression models to show that recent birth rates and current pregnancy rates are also lower among HIV-positive women than among HIV-negative women in those African populations where contraceptive use is high. The fertility reduction is smaller than where contraceptive use is low because age at first sexual intercourse is later and birth rates at older ages are already low. Nevertheless, total fertility is approximately 8.5 per cent lower and HIV-associated sub-fertility may account for as much as one-quarter of fertility decline in Zimbabwe since the late 1980s. Mechanisms for HIV-associated sub-fertility in rural Zimbabwe include more frequent widowhood and divorce, reduced coital frequency, increased amenorrhoea, and possibly, pelvic inflammatory disease. Miscarriage appears to be a less important factor than elsewhere possibly because syphilis is rare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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24. Rapid emergence of resistance to penicillin and trimethoprim–sulphamethoxazole in invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae in Zimbabwe
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Gwanzura, Lovemore, Pasi, Christopher, Nathoo, Kusum J., Hakim, James, Gangaidzo, Innocent, Mielke, Jens, Robertson, Valerie J., Heyderman, Robert S., and Mason, Peter R.
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MENINGITIS , *ANTIBIOTICS - Abstract
Pneumococcal pneumonia and meningitis are common infectious disease problems in people who are HIV seropositive in southern Africa. For many years two inexpensive antibiotics, penicillin and trimethoprim–sulphamethoxazole (TMP–SMX) had been effective in treatment, but recently resistance to these agents has been reported from many parts of the world. This study was designed to determine the antimicrobial resistance patterns in invasive pneumococci from hospital patients in Harare, Zimbabwe. A total of 160 isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae from blood cultures and CSF cultures were examined. The isolates came from adults and children in hospital in Harare between 1994 and 2000. The majority of isolates came from HIV positive adults (74%) and children (75%). Isolates of pneumococci with an MIC of 1.0 mg/l or more were first seen in 1997 and by 2000 they made up 35% of all isolates. Significantly more isolates from HIV seropositive patients (50%) showed reduced susceptibility to penicillin compared with isolates from HIV seronegative patients (16%), and high level resistance (MIC 1.0 mg/l or higher) was found in 16% isolates from HIV positive patients compared with 6% isolates from HIV seronegative patients. Resistance to TMP–SMX was common, with more than 50% isolates from HIV positive and HIV negative patients having reduced susceptibility to this antibiotic combination. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2003
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25. Association of high HIV-1 RNA levels and homozygosity at HLA class II DRB1 in adults coinfected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Harare, Zimbabwe
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Zijenah, Lynn S., Hartogensis, Wendy E., Katzenstein, David A., Tobaiwa, Ocean, Mutswangwa, Junior, Mason, Peter R., and Louie, Leslie G.
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HLA histocompatibility antigens , *HIV - Abstract
HIV-1 mRNA levels (virus load) were quantified for 191 pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) patients and 132 HIV-1 seropositive controls. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I and II genes were typed for 188 patients and 121 HIV-1 seropositive controls. The mean log virus load was higher among cases than HIV-1 seropositive controls (p < 0.0001). Among the controls, mean log virus load was higher among males than females (p = 0.04). There was no association between virus load and homozygosity at HLA class I and II among the controls. In contrast, among the cases, HLA-DRB1 homozygosity was associated with high virus load (p = 0.008), conferring risk for rapid progression to AIDS, thus lending support to the heterozygote advantage hypothesis. The observed decreased virus load in HLA-DRB-1 heterozygotes may be due to a better control of M. tb. infection in the context of HIV-1 disease. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2002
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26. Sexual mixing patterns and sex-differentials in teenage exposure to HIV infection in rural Zimbabwe.
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Gregson, Simon, Nyamukapa, Constance A, Garnett, Geoffrey P, Mason, Peter R, Zhuwau, Tom, Caraël, Michel, Chandiwana, Stephen K, and Anderson, Roy M
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HIV infections , *ADOLESCENT health , *YOUNG women , *PUBLIC health , *YOUTHS' sexual behavior ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
Summary: Background: HIV-1 prevalence typically rises more rapidly at young ages in women than in men in sub-Saharan Africa. Greater susceptibility to infection on exposure in women is believed to be a contributory factor as is greater exposure to previously infected sexual partners of the opposite sex. We investigated the latter hypothesis using data from a field study in rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe. Methods: Quantitative data on onset and degree of sexual activity, numbers of partners, concurrent partnerships, condom use, and partner characteristics were used in conjunction with epidemiological data on age and sex specific prevalence of HIV infection to do statistical analyses of association between key variables. Mathematical models and qualitative data were used to aid analysis and interpretation. Findings: Older age of sexual partner was associated with increased risk of HIV-1 infection in men (odds ratio 1.13 [95% CI 1.02-1.25]) and women (1.04 [1.01-1.07]). Young women form partnerships with men 5-10 years older than themselves, whereas young men have relationships with women of a similar age or slightly younger. Greater number of lifetime partners is also associated with increased risk of HIV (1.03 [1.00-1.05]). Young men report more partners than do women but infrequent coital acts and greater use of condoms. These behaviour patterns are underpinned by cultural factors including the expectation that women should marry earlier than men. A strong gender effect remains after factors that affect exposure to infected partners are controlled for (6.04 [1.49-24.47]). Interpretation: The substantial age difference between female and male sexual partners in Manicaland is the major behavioural determinant of the more rapid rise in HIV prevalence in young women than in men. Theoretical studies have suggested that this difference is an important determinant of observed epidemiological patterns but the study reported in this paper provides clear empirical evidence... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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27. Reply.
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Heyderman, Robert S., Gangaidzo, Innocent T., Hakim, James G., Mielke, Jens, Taziwa, Albert, Musvaire, Praise, Robertson, Valerie J., and Mason, Peter R.
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AIDS complications , *MENINGITIS - Abstract
Presents a reply to the letter of authors Angela Restrepo and Elizabeth Castaneda which appeared in the June 1999 issue of the periodical 'Clinical Infectious Diseases,' concerning clinical researches on HIV in resource-poor countries. Importance of the study on cryptococcal meningitis (CM) in AIDS associated condition; Need to develop a sustainable management strategy that benefits all patients with CM.
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- 1999
28. Voluntary Counseling and Testing by Nurse Counselors: What Is the Role of Routine Repeated Testing after a Negative Result?
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Matambo, Ronnie, Dauya, Ethel, Mutswanga, Junior, Makanza, Eve, Chandiwana, Steven, Mason, Peter R., Butterworth, Anthony E., and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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RAPID methods (Microbiology) , *NURSES , *COUNSELING , *HIV , *MICROBIOLOGICAL techniques - Abstract
Three hundred eighty-eight human immuno deficiency virus (HIV)-negative clients in Zimbabwe were retested at 3 months using 2 parallel rapid tests. One operator error (risk, 0.26%; 95% confidence interval, 0.0065%-1.4%) and no "true" seroconversions (upper 95% confidence limit, 0.96%) were detected. High-risk behavior was not significantly reduced. Policies recommending routine retesting need to be reconsidered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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29. HIV Decline Associated with Behavior Change in Eastern Zimbabwe.
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Gregson, Simon, Garnett, Geoffrey P., Nyamukapa, Constance A., Hallett, Timothy B., Lewis, James J. C., Mason, Peter R., Chandiwana, Stephen K., and Anderson, Roy M.
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HIV infections , *AIDS , *HUMAN sexuality , *AIDS education , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *LENTIVIRUS diseases , *IMMUNOLOGICAL deficiency syndromes - Abstract
Few sub-Saharan African countries have witnessed declines in HIV prevalence, and only Uganda has compelling evidence for a decline founded on sexual behavior change. We report a decline in HIV prevalence in eastern Zimbabwe between 1998 and 2003 associated with sexual behavior change in four distinct socioeconomic strata. HIV prevalence fell most steeply at young ages — by 23 and 49%, respectively, among men aged 17 to 29 years and women aged 15 to 24 years — and in more educated groups. Sexually experienced men and women reported reductions in casual sex of 49 and 22%, respectively, whereas recent cohorts reported delayed sexual debut. Selective AIDS-induced mortality contributed to the decline in HIV prevalence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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30. Authors' Reply: Don't Let the Hypothesis Slip.
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Lopman, Ben A., Garnett, Geoff P., Gregson, Simon, and Mason, Peter R.
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INJECTIONS , *DRUG administration , *HIV infection transmission , *AIDS - Abstract
Presents the response of the authors to comments on their study regarding the association between injections and HIV incidence. Investigation of the hypothesised importance of medical injections in the transmission of HIV in Africa; Difficulty in collecting data for the study; Problems in generating reliable responses to questions about sexual behavior.
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- 2005
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31. Reply to Talbot et al.
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Corbett, Elizabeth L., Munyati, Shungu S., Mungofa, Stanley, Gwanzura, Lovemore, Mutsvangwa, Junior, and Mason, Peter R.
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LETTERS to the editor , *TUBERCULOSIS - Abstract
Presents a letter to the editor in response to the treatment of tuberculosis.
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- 2005
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32. Uptake of workplace HIV counselling and testing: a cluster-randomised trial in Zimbabwe.
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Corbett, Elizabeth L., Dauya, Ethel, Matambo, Ronnie, Yin Bun Cheung, Makamure, Beauty, Bassett, Mary T., Chandiwana, Steven, Munyati, Shungu, Mason, Peter R., Butterworth, Anthony E., Godfrey-Faussett, Peter, Hayes, Richard J., and Cheung, Yin Bun
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HEALTH counseling , *HIV infections , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *CLINICS , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: HIV counselling and testing is a key component of both HIV care and HIV prevention, but uptake is currently low. We investigated the impact of rapid HIV testing at the workplace on uptake of voluntary counselling and testing (VCT).Methods and Findings: The study was a cluster-randomised trial of two VCT strategies, with business occupational health clinics as the unit of randomisation. VCT was directly offered to all employees, followed by 2 y of open access to VCT and basic HIV care. Businesses were randomised to either on-site rapid HIV testing at their occupational clinic (11 businesses) or to vouchers for off-site VCT at a chain of free-standing centres also using rapid tests (11 businesses). Baseline anonymised HIV serology was requested from all employees. HIV prevalence was 19.8% and 18.4%, respectively, at businesses randomised to on-site and off-site VCT. In total, 1,957 of 3,950 employees at clinics randomised to on-site testing had VCT (mean uptake by site 51.1%) compared to 586 of 3,532 employees taking vouchers at clinics randomised to off-site testing (mean uptake by site 19.2%). The risk ratio for on-site VCT compared to voucher uptake was 2.8 (95% confidence interval 1.8 to 3.8) after adjustment for potential confounders. Only 125 employees (mean uptake by site 4.3%) reported using their voucher, so that the true adjusted risk ratio for on-site compared to off-site VCT may have been as high as 12.5 (95% confidence interval 8.2 to 16.8).Conclusions: High-impact VCT strategies are urgently needed to maximise HIV prevention and access to care in Africa. VCT at the workplace offers the potential for high uptake when offered on-site and linked to basic HIV care. Convenience and accessibility appear to have critical roles in the acceptability of community-based VCT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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