89 results on '"Van der Stuyft, Patrick"'
Search Results
2. Effectiveness of a provider and patient-focused intervention to improve hypertension management and control in the primary health care setting in Cuba: a controlled before-after study.
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Londoño Agudelo, Esteban, Battaglioli, Tullia, Díaz Piñera, Addys, Rodríguez Salvá, Armando, Smekens, Tom, Achiong Estupiñán, Fernando, Carbonell García, Isabel, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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HYPERTENSION ,PATIENT-centered care ,REGRESSION analysis ,PRIMARY health care ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITY assurance ,STATISTICAL sampling ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISEASE management - Abstract
Background: Implementation research to improve hypertension control is scarce in Latin America. We assessed the effectiveness of an intervention aimed at primary care practitioners and hypertensive patients in a setting that provides integrated care through an accessible network of family practices. Methods: We conducted in Cardenas and Santiago, Cuba, a controlled before-after study in 122 family practices, which are staffed with a doctor and a nurse. The intervention comprised a control arm (usual care), an arm with a component targeting providers (hypertension management workshops), and an arm with, on top of the latter, a component targeting patients (hypertension schools). To evaluate the effect, we undertook a baseline survey before the intervention and an endline survey sixteen months after its start. In each survey, we randomly included 1400 hypertensive patients. Controlled hypertension, defined as a mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure below 140 and 90 mmHg, respectively, was the primary endpoint assessed. We performed linear and logistic regression with a Generalized Estimating Equations approach to determine if the proportion of patients with controlled hypertension changed following the intervention. Results: Seventy-three doctors, including substitutes, and 54 nurses from the 61 intervention family practices attended the provider workshops, and 3308 patients −51.6% of the eligible ones- participated in the hypertension schools. Adherence to anti-hypertensive medication improved from 42% at baseline to 63% at the endline in the intervention arms. Under the provider intervention, the proportion of patients with controlled hypertension increased by 18.9%, from 48.7% at baseline to 67.6% at endline. However, adding the component that targeted hypertensive patients did not augment the effect. Compared to patients in the control arm, the adjusted OR of having controlled hypertension was 2.36 (95% CI, 1.73–3.22) in the provider and 2.00 (95% CI, 1.68–2.37) in the provider plus patient intervention arm. Conclusions: The intervention's patient component remains to be fine-tuned. Still, we demonstrate that it is feasible to substantially improve hypertension outcomes by intervention at the primary care level, despite an already relatively high control rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Lung cancer occurrence after an episode of tuberculosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Cabrera-Sanchez, Javier, Cuba, Vicente, Vega, Victor, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, and Otero, Larissa
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LUNG cancer ,TUBERCULOSIS ,META-analysis ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,HETEROGENEITY - Abstract
Introduction: People with tuberculosis experience long-term health effects beyond cure, including chronic respiratory diseases. We investigated whether tuberculosis is a risk factor for subsequent lung cancer. Methods: We searched PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane, Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature and the Scientific Electronic Library Online for cohort and case-control studies providing effect estimates for the association between tuberculosis and subsequent lung cancer. We pooled estimates through random-effects meta-analysis. The study was registered in PROSPERO (CDR42020178362). Results: Out of 6240 records, we included 29 cohort and 44 case-control studies. Pooled estimates adjusted for age and smoking (assessed quantitatively) were hazard ratio (HR) 1.51 (95% CI 1.30-1.76, I²=81%; five studies) and OR 1.74 (95% CI 1.42-2.13, I²=59%; 19 studies). The occurrence of lung cancer was increased for 2 years after tuberculosis diagnosis (HR 5.01, 95% CI 3.64-6.89; two studies), but decreased thereafter. Most studies were retrospective, had moderate to high risk of bias, and did not control for passive smoking, environmental exposure and socioeconomic status. Heterogeneity was high. Conclusion: We document an association between tuberculosis and lung cancer occurrence, particularly in, but not limited to, the first 2 years after tuberculosis diagnosis. Some cancer cases may have been present at the time of tuberculosis diagnosis and therefore causality cannot be ascertained. Prospective studies controlling for key confounding factors are needed to identify which tuberculosis patients are at the highest risk, as well as cost-effective approaches to mitigate such risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Gaps in Hypertension Management in a Middle-Income Community of Quito-Ecuador: A Population-Based Study.
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Ortiz, Patricia, Vásquez, Yajaira, Arévalo, Esperanza, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, and Londoño Agudelo, Esteban
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- 2022
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5. Evaluation of insecticide treated window curtains and water container covers for dengue vector control in a large-scale cluster-randomized trial in Venezuela.
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Lenhart, Audrey, Castillo, Carmen Elena, Villegas, Elci, Alexander, Neal, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, van der Stuyft, Patrick, and McCall, Philip J.
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VECTOR control ,DENGUE ,INSECTICIDES ,AEDES aegypti ,VIRUS diseases - Abstract
Background: Following earlier trials indicating that their potential in dengue vector control was constrained by housing structure, a large-scale cluster-randomized trial of insecticide treated curtains (ITCs) and water jar covers (ITJCs) was undertaken in Venezuela. Methods: In Trujillo, Venezuela, 60 clusters (6223 houses total) were randomized so that 15 clusters each received either PermaNet insecticide-treated window curtains (ITCs), permanent insecticide-treated water storage jar covers (ITJCs), a combination of both ITCs and ITJCs, or no insecticide treated materials (ITMs). A further 15 clusters located at least 5km from the edge of the study site were selected to act as an external control. Entomological surveys were carried out immediately before and after intervention, and then at 6-month intervals over the following 27 months. The Breteau and House indices were used as primary outcome measures and ovitrap indices as secondary. Negative binomial regression models were used to compare cluster-level values of these indices between the trial arms. Results: Reductions in entomological indices followed deployment of all ITMs and throughout the trial, indices in the external control arm remained substantially higher than in the ITM study arms including the internal control. Comparing the ratios of between-arm means to summarise the entomological indices throughout the study, the combined ITC+ITJC intervention had the greatest impact on the indices, with a 63% difference in the pupae per person indices between the ITC+ITJC arm and the internal control. However, coverage had fallen below 60% by 14-months post-intervention and remained below 40% for most of the remaining study period. Conclusions: ITMs can impact dengue vector populations in the long term, particularly when ITCs and ITJCs are deployed in combination. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov ISRCTN08474420; www.isrctn.com. Author summary: Dengue is a serious mosquito-borne disease and a threat to an estimated one third of the human population throughout the tropics. Prevention and control of dengue outbreaks is limited to vector control, and most public health programs use a variety of methods to kill the primary mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti. Water holding containers harboring the mosquito's immature stages can be treated or eliminated, in addition to control measures that target infected adult mosquitoes. Sustainable interventions that effectively target adult mosquitoes are needed to increase the options for control of dengue and other Aedes-borne viral diseases. The use of insecticide-treated curtains (ITCs) has previously been shown to significantly reduce Ae. aegypti numbers in and around homes, but the impact of insecticide-treated jar covers (ITJCs) is less known. The results of this study demonstrated that both ITCs and ITJCs can reduce entomological indices, with the greatest impact detected when they were deployed together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Gaps in hypertension care and control: a population‐based study in low‐income urban Medellin, Colombia.
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Londoño Agudelo, Esteban, Pérez Ospina, Viviana, Battaglioli, Tullia, Taborda Pérez, Cecilia, Gómez‐Arias, Rubén, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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HYPERTENSION ,ANTIHYPERTENSIVE agents ,BLOOD pressure ,DIAGNOSIS ,URBAN studies - Abstract
Objectives: To assess hypertension prevalence and the extent and associated factors of hypertension diagnosis, follow‐up, treatment and control gaps in low‐income urban Medellin, Colombia. Methods: We randomly sampled 1873 adults aged 35 or older. Unaware hypertensive individuals were defined as those without previous diagnosis whose average blood pressure was equal to or above 140/90 mmHg. For aware hypertensive patients, control was delimited as average blood pressure below 140/90 if under 59 years old or diabetic, and as less than 150/90 otherwise. We used logistic regression to identify care gap‐associated factors. Results: Hypertension prevalence was 43.5% (95% CI 41.2–45.7). We found 28.2% aware and 15.3% unaware hypertensive individuals, which corresponds to a 35.1% (95% CI 31.9–38.5) underdiagnosis. This gap was determined by age, sex, education and lifestyle factors. 14.4% (95% CI 11.6–17.6) of aware hypertensive patients presented a follow‐up gap, 93.4% (95% CI 90.9–95.2) were prescribed antihypertensive drugs, but 38.9% (95% CI 34.7–43.3) were not compliant. The latter was strongly associated with follow‐up. The hypertension control gap in aware hypertensive patients, 39.0% (95% CI: 34.9–43.2), was associated with being older, having diabetes, weakly adhering to pharmacological treatment and receiving poor non‐pharmacological advice. Overall, 60.4% (95% CI 57.0–63.8) of aware and unaware hypertensive participants had either diagnosed but uncontrolled or undiagnosed hypertension. Conclusions: We found high hypertension prevalence coupled with, from an international perspective, encouraging awareness and control figures. Still, there remains ample room for improvement. Our findings can assist in designing integrated primary healthcare measures that further strengthen equitable and effective access to hypertension care and control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Recurrent TB: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the incidence rates and the proportions of relapses and reinfections.
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Vega, Victor, Rodríguez, Sharon, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Seas, Carlos, and Otero, Larissa
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REINFECTION ,TUBERCULOSIS ,HIV infections ,MULTIDRUG-resistant tuberculosis ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: A recurrent tuberculosis (TB) episode results from exogenous reinfection or relapse after cure. The use of genotyping allows the distinction between both.Methods: We did a systematic review and meta-analysis, using four databases to search for studies in English, French and Spanish published between 1 January 1980 and 30 September 2020 that assessed recurrences after TB treatment success and/or differentiated relapses from reinfections using genotyping. We calculated person years of follow-up and performed random-effects model meta-analysis for estimating pooled recurrent TB incidence rates and proportions of relapses and reinfections. We performed subgroup analyses by clinical-epidemiological factors and by methodological study characteristics.Findings: The pooled recurrent TB incidence rate was 2.26 per 100 person years at risk (95% CI 1.87 to 2.73; 145 studies). Heterogeneity was high (I2=98%). Stratified pooled recurrence rates increased from 1.47 (95% CI 0.87 to 2.46) to 4.10 (95% CI 2.67 to 6.28) per 100 person years for studies conducted in low versus high TB incidence settings. Background HIV prevalence, treatment drug regimen, sample size and duration of follow-up contributed too. The pooled proportion of relapses was 70% (95% CI 63% to 77%; I²=85%; 48 studies). Heterogeneity was determined by background TB incidence, as demonstrated by pooled proportions of 83% (95% CI 75% to 89%) versus 59% (95% CI 42% to 74%) relapse for studies from settings with low versus high TB incidence, respectively.Interpretation: The risk of recurrent TB is substantial and relapse is consistently the most frequent form of recurrence. Notwithstanding, with increasing background TB incidence the proportion of reinfections increases and the predominance of relapses among recurrences decreases.Prospero Registration Number: CRD42018077867. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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8. Contact evaluation and isoniazid preventive therapy among close and household contacts of tuberculosis patients in Lima, Peru: an analysis of routine data.
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Otero, Larissa, Battaglioli, Tullia, Ríos, Julia, De la Torre, Zayda, Trocones, Nayda, Ordoñez, Cielo, Seas, Carlos, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,DRUG therapy for tuberculosis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,ISONIAZID ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ANTITUBERCULAR agents ,CHILD health services ,RESEARCH funding ,CONTACT tracing - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2020
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9. Out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care: a population-based study in low-income urban Medellin, Colombia.
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Londoño Agudelo, Esteban, García Fariñas, Anaí, Pérez Ospina, Viviana, Taborda Pérez, Cecilia, Villacrés Landeta, Tatiana, Battaglioli, Tullia, Gómez Arias, Rubén, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Abstract
Hypertension requires life-long medical care, which may cause economic burden and even lead to catastrophic health expenditure. To estimate the extent of out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care at a population level and its impact on households’ budgets in a low-income urban setting in Colombia. We conducted a cross-sectional survey in Santa Cruz, a commune in the city of Medellin. In 410 randomly selected households with a hypertensive adult, we estimated annual basic household expenditure and hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure. For socioeconomic stratification, we categorised households according to basic expenditure quintiles. Catastrophic hypertension-attributable expenditure was defined as out-of-pocket expenditure above 10% of total household expenditure. The average annual basic household expenditure was US dollars at purchasing power parity (USD-PPP) $12,255.59. The average annual hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure was USD-PPP $147.75 (95% CI 120.93–174.52). It was incurred by 73.9% (95% CI 69.4%-78.1%) of patients, and consisted mainly of direct non-medical expenses (76.7%), predominantly for dietary requirements prescribed as non-pharmacological treatment and for transport to attend health care consultations. Medical out-of-pocket expenditure (23.3%) was for the most part incurred for pharmacological treatment. Hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure represented on average 1.6% (95% CI 1.3%-1.9%) of the total annual basic household expenditure. Eight households (2.0%; 95% CI 1.0%-3.8%) had catastrophic health expenditure; six of them belonged to the two lowest expenditure quintiles. Payments related to dietary requirements and transport to consultations were critical determinants of their catastrophic expenditure. Out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care is moderate on average, but frequent, and mainly made up of direct non-medical expenses. Catastrophic health expenditure is uncommon and affects primarily households in the bottom socioeconomic quintiles. Financial protection should be strengthened by covering the costs of chronic diseases-related dietary requirements and transport to health services in the most deprived households. NCDs: Non-communicable diseases; LMICs: Low and middle-income countries; WHO: World Health Organization; HTN: hypertension; CVDs: Cardiovascular diseases; OOPE: out-of-pocket expenditure; USD-PPP: US dollars at purchasing power parity; CI: Confidence interval [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. Out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care: a population-based study in low-income urban Medellin, Colombia.
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Londoño Agudelo, Esteban, García Fariñas, Anaí, Pérez Ospina, Viviana, Taborda Pérez, Cecilia, Villacrés Landeta, Tatiana, Battaglioli, Tullia, Gómez Arias, Rubén, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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CHRONIC diseases ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DIET ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,HYPERTENSION ,INCOME ,INSURANCE ,MEDICAL care costs ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PRIMARY health care ,TRANSPORTATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,NON-communicable diseases ,POPULATION-based case control - Abstract
Hypertension requires life-long medical care, which may cause economic burden and even lead to catastrophic health expenditure. To estimate the extent of out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care at a population level and its impact on households' budgets in a low-income urban setting in Colombia. We conducted a cross-sectional survey in Santa Cruz, a commune in the city of Medellin. In 410 randomly selected households with a hypertensive adult, we estimated annual basic household expenditure and hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure. For socioeconomic stratification, we categorised households according to basic expenditure quintiles. Catastrophic hypertension-attributable expenditure was defined as out-of-pocket expenditure above 10% of total household expenditure. The average annual basic household expenditure was US dollars at purchasing power parity (USD-PPP) $12,255.59. The average annual hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure was USD-PPP $147.75 (95% CI 120.93–174.52). It was incurred by 73.9% (95% CI 69.4%-78.1%) of patients, and consisted mainly of direct non-medical expenses (76.7%), predominantly for dietary requirements prescribed as non-pharmacological treatment and for transport to attend health care consultations. Medical out-of-pocket expenditure (23.3%) was for the most part incurred for pharmacological treatment. Hypertension-attributable out-of-pocket expenditure represented on average 1.6% (95% CI 1.3%-1.9%) of the total annual basic household expenditure. Eight households (2.0%; 95% CI 1.0%-3.8%) had catastrophic health expenditure; six of them belonged to the two lowest expenditure quintiles. Payments related to dietary requirements and transport to consultations were critical determinants of their catastrophic expenditure. Out-of-pocket expenditure for hypertension care is moderate on average, but frequent, and mainly made up of direct non-medical expenses. Catastrophic health expenditure is uncommon and affects primarily households in the bottom socioeconomic quintiles. Financial protection should be strengthened by covering the costs of chronic diseases-related dietary requirements and transport to health services in the most deprived households. NCDs: Non-communicable diseases; LMICs: Low and middle-income countries; WHO: World Health Organization; HTN: hypertension; CVDs: Cardiovascular diseases; OOPE: out-of-pocket expenditure; USD-PPP: US dollars at purchasing power parity; CI: Confidence interval [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Assessment of hypertension management and control: a registry-based observational study in two municipalities in Cuba.
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Londoño Agudelo, Esteban, Rodríguez Salvá, Armando, Díaz Piñera, Addys, García Roche, René, De Vos, Pol, Battaglioli, Tullia, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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HYPERTENSION ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,BLOOD pressure measurement ,PRIMARY health care - Abstract
Background: To determine the prevalence of hypertension treatment and control among hypertensive patients in the Cuban municipalities of Cardenas and Santiago and to explore the main associated predictors.Methods: Cross-sectional study, with multistage cluster sampling, conducted between February 2012 and January 2013 in two Cuban municipalities. We interviewed and measured blood pressure in 1333 hypertensive patients aged 18 years or older. Hypertension control was defined as blood pressure lower than 140/90 mmHg.Results: The mean age ± standard deviation (SD) of participants was 59.8 ± 14 years, the mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure ± SD was 130.0 ± 14.4 and 83.1 ± 9.0 mmHg respectively. The majority of patients (91, 95%CI 90-93) were on pharmacological treatment, 49% with a combination of 2 or more classes of drugs. Among diagnosed hypertensive patients 58% (95%CI 55-61) had controlled hypertension. There was no association between hypertension control and gender, age and socio-economic condition. Levels of hypertension control depended on health area and control furthermore was positively associated with post-primary education, not being obese and white ethnicity: adjusted Odds Ratio (95% CI) 1.71 (1.26-2.34), 1.43 (1.09-1.88) and 1.41 (1.09-1.81) respectively.Conclusions: The observed figures are outstanding at the international level and illustrate that hypertension treatment and control are achievable in a resource-constrained setting such as Cuba. The country's primary health care approach and social equity in access to health care can be seen as key determinants of this success. Nevertheless, there is still room for improvement, as over a third of patients did not have controlled hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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12. Prioritizing surveillance activities for certification of yaws eradication based on a review and model of historical case reporting.
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Fitzpatrick, Christopher, Asiedu, Kingsley, Solomon, Anthony W., Mitja, Oriol, Marks, Michael, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, and Meheus, Filip
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YAWS ,BACTERIAL disease prevention ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,REPORTING of diseases - Abstract
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) has targeted yaws for global eradication. Eradication requires certification that all countries are yaws-free. While only 14 Member States currently report cases to WHO, many more are known to have a history of yaws and some of them may have ongoing transmission. We reviewed the literature and developed a model of case reports to identify countries in which passive surveillance is likely to find and report cases if transmission is still occurring, with the goal of reducing the number of countries in which more costly active surveillance will be required. Methods: We reviewed published and unpublished documents to extract data on the number of yaws cases reported to WHO or appearing in other literature in any year between 1945 and 2015. We classified countries as: a) having interrupted transmission; b) being currently endemic; c) being previously endemic (current status unknown); or d) having no history of yaws. We constructed a panel dataset for the years 1945–2015 and ran a regression model to identify factors associated with some countries not reporting cases during periods when there was ongoing (and documented) transmission. For previously endemic countries whose current status is unknown, we then estimated the probability that countries would have reported cases if there had in fact been transmission in the last three years (2013–2015). Results: Yaws has been reported in 103 of the 237 countries and areas considered. 14 Member States and 1 territory (Wallis and Futuna Islands) are currently endemic. 2 countries are believed to have interrupted transmission. 86 countries and areas are previously endemic (current status unknown). Reported cases peaked in the 1950s, with 55 countries reporting at least one case in 1950 and a total of 2.35 million cases reported in 1954. Our regression model suggests that case reporting during periods of ongoing transmission is positively associated with socioeconomic development and, in the short-term, negatively associated with independence. We estimated that for 66 out of the 86 previously endemic countries whose current status is unknown, the probability of reporting cases in the absence of active surveillance is less than 50%. Discussion: Countries with a history of yaws need to be prioritized so that international resources for global yaws eradication may be deployed efficiently. Heretofore, the focus has been on mass treatment in countries currently reporting cases. It is also important to undertake surveillance in the 86 previously endemic countries for which the current status is unknown. Within this large and diverse group, we have identified a group of 20 countries with more than a 50% probability of reporting cases in the absence of active surveillance. For the other 66 countries, international support for active surveillance will likely be required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Involving private practitioners in the Indian tuberculosis programme: a randomised trial.
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Yellappa, Vijayashree, Battaglioli, Tullia, Gurum, Sanath Kumar, Narayanan, Devadasan, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS ,SPUTUM examination ,HEALTH care reform ,LUNG diseases ,MYCOBACTERIAL diseases - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
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14. Development of a clinical prediction rule for tuberculous meningitis in adults in Lima, Peru.
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Solari, Lely, Soto, Alonso, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOUS meningitis ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,DISEASES in adults ,ADENOSINE deaminase ,DIAGNOSIS ,COUGH diagnosis ,BIOLOGICAL models ,COUGH ,DECISION making ,HIV infections ,HOSPITALS ,HYDROLASES ,METROPOLITAN areas ,MYCOBACTERIUM ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Insecticide treated curtains and residual insecticide treatment to control Aedes aegypti: An acceptability study in Santiago de Cuba.
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Pérez, Dennis, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Toledo, María Eugenia, Ceballos, Enrique, Fabré, Francisco, and Lefèvre, Pierre
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AEDES aegypti ,INSECTICIDES ,DELTAMETHRIN ,VECTOR control ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: Within the context of a field trial conducted by the Cuban vector control program (AaCP), we assessed acceptability of insecticide-treated curtains (ITCs) and residual insecticide treatment (RIT) with deltamethrin by the community. We also assessed the potential influence of interviewees’ risk perceptions for getting dengue and disease severity. Methodology/principal findings: We embedded a qualitative study using in-depth interviews in a cluster randomized trial (CRT) testing the effectiveness of ITCs and RIT in Santiago de Cuba. In-depth interviews (N = 38) were conducted four and twelve months after deployment of the tools with people who accepted the tools, who stopped using them and who did not accept the tools. Data analysis was deductive. Main reasons for accepting ITCs at the start of the trial were perceived efficacy and not being harmful to health. Constraints linked to manufacturer instructions were the main reason for not using ITCs. People stopped using the ITCs due to perceived allergy, toxicity and low efficacy. Few heads of households refused RIT despite the noting reasons for rejection, such as allergy, health hazard and toxicity. Positive opinions of the vector control program influenced acceptability of both tools. However, frequent insecticide fogging as part of routine AaCP vector control actions diminished perceived efficacy of both tools and, therefore, acceptability. Fifty percent of interviewees did feel at risk for getting dengue and considered dengue a severe disease. However, this did not appear to influence acceptability of ITCs or RIT. Conclusion/significance: Acceptability of ITCs and RIT was linked to acceptability of AaCP routine vector control activities. However, uptake and use were not always an indication of acceptability. Factors leading to acceptability may be best identified using qualitative methods, but more research is needed on the concept of acceptability and its measurement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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16. The additional benefit of residual spraying and insecticide-treated curtains for dengue control over current best practice in Cuba: Evaluation of disease incidence in a cluster randomized trial in a low burden setting with intensive routine control.
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Toledo, Maria Eugenia, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, Rosales, Julio Popa, Mirabal, Mayelin, Cabrera, Pedro, Fonseca, Viviana, Gómez Padrón, Tania, Pérez Menzies, Mirtha, Montada, Domingo, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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AEDES ,DENGUE ,INSECTICIDES ,DELTAMETHRIN ,HEALTH education - Abstract
Background: Aedes control interventions are considered the cornerstone of dengue control programmes, but there is scarce evidence on their effect on disease. We set-up a cluster randomized controlled trial in Santiago de Cuba to evaluate the entomological and epidemiological effectiveness of periodical intra- and peri-domiciliary residual insecticide (deltamethrin) treatment (RIT) and long lasting insecticide treated curtains (ITC). Methodology/Principal findings: Sixty three clusters (around 250 households each) were randomly allocated to two intervention (RIT and ITC) and one control arm. Routine Aedes control activities (entomological surveillance, source reduction, selective adulticiding, health education) were applied in the whole study area. The outcome measures were clinical dengue case incidence and immature Aedes infestation. Effectiveness of tools was evaluated using a generalized linear regression model with a negative binomial link function. Despite significant reduction in Aedes indices (Rate Ratio (RR) 0.54 (95%CI 0.32–0.89) in the first month after RIT, the effect faded out over time and dengue incidence was not reduced. Overall, in this setting there was no protective effect of RIT or ITC over routine in the 17months intervention period, with for house index RR of 1.16 (95%CI 0.96–1.40) and 1.25 (95%CI 1.03–1.50) and for dengue incidence 1.43 (95%CI 1.08–1.90) and RR of 0.96 (95%CI 0.72–1.28) respectively. The monthly dengue incidence rate (IR) at cluster level was best explained by epidemic periods (Incidence Rate Ratio (IRR) 5.50 (95%CI 4.14–7.31)), the IR in bordering houseblocks (IRR 1.03 (95%CI 1.02–1.04)) and the IR pre-intervention (IRR 1.02 (95%CI 1.00–1.04)). Conclusions: Adding RIT to an intensive routine Aedes control programme has a transient effect on the already moderate low entomological infestation levels, while ITC did not have any effect. For both interventions, we didn’t evidence impact on disease incidence. Further studies are needed to evaluate impact in settings with high Aedes infestation and arbovirus case load. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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17. The cost and cost-effectiveness of rapid testing strategies for yaws diagnosis and surveillance.
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Fitzpatrick, Christopher, Asiedu, Kingsley, Sands, Anita, Gonzalez Pena, Tita, Marks, Michael, Mitja, Oriol, Meheus, Filip, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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YAWS ,COST effectiveness ,DISEASE prevalence ,HEALTH programs ,DIAGNOSIS ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Background: Yaws is a non-venereal treponemal infection caused by Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue. The disease is targeted by WHO for eradication by 2020. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are envisaged for confirmation of clinical cases during treatment campaigns and for certification of the interruption of transmission. Yaws testing requires both treponemal (trep) and non-treponemal (non-trep) assays for diagnosis of current infection. We evaluate a sequential testing strategy (using a treponemal RDT before a trep/non-trep RDT) in terms of cost and cost-effectiveness, relative to a single-assay combined testing strategy (using the trep/non-trep RDT alone), for two use cases: individual diagnosis and community surveillance. Methods: We use cohort decision analysis to examine the diagnostic and cost outcomes. We estimate cost and cost-effectiveness of the alternative testing strategies at different levels of prevalence of past/current infection and current infection under each use case. We take the perspective of the global yaws eradication programme. We calculate the total number of correct diagnoses for each strategy over a range of plausible prevalences. We employ probabilistic sensitivity analysis (PSA) to account for uncertainty and report 95% intervals. Results: At current prices of the treponemal and trep/non-trep RDTs, the sequential strategy is cost-saving for individual diagnosis at prevalence of past/current infection less than 85% (81–90); it is cost-saving for surveillance at less than 100%. The threshold price of the trep/non-trep RDT (below which the sequential strategy would no longer be cost-saving) is US$ 1.08 (1.02–1.14) for individual diagnosis at high prevalence of past/current infection (51%) and US$ 0.54 (0.52–0.56) for community surveillance at low prevalence (15%). Discussion: We find that the sequential strategy is cost-saving for both diagnosis and surveillance in most relevant settings. In the absence of evidence assessing relative performance (sensitivity and specificity), cost-effectiveness is uncertain. However, the conditions under which the combined test only strategy might be more cost-effective than the sequential strategy are limited. A cheaper trep/non-trep RDT is needed, costing no more than US$ 0.50–1.00, depending on the use case. Our results will help enhance the cost-effectiveness of yaws programmes in the 13 countries known to be currently endemic. It will also inform efforts in the much larger group of 71 countries with a history of yaws, many of which will have to undertake surveillance to confirm the interruption of transmission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. Performance of clinical prediction rules for diagnosis of pleural tuberculosis in a high-incidence setting.
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Solari, Lely, Soto, Alonso, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,DISEASE incidence ,PLEURAL tuberculosis ,CARDIOPULMONARY resuscitation ,PLEURAL biopsy ,PREDICTION models ,SPUTUM microbiology ,TUBERCULOSIS microbiology ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,CHEST X rays ,DECISION making ,CLINICAL pathology ,HYDROLASES ,MYCOBACTERIUM ,NEEDLE biopsy ,PLEURAL effusions ,TUBERCULOSIS ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,PREDICTIVE tests - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Patients pathways to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in a fragmented health system: a qualitative study from a south Indian district.
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Yellappa, Vijayashree, Lefèvre, Pierre, Battaglioli, Tullia, Devadasan, Narayanan, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS treatment ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care of tuberculosis patients ,MEDICAL care ,SICK people ,DRUG therapy for tuberculosis ,COGNITION ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL referrals ,NATIONAL health services ,QUALITATIVE research ,PRIVATE sector ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Background: India's Revised National Tuberculosis (TB) Control Programme (RNTCP) offers free TB diagnosis and treatment. But more than 50% of TB patients seek care from private practitioners (PPs), where TB is managed sub-optimally. In India, there is dearth of studies capturing experiences of TB patients when they navigate through health facilities to seek care. Also, there is less information available on how PPs make decisions to refer TB cases to RNTCP. We conducted this study to understand the factors influencing TB patient's therapeutic itineraries to RNTCP and PP's cross referral practices linked to RNTCP.Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews on a purposive sample of 33 TB patients and 38 PPs. Patients were categorised into three groups: those who reached RNTCP directly, those who were referred by PPs to RNTCP and patients who took DOT from PPs. We assessed patient's experiences in each category and documented their journey from initial symptoms until they reached RNTCP, where they were diagnosed and started on treatment. PPs were categorised into three groups based on their TB case referrals to RNTCP: actively-referring, minimally-referring and non-referring.Results: Patients had limited awareness about TB. Patients switched from one provider to the other, since their symptoms were not relieved. A first group of patients, self-medicated by purchasing get rid drugs from private chemists over the counter, before seeking care. A second group sought care from government facilities and had simple itineraries. A third group who sought care from PPs, switched concurrently and/or iteratively from public and private providers in search for relief of symptoms causing important diagnostic delays. Eventually all patients reached RNTCP, diagnosed and started on treatment. PP's cross-referral practices were influenced by patient's paying capacity, familiarity with RNTCP, kickbacks from private labs and chemists, and even to get rid of TB patients. These trade-offs by PPs complicated patient's itineraries to RNTCP.Conclusions: India aims to achieve universal health care for TB. Our study findings help RNTCP to develop initiatives to promote early detection of TB, by involving PPs and private chemists and establish effective referral systems from private sectors to RNTCP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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20. Coping with tuberculosis and directly observed treatment: a qualitative study among patients from South India.
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Yellappa, Vijayashree, Lefèvre, Pierre, Battaglioli, Tullia, Narayanan, Devadasan, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PATIENT-centered care ,DRUG therapy for tuberculosis ,TUBERCULOSIS ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,DIRECTLY observed therapy ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: In India, the Revised National TB control programme (RNTCP) offers free diagnosis and treatment for tuberculosis (TB), based on the Directly Observed Treatment Short course (DOTS) strategy. We conducted a qualitative study to explore the experience and consequences of having TB on patients enrolled in DOTS and their caretakers in Tumkur district, located in a southern state of India, Karnataka.Methods: We conducted 33 in-depth interviews on a purposive sample of TB patients from three groups: (1) patients who reached RNTCP directly on their own and took DOTS at RNTCP; (2) patients who were referred by private practitioners (PPs) to RNTCP and took DOTS at RNTCP; and (3) patients diagnosed by RNTCP and took DOTS from PPs. Data was analyzed using a thematic approach with the support of NVivo9.Results: The study revealed that TB and DOTS have a large impact on patient's lives, which is often extended to the family and caretakers. The most vulnerable patients faced the most difficulty in accessing and completing DOTS. The family was the main source of support during patient's recovery. Patients residing in rural areas and, taking DOTS from the government facilities had to overcome many barriers to adhere to the DOTS therapy, such as long travelling distance to DOTS centers, inconvenient timings and unfavorable attitude of the RNTCP staff, when compared to patients who took DOTS from PPs. Advantages of taking DOTS from PPs cited by the patients were privacy, flexibility in timings, proximity and more immediate access to care. Patients and their family had to cope with stigmatization and fear and financial hardships that surfaced from TB and DOTS. Young patients living in urban areas were more worried about stigmatisation, than elderly patients living in rural areas. Patients who were referred by PPs experienced more financial problems compared to those who reached RNTCP services directly.Conclusion: Our study provided useful information about patient's needs and expectations while taking DOTS. The development of mechanisms within RNTCP towards patient centered care is needed to enable patients and caretakers cope with disease condition and adhere to DOTS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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21. A modified theoretical framework to assess implementation fidelity of adaptive public health interventions.
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Pérez, Dennis, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Zabala, Maríadel Carmen, Castro, Marta, and Lefèvre, Pierre
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PUBLIC health ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,DENGUE ,EMPIRICAL research ,RESEARCH methodology ,OUTCOME assessment (Social services) ,LOYALTY ,HEALTH promotion ,POWER (Social sciences) ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: One of the major debates in implementation research turns around fidelity and adaptation. Fidelity is the degree to which an intervention is implemented as intended by its developers. It is meant to ensure that the intervention maintains its intended effects. Adaptation is the process of implementers or users bringing changes to the original design of an intervention. Depending on the nature of the modifications brought, adaptation could either be potentially positive or could carry the risk of threatening the theoretical basis of the intervention, resulting in a negative effect on expected outcomes. Adaptive interventions are those for which adaptation is allowed or even encouraged. Classical fidelity dimensions and conceptual frameworks do not address the issue of how to adapt an intervention while still maintaining its effectiveness.Discussion: We support the idea that fidelity and adaptation co-exist and that adaptations can impact either positively or negatively on the intervention's effectiveness. For adaptive interventions, research should answer the question how an adequate fidelity-adaptation balance can be reached. One way to address this issue is by looking systematically at the aspects of an intervention that are being adapted. We conducted fidelity research on the implementation of an empowerment strategy for dengue prevention in Cuba. In view of the adaptive nature of the strategy, we anticipated that the classical fidelity dimensions would be of limited use for assessing adaptations. The typology we used in the assessment-implemented, not-implemented, modified, or added components of the strategy-also had limitations. It did not allow us to answer the question which of the modifications introduced in the strategy contributed to or distracted from outcomes. We confronted our empirical research with existing literature on fidelity, and as a result, considered that the framework for implementation fidelity proposed by Carroll et al. in 2007 could potentially meet our concerns. We propose modifications to the framework to assess both fidelity and adaptation. The modified Carroll et al.'s framework we propose may permit a comprehensive assessment of the implementation fidelity-adaptation balance required when implementing adaptive interventions, but more empirical research is needed to validate it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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22. High prevalence of IgG antibodies to Ebola virus in the Efé pygmy population in the Watsa region, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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Mulangu, Sabue, Borchert, Matthias, Paweska, Janusz, Tshomba, Antoine, Afounde, Afongenda, Kulidri, Amayo, Swanepoel, Robert, Muyembe-Tamfum, Jean-Jacques, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Abstract
Background: Factors related to the natural transmission of Ebola virus (EBOV) to humans are still not well defined. Results of previous sero-prevalence studies suggest that circulation of EBOV in human population is common in sub-Saharan Africa. The Efé pygmies living in Democratic Republic of the Congo are known to be exposed to potential risk factors of EBOV infection such as bush meat hunting, entry into caves, and contact with bats. We studied the pygmy population of Watsa region to determine seroprevalence to EBOV infection and possible risks factors.Method: Volunteer participants (N = 300) aged 10 years or above were interviewed about behavior that may constitute risk factors for transmission of EBOV, including exposures to rats, bats, monkeys and entry into caves. Samples of venous blood were collected and tested for IgG antibody against EBOV by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The χ2-test and Fisher's exact test were used for the comparison of proportions and the Student's t-test to compare means. The association between age group and anti-EBOV IgG prevalence was analysed by a nonparametric test for trend.Results: The prevalence of anti-EBOV IgG was 18.7 % overall and increased significantly with age (p = 0.023). No association was observed with exposure to risk factors (contacts with rats, bats, monkeys, or entry into caves).Conclusions: The seroprevalence of IgG antibody to EBOV in pygmies in Watsa region is among the highest ever reported, but it remains unclear which exposures might lead to this high infection rate calling for further ecological and behavioural studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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23. A prospective longitudinal study of tuberculosis among household contacts of smear-positive tuberculosis cases in Lima, Peru.
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Otero, Larissa, Shah, Lena, Verdonck, Kristien, Battaglioli, Tullia, Brewer, Timothy, Gotuzzo, Eduardo, Seas, Carlos, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,DIAGNOSIS ,SYMPTOMS ,PUBLIC health ,SPUTUM microbiology ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS transmission ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,FAMILIES ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,DISEASE incidence ,CONTACT tracing - Abstract
Background: Household contacts (HHCs) of TB cases are at increased risk for TB disease compared to the general population but the risk may be modified by individual or household factors. We conducted a study to determine incident TB among HHCs over two years after exposure and to identify individual and household level risk factors.Methods: Adults newly diagnosed with a first episode of smear-positive pulmonary TB (index cases) between March 2010 and December 2011 in eastern Lima, were interviewed to identify their HHC and household characteristics. TB registers were reviewed for up to two years after the index case diagnosis and house visits were made to ascertain TB cases among HHC. The TB incidence rate ratio among HHCs as a function of risk factors was determined using generalized linear mixed models.Results: The 1178 index cases reported 5466 HHCs. In 402/1178 (34.1 %) households, at least one HHC had experienced a TB episode ever. The TB incidence among HHCs was 1918 (95%CI 1669-2194) per 100,000 person-years overall, and was 2392 (95%CI 2005-2833) and 1435 (95%CI 1139-1787) per 100,000 person-years in the first and second year, respectively. Incident TB occurred more than six months following the index case's TB diagnosis in 121/205 (59.0 %) HHCs. In HHCs, bacillary load and time between symptoms and treatment initiation in the index case, as well as the relationship to the index case and the sex of the HHC all had a significant association with TB incidence in HHCs.Conclusions: Incidence of TB among HHCs was more than ten times higher than in the general population. Certain HHC and households were at higher risk of TB, we recommend studies to compare HHC investigation to households at highest risk versus current practice, in terms of efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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24. Incremental cost of implementing residual insecticide treatment with delthametrine on top of intensive routine Aedes aegypti control.
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Baly, Alberto, Gonzalez, Karelia, Cabrera, Pedro, Popa, Julio C., Toledo, Maria E., Hernandez, Claudia, Montada, Domingo, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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INSECTICIDE residues ,AEDES aegypti ,DIRECT costing ,COST analysis ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,PREVENTION of epidemics ,INSECTICIDES ,EPIDEMICS ,ANIMAL experimentation ,DISEASE vectors ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,MOSQUITOES ,DENGUE ,PEST control ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,ECONOMICS ,PREVENTION ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
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25. Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Treatment Outcomes of Isoniazid- and Rifampicin- Mono-Resistant Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Lima, Peru.
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Villegas, Leonela, Otero, Larissa, Sterling, Timothy R., Huaman, Moises A., Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Gotuzzo, Eduardo, and Seas, Carlos
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TUBERCULOSIS treatment ,TUBERCULOSIS risk factors ,ISONIAZID ,RIFAMPIN ,DISEASE prevalence ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Isoniazid and rifampicin are the two most efficacious first-line agents for tuberculosis (TB) treatment. We assessed the prevalence of isoniazid and rifampicin mono-resistance, associated risk factors, and the association of mono-resistance on treatment outcomes. Methods: A prospective, observational cohort study enrolled adults with a first episode of smear-positive pulmonary TB from 34 health facilities in a northern district of Lima, Peru, from March 2010 through December 2011. Participants were interviewed and a sputum sample was cultured on Löwenstein-Jensen (LJ) media. Drug susceptibility testing was performed using the proportion method. Medication regimens were documented for each patient. Our primary outcomes were treatment outcome at the end of treatment. The secondary outcome included recurrent episodes among cured patients within two years after completion of the treatment. Results: Of 1292 patients enrolled, 1039 (80%) were culture-positive. From this subpopulation, isoniazid mono-resistance was present in 85 (8%) patients and rifampicin mono-resistance was present in 24 (2%) patients. In the multivariate logistic regression model, isoniazid mono-resistance was associated with illicit drug use (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 2.10; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.1–4.1), and rifampicin mono-resistance was associated with HIV infection (aOR = 9.43; 95%CI: 1.9–47.8). Isoniazid mono-resistant patients had a higher risk of poor treatment outcomes including treatment failure (2/85, 2%, p-value<0.01) and death (4/85, 5%, p<0.02). Rifampicin mono-resistant patients had a higher risk of death (2/24, 8%, p<0.01). Conclusion: A high prevalence of isoniazid and rifampicin mono-resistance was found among TB patients in our low HIV burden setting which were similar to regions with high HIV burden. Patients with isoniazid and rifampicin mono-resistance had an increased risk of poor treatment outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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26. Molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis in Havana, Cuba, 2009.
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González Díaz, Alexander, Battaglioli, Tullia, Díaz Rodríguez, Raúl, Goza Valdés, Roxana, González Ochoa, Edilberto, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS treatment ,TUBERCULOSIS transmission ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MOLECULAR biology methodology - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
27. Patient Characteristics Associated with Tuberculosis Treatment Default: A Cohort Study in a High-Incidence Area of Lima, Peru.
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Lackey, Brian, Seas, Carlos, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, and Otero, Larissa
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TUBERCULOSIS treatment ,DISEASE incidence ,MULTIDRUG resistance ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Although tuberculosis (TB) is usually curable with antibiotics, poor adherence to medication can lead to increased transmission, drug resistance, and death. Prior research has shown several factors to be associated with poor adherence, but this problem remains a substantial barrier to global TB control. We studied patients in a high-incidence district of Lima, Peru to identify factors associated with premature termination of treatment (treatment default). Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study of adult smear-positive TB patients enrolled between January 2010 and December 2011 with no history of TB disease. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to determine risk factors associated with treatment default. Results: Of the 1233 patients studied, 127 (10%) defaulted from treatment. Patients who defaulted were more likely to have used illegal drugs (OR = 4.78, 95% CI: 3.05-7.49), have multidrug-resistant TB (OR = 3.04, 95% CI: 1.58-5.85), not have been tested for HIV (OR = 2.30, 95% CI: 1.50-3.54), drink alcohol at least weekly (OR = 2.22, 95% CI: 1.40-3.52), be underweight (OR = 2.08, 95% CI: 1.21-3.56), or not have completed secondary education (OR = 1.55, 95% CI: 1.03-2.33). Conclusions: Our study identified several factors associated with defaulting from treatment, suggesting a complex set of causes that might lead to default. Addressing these factors individually would be difficult, but they might help to identify certain high-risk patients for supplemental intervention prior to treatment interruption. Treatment adherence remains a barrier to successful TB care and reducing the frequency of default is important for both the patients’ health and the health of the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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28. Sociopolitical Determinants of International Health Policy.
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De Vos, Pol and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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HEALTH services accessibility ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,RURAL health ,WORLD health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
For decades, two opposing logics have dominated the health policy debate: a comprehensive health care approach, with the 1978 Alma Ata Declaration as its cornerstone, and a private competition logic, emphasizing the role of the private sector. We present this debate and its influence on international health policies in the context of changing global economic and sociopolitical power relations in the second half of the last century. The neoliberal approach is illustrated with Chile’s health sector reform in the 1980s and the Colombian reform since 1993. The comprehensive “public logic” is shown through the social insurance models in Costa Rica and in Brazil and through the national public health systems in Cuba since 1959 and in Nicaragua during the 1980s. These experiences emphasize that health care systems do not naturally gravitate toward greater fairness and efficiency, but require deliberate policy decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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29. No Effect of Insecticide Treated Curtain Deployment on Aedes Infestation in a Cluster Randomized Trial in a Setting of Low Dengue Transmission in Guantanamo, Cuba.
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Toledo, Maria Eugenia, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, Lambert, Isora, Montada, Domingo, Baly, Alberto, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of insecticides ,DENGUE ,TICK infestations ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Objective & Methodology: The current study evaluated the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of Insecticide Treated Curtain (ITC) deployment for reducing dengue vector infestation levels in the Cuban context with intensive routine control activities. A cluster randomized controlled trial took place in Guantanamo city, east Cuba. Twelve neighborhoods (about 500 households each) were selected among the ones with the highest Aedes infestation levels in the previous two years, and were randomly allocated to the intervention and control arms. Long lasting ITC (PermaNet) were distributed in the intervention clusters in March 2009. Routine control activities were continued in the whole study area. In both study arms, we monitored monthly pre- and post-intervention House Index (HI, number of houses with at least 1 container with Aedes immature stages/100 houses inspected), during 12 and 18 months respectively. We evaluated the effect of ITC deployment on HI by fitting a generalized linear regression model with a negative binomial link function to these data. Principal Findings: At distribution, the ITC coverage (% of households using ≥1 ITC) reached 98.4%, with a median of 3 ITC distributed/household. After 18 months, the coverage remained 97.4%. The local Aedes species was susceptible to deltamethrin (mosquito mortality rate of 99.7%) and the residual deltamethrin activity in the ITC was within acceptable levels (mosquito mortality rate of 73.1%) after one year of curtain use. Over the 18 month observation period after ITC distribution, the adjusted HI rate ratio, intervention versus control clusters, was 1.15 (95% CI 0.57 to 2.34). The annualized cost per household of ITC implementation was 3.8 USD, against 16.8 USD for all routine ACP activities. Conclusion: Deployment of ITC in a setting with already intensive routine Aedes control actions does not lead to reductions in Aedes infestation levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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30. Association between Mycoplasma genitalium infection and HIV acquisition among female sex workers in Uganda: evidence from a nested case-control study.
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Vandepitte, Judith, Weiss, Helen A., Bukenya, Justine, Kyakuwa, Nassim, Muller, Etienne, Buvé, Anne, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Hayes, Richard J., and Grosskurth, Heiner
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MYCOPLASMA diseases ,HIV infection transmission ,SEX workers ,SEXUALLY transmitted disease risk factors ,DISEASES - Abstract
Objectives Cross-sectional studies have shown a strong association between Mycoplasma genitalium and HIV infections. We previously reported that in a cohort of female sex workers in Uganda, M genitalium infection at baseline was associated with HIV seroconversion. Here we examine the temporal association between the M genitalium infection status shortly before HIV seroconversion and HIV acquisition. Methods A nested case-control study was conducted within a cohort of women at high risk for HIV in Kampala. Cases were those of women acquiring HIV within 2 years of enrolment. For each of the 42 cases, 3 controls were selected from women HIV negative at the visit when the corresponding case first tested HIV seropositive. The association between HIV acquisition and M genitalium infection immediately prior to HIV testing was analysed using conditional logistic regression. Results There was weak evidence of an association between M genitalium infection and HIV acquisition overall (crude OR=1.57; 95% CI 0.67 to 3.72, aOR=2.28: 95% CI 0.81 to 6.47). However, time of M genitalium testing affected the association (p value for effect-modification=0.004). For 29 case-control sets with endocervical samples tested 3 months prior to the first HIV-positive result, M genitalium infection increased the risk of HIV acquisition (crude OR=3.09; 95% CI 1.06 to 9.05, aOR=7.19; 95% CI 1.68 to 30.77), whereas there was little evidence of an association among the 13 case-control sets with samples tested at an earlier visit (crude OR=0.30: 95% CI 0.04 to 2.51; aOR=0.34; 95% CI 0.02 to 5.94). Conclusions Our study showed evidence of a temporal relationship between M genitalium infection and HIV acquisition that suggests that M genitalium infection may be a co-factor in the acquisition of HIV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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31. The Relationship between Economic Status, Knowledge on Dengue, Risk Perceptions and Practices.
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Castro, Marta, Sánchez, Lizet, Pérez, Dennis, Sebrango, Carlos, Shkedy, Ziv, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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PUBLIC health ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,CONCEPTUAL models ,DENGUE ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,ECONOMIC status ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
The reemergence of dengue as an important public health problem reflects the difficulties in sustaining vertically organized, effective, control programs and the need for community-based strategies for Aedes aegypti control that result in behavioral change. We aimed to disentangle the relationships between underlying determinants of dengue related practices. We conducted a cross-sectional study in 780 households in La Lisa, Havana, Cuba. A questionnaire and an observation guide were administrated to collect information on variables related to economic status, knowledge on dengue, risk perception and practices associated with Aedes aegypti breading sites. To test a conceptual model that hypothesized direct relationships among all these constructs, we first used Exploratory Factor Analysis with Principal Component Analysis to establish the relationship between observed variables and the underlying latent variables. Subsequently, we tested whether the observed data supported the conceptual model through Confirmatory Factor Analysis. Exploratory Factor Analysis indicated that the items measured could be reduced into five factors with an eigenvalue >1.0: Knowledge on dengue, Intradomiciliar risk practices, Peridomiciliar risk practices, Risk perception and Economic status. The proportion of the total variance in the data explained by these five factors was 74.3%. The Confirmatory Factor Analysis model differed from our hypothesized conceptual model. Only Knowledge on dengue had a significant, direct, positive, effect on Practices. There was also a direct association of Economic status with Knowledge on dengue, but not with Risk perception and Practices. Clarifying the relationship between direct and indirect determinants of dengue related practices contributes to a better understanding of the potential effect of Information Education and Communication on practices and on the reduction of Aedes aegypti breeding sites and provides inputs for designing a community based strategy for dengue control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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32. Natural history of Mycoplasma genitalium infection in a cohort of female sex workers in Kampala, Uganda.
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Vandepitte, Judith, Weiss, Helen A, Kyakuwa, Nassim, Nakubulwa, Susan, Muller, Etienne, Buvé, Anne, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Hayes, Richard, and Grosskurth, Heiner
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- 2013
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33. Childhood Atopic Diseases and Early Life Circumstances: An Ecological Study in Cuba.
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van der Werff, Suzanne D., Polman, Katja, Ponce, Maiza Campos, Twisk, Jos W. R., Díaz, Raquel Junco, Gorbea, Mariano Bonet, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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JUVENILE diseases ,NUTRITION ,INFECTION ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SKIN inflammation - Abstract
Background: Children are especially vulnerable during periods of resource shortage such as economic embargoes. They are likely to suffer most from poor nutrition, infectious diseases, and other ensuing short-term threats. Moreover, early life circumstances can have important consequences for long-term health. We examined the relationship between early childhood exposure to the Cuban economic situation in the nineties and the occurrence of atopic diseases later in childhood. Methodology/Principal Findings: A cross-sectional study of 1321 primary schoolchildren aged 4-14 was conducted in two Cuban municipalities. Asthma, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and atopic dermatitis were diagnosed using the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood questionnaire. Children were divided into three groups of exposure to the economic situation in the nineties according to birth date: (1) unexposed; (2) exposed during infancy; (3) exposed during infancy and early childhood. Associations were assessed using multiple logistic regression models. Exposure during infancy had a significant inverse association with the occurrence of asthma (OR 0.56, 95%CI 0.33-0.94) and allergic rhinoconjunctivitis (OR 0.46, 95%CI 0.25-0.85). The associations were stronger after longer exposure, i.e. during infancy and early childhood, for asthma (OR 0.40, 95% CI 0.17-0.95) and allergic rhinoconjunctivitis (OR 0.29, 95%CI 0.11-0.77). No significant associations were found for atopic dermatitis. Conclusions/Significance: Exposure to the economic situation in the nineties during infancy and early childhood was inversely associated with asthma and allergic rhinoconjunctivitis occurrence later in childhood. We hypothesize that factors related to this period, such as infectious diseases and undernutrition, may have an attenuating effect on atopic disease development. The exact cause and underlying mechanisms need to be further elucidated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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34. A community empowerment strategy embedded in a routine dengue vector control programme: a cluster randomised controlled trial
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Castro, Marta, Sánchez, Lizet, Pérez, Dennis, Carbonell, Nestor, Lefèvre, Pierre, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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DENGUE ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,AEDES aegypti ,PUBLIC health ,PREVENTIVE medicine - Abstract
Abstract: The non-sustainability of vertically organised dengue vector control programmes led to pleas for changing the emphasis towards community-based strategies. We conducted a cluster randomised controlled trial with 16 intervention and 16 control clusters to test the effectiveness of a community empowerment strategy intertwined with the routine dengue vector control programme in La Lisa, Havana City, Cuba. The intervention included four components on top of routine control: organisation and management; entomological risk surveillance; capacity building; and community work for vector control. In the control clusters, routine activities continued without interference. The community participation score increased from 1.4 to 3.4. Good knowledge of breeding sites increased by 52.8% and 27.5% in the intervention and control clusters, respectively. There were no changes in adequate Aedes aegypti control practices at household level in the control clusters, but in the intervention clusters adequacy increased by 36.2%. At baseline, the Breteau indices (BI) were approximately 0.1 and were comparable; they fluctuated over time but became different with the launch of the community-based dengue control activities in the intervention clusters. Over the intervention period, the BI remained 53% (95% CI 22–92%) lower in these clusters than in the control clusters. The empowerment strategy increased community involvement and added effectiveness to routine A. aegypti control. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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35. Public health services, an essential determinant of health during crisis. Lessons from Cuba, 1989-2000.
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De Vos, Pol, García-Fariñas, Anaí, Álvarez-Pérez, Adolfo, Rodríguez-Salvá, Armando, Bonet-Gorbea, Mariano, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,CRISIS management ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH risk assessment ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Costs of dengue prevention and incremental cost of dengue outbreak control in Guantanamo, Cuba.
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Baly, Alberto, Toledo, Maria E., Rodriguez, Karina, Benitez, Juan R., Rodriguez, Maritza, Boelaert, Marleen, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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PREVENTIVE medicine ,DENGUE ,DISEASE outbreaks ,AEDES aegypti ,DIRECT costing ,HEALTH programs ,COST effectiveness - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. High Prevalence of Primary Multidrug Resistant Tuberculosis in Persons with No Known Risk Factors.
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Otero, Larissa, Krapp, Fiorella, Tomatis, Cristina, Zamudio, Carlos, Matthys, Francine, Gotuzzo, Eduardo, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, and Seas, Carlos
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MULTIDRUG resistance ,DISEASE susceptibility ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,MYCOBACTERIAL diseases ,DRUGS of abuse ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Introduction: In high multidrug resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) prevalence areas, drug susceptibility testing (DST) at diagnosis is recommended for patients with risk factors for MDR. However, this approach might miss a substantial proportion of MDR-TB in the general population. We studied primary MDR in patients considered to be at low risk of MDRTB in Lima, Peru. Methods: We enrolled new sputum smear-positive TB patients who did not report any MDR-TB risk factor: known exposure to a TB patient whose treatment failed or who died or who was known to have MDR-TB; immunosuppressive co-morbidities, ex prison inmates; prison and health care workers; and alcohol or drug abuse. A structured questionnaire was applied to all enrolled participants to confirm the absence of these factors and thus minimize underreporting. Sputum from all participants was cultured on Lö wenstein-Jensen media and DST for first line drugs was performed using the 7H10 agar method. Results: Of 875 participants with complete data, 23.2% (203) had risk factors for MDR-TB elicited after enrolment. Among the group with no reported risk factors who had a positive culture, we found a 6.3% (95%CI 4.4-8.3) (37/584) rate of MDRTB. In this group no epidemiological characteristics were associated with MDR-TB. Thus, in this group, multidrug resistance occurred in patients with no identifiable risk factors. Conclusions: We found a high rate of primary MDR-TB in a general population with no identifiable risk factors for MDR-TB. This suggests that in a high endemic area targeting patients for MDR-TB based on the presence of risk factors is an insufficient intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Process-oriented fidelity research assists in evaluation, adjustment and scaling-up of community-based interventions.
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Pérez, Dennis, Lefèvre, Pierre, Castro, Marta, Sánchez, Lizet, Toledo, María Eugenia, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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DENGUE ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,AEDES aegypti ,INTERVENTION (Social services) ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,LOCAL government - Abstract
Fidelity research can help to answer essential questions about the diffusion process of innovative health interventions and provide insights for further scaling-up and institutionalization. This study assessed fidelity and reinvention in the implementation of a community-based control strategy for Aedes aegypti control. The intervention was implemented in 16 study areas in La Lisa, a municipality of Havana, Cuba. Its major components were: organization & management, capacity-building, community work and surveillance. A participatory assessment of process data was performed to determine whether the components and subcomponents were implemented, not-implemented or modified. Frequencies were tabulated over all circumscriptions (lowest level of local government) and the average was calculated for the four components. Spearman Rank correlation coefficients were calculated to explore the relationships between components. In addition, semi-structured interviews were conducted with co-ordinators of the strategy at different levels to identify difficulties encountered in the strategy’s implementation. Surveillance was the most implemented component (72.9%) followed by capacity-building (54.7%). Community work and organization & management were less implemented or modified (50% and 45%, respectively). Apart from surveillance and capacity-building, all components are significantly and strongly correlated (Spearman Rank correlation coefficient > 0.70, P < 0.01). If one component is implemented in a circumscription, the other components are also likely to be implemented. It is noticeable that areas which did not undergo organizational changes commonly did not implement community work activities. Within the whole strategy, few activities were added. Scarcely implemented subcomponents were the most innovative. The difficulties encountered during implementation were related to appropriate training and skills, available time, lack of support and commitment to the strategy, lack of motivation of local leadership, and integration of actors and resources. The study showed a wide variability of fidelity in the implementation of the intervention and highlighted challenges for scaling-up and institutionalization of the community-based intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
- Full Text
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39. Evidence on impact of community-based environmental management on dengue transmission in Santiago de Cuba.
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Toledo, Maria E., Rodriguez, Adriana, Valdés, Luis, Carrión, Rigoberto, Cabrera, Georgina, Banderas, Digna, Ceballos, Enrique, Domeqc, Mireya, Peña, Carilda, Baly, Alberto, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
DENGUE ,AEDES aegypti ,EPIDEMICS ,VECTOR control ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Validation of a Clinical-Radiographic Score to Assess the Probability of Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Suspect Patients with Negative Sputum Smears.
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Soto, Alonso, Solari, Lely, Díaz, Javier, Mantilla, Alberto, Matthys, Francine, and van der Stuyft, Patrick
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TUBERCULOSIS patients ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,SALIVA ,RADIOGRAPHY ,PUBLIC health ,MORTALITY - Abstract
Background: Clinical suspects of pulmonary tuberculosis in which the sputum smears are negative for acid fast bacilli represent a diagnostic challenge in resource constrained settings. Our objective was to validate an existing clinicalradiographic score that assessed the probability of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis (SNPT) in high incidence settings in Peru. Methodology/Principal Findings: We included in two referral hospitals in Lima patients with clinical suspicion of pulmonary tuberculosis and two or more negative sputum smears. Using a published but not externally validated score, patients were classified as having low, intermediate or high probability of pulmonary tuberculosis. The reference standard for the diagnosis of tuberculosis was a positive sputum culture in at least one of 2 liquid (MGIT or Middlebrook 7H9) and 1 solid (Ogawa) media. Prevalence of tuberculosis was calculated in each of the three probability groups. 684 patients were included. 184 (27.8%) had a diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis. The score did not perform well in patients with a previous history of pulmonary tuberculosis. In patients without, the prevalence of tuberculosis was 5.1%, 31.7% and 72% in the low, intermediate and high probability group respectively. The area under de ROC curve was 0.76 (95% CI 0.72-0.80) and scores ≥6 had a positive LR of 10.9. Conclusions/Significance: In smear negative suspects without previous history of tuberculosis, the clinical-radiographic score can be used as a tool to assess the probability of pulmonary tuberculosis and to guide the decision to initiate or defer treatment or to requesting additional tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
- Full Text
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41. Performance of an algorithm based on WHO recommendations for the diagnosis of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis in patients without HIV infection.
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Soto, Alonso, Solari, Lely, Gotuzzo, Eduardo, Acinelli, Roberto, Vargas, Dante, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
HIV-positive persons ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,ALGORITHMS ,SPUTUM ,PERIODIC health examinations ,ANTIBIOTICS ,THERAPEUTIC use of x-rays - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Insecticide Treated Materials for Household Level Dengue Vector Control.
- Author
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Vanlerberghe, Veerle, Villegas, Elci, Oviedo, Milagros, Baly, Alberto, Lenhart, Audrey, McCall, P. J., and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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VECTOR control ,DENGUE ,INSECTICIDES ,SUBURBS ,AEDES aegypti - Abstract
Objective: To assess the operational effectiveness of long-lasting insecticide treated materials (ITMs), when used at household level, for the control of Aedes aegypti in moderately infested urban and suburban areas. Methods: In an intervention study, ITMs consisting of curtains and water jar-covers (made from PermaNet) were distributed under routine field conditions in 10 clusters (5 urban and 5 suburban), with over 4000 houses, in Trujillo, Venezuela. Impact of the interventions were determined by comparing pre-and post-intervention measures of the Breteau index (BI, number of positive containers/100 houses) and pupae per person index (PPI), and by comparison with indices from untreated areas of the same municipalities. The effect of ITM coverage was modeled. Results: At distribution, the proportion of households with ≥1 ITM curtain was 79.7% in urban and 75.2% in suburban clusters, but decreased to 32.3% and 39.0%, respectively, after 18 months. The corresponding figures for the proportion of jars using ITM covers were 34.0% and 50.8% at distribution and 17.0% and 21.0% after 18 months, respectively. Prior to intervention, the BI was 8.5 in urban clusters and 42.4 in suburban clusters, and the PPI was 0.2 and 0.9, respectively. In both urban and suburban clusters, the BI showed a sustained 55% decrease, while no discernable pattern was observed at the municipal level. After controlling for confounding factors, the percentage ITM curtain coverage, but not ITM jar-cover coverage, was significantly associated with both entomological indices (Incidence Rate Ratio = 0.98; 95%CI 0.97–0.99). The IRR implied that ITM curtain coverage of at least 50% was necessary to reduce A. aegypti infestation levels by 50%. Conclusion: Deployment of insecticide treated window curtains in households can result in significant reductions in A. aegypti levels when dengue vector infestations are moderate, but the magnitude of the effect depends on the coverage attained, which itself can decline rapidly over time. Author Summary: An estimated 40% of the world's population lives at risk of contracting dengue, and it inflicts a significant health, economic and social burden on the populations of endemic areas. In the absence of a vaccine, vector control is the only available strategy to prevent transmission. Some control methods against Aedes aegypti (the main dengue vector) have been successful in reducing vector infestation levels, but rarely sustained the reductions for a prolonged period. We report here on the first effectiveness trial of insecticide treated curtains and jar covers against A. aegypti implemented under 'real-life' conditions. The coverage of tools was high at distribution, but declined quickly over the 18 months of follow up. The vector infestation levels showed a sustained 55% decrease in the intervention clusters, while no discernable pattern was observed at the municipal level. At least 50% curtain coverage was needed to reduce A. aegypti infestation levels by 50%. We concluded that deployment of insecticide treated window curtains in households can result in significant reductions in dengue vector levels, which are related to dengue transmission risk. The magnitude of the effect depends on the curtain coverage attained, which itself can decline rapidly over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Evaluation of Clinical Prediction Rules for Respiratory Isolation of Inpatients with Suspected Pulmonary Tuberculosis.
- Author
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Solari, Lely, Acuna-Villaorduna, Carlos, Soto, Alonso, and van der Stuyft, Patrick
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CLINICAL prediction rules ,TUBERCULOSIS patients ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,HUMAN services - Abstract
Background. In the framework of hospital infection control, various clinical prediction rules (CPRs) for respiratory isolation of patients with suspected pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) have been developed. Our aim was to evaluate their performance in an emergency department setting with a high prevalence of PTB. Methods. We searched the MEDLINE and OVID databases to identify CPRs to predict PTB. We used a previously collected database containing clinical, radiographical, and microbiological information on patients attending an emergency department with respiratory complaints, and we applied each CPR to every patient and compared the result with culture for Mycobacterium tuberculosis as the reference standard. We also simulated the proportion of isolated suspects and missed cases for PTB prevalences of 5% and 30%. Results. We withheld 13 CPRs for evaluation. We had complete data on 345 patients. Most CPRs achieved a high sensitivity but very low specificity and very low positive predictive value. Mylotte's score, which includes results of sputum smear as a predictive finding, was the best-performing CPR. It attained a sensitivity of 88.9% and a specificity of 63.9%. However, at a 30% PTB prevalence, 498 of 1000 individuals with suspected PTB would have to be isolated; 267 of these cases would be true PTB cases, and 33 cases would be missed. Two consecutive sputum smears had a sensitivity of 75.6% and a specificity of 99.7%. Conclusions. In a setting with a high prevalence of PTB, only 1 of the 13 assessed CPRs demonstrated high sensitivity combined with satisfactory specificity. Our results highlight the need for local validation of CPRs before their application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Community health insurance in Gudalur, India, increases access to hospital care.
- Author
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Devadasan, Narayanan, Criel, Bart, Van Damme, Wim, Manoharan, S., Sarma, P. Sankara, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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HOSPITAL & community ,COMMUNITY health services ,HEALTH insurance ,POOR people ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HOUSEHOLDS ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITAL care - Abstract
Background To reduce the burden of out-of-pocket payments on households in India, the government has introduced community health insurance (CHI) as part of its National Rural Health Mission. Indian CHI schemes have been shown to provide financial protection and have the potential to improve quality of care, but do not seem to improve access. This study examines this dimension of CHI performance and explores conditions under which a CHI scheme can improve access to hospital care for the poor. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Community health insurance amidst abolition of user fees in Uganda: the view from policy makers and health service managers.
- Author
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Basaza, Robert K., Criel, Bart, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,COMMUNITY health services ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: This paper investigates knowledge of Community Health Insurance (CHI) and the perception of its relevance by key policy makers and health service managers in Uganda. Community Health Insurance schemes currently operate in the private-not-for-profit sector, in settings where church-based facilities function. They operate in a wider policy environment where user fees in the public sector have been abolished. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted during the second half of 2007 with District Health Officers (DHOs) and senior staff of the Ministry of Health (MOH). The qualitative data collected were analyzed using the framework method, facilitated by EZ-Text software. Results: There is poor knowledge and understanding of CHI activities by staff of the MOH headquarters and DHOs. However, a comparison of responses reveals a relatively high level of awareness of CHI principles among DHOs compared to that of MOH staff. All the DHOs in the districts with schemes had a good understanding of CHI principles compared to DHOs in districts without schemes. Out-of-pocket expenditure remains an important feature of health care financing in Uganda despite blanket abolition of user fees in government facilities. Conclusion: CHI is perceived as a relevant policy option and potential source of funds for health care. It is also considered a means of raising the quality of health care in both public and private health units. To assess whether it is also feasible to introduce CHI in the public sector, there is an urgent need to investigate the willingness and readiness of stakeholders, in particular high level political authorities, to follow this new path. The current ambiguity and contradictions in the health financing policy of the Uganda MOH need to be addressed and clarified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Augmenting frameworks for appraising the practices of community-based health interventions.
- Author
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Pérez, Dennis, Lefèvre, Pierre, Romero, Maria Isabel, Sánchez, Lizet, De Vos, Pol, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
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COMMUNITY involvement ,SELF-efficacy ,ETHICS ,PARTICIPANT observation ,VALUES (Ethics) ,POPULAR education - Abstract
This paper aims at augmenting the frameworks proposed by Rifkin in 1996 to distinguish between target-oriented and empowerment approaches to participation in community-based health interventions. In her paper, Rifkin defined three criteria: who makes decisions on resource allocation, expected outcome and outcome assessment. We propose five additional criteria: the definition of community, the characteristics of the capacity-building process, the leadership characteristics, the documentation process, and ethical issues regarding participation. Derived from our analysis of a community-based project, the proposed criteria are discussed in the light of the principles of Popular Education and other literature on community participation. The augmented frameworks are intended to assist health professionals and planners interested in the empowerment approach of community participation to consciously sharpen their practice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Pulmonary tuberculosis case detection through fortuitous cough screening during home visits.
- Author
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González-Ochoa, Edilberto, Brooks, Jorge L., Matthys, Francine, Calist, Pausides, Armas, Luisa, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,COUGH diagnosis ,MEDICAL screening ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH facilities ,HOME-based family services - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Voluntary counselling and testing uptake and HIV prevalence among tuberculosis patients in Jogjakarta, Indonesia
- Author
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Mahendradhata, Yodi, Ahmad, Riris A., Kusuma, Theodorus A., Boelaert, Marleen, Van der Werf, Marieke J., Kimerling, Michael E., and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
HIV infections ,HEALTH counseling ,TUBERCULOSIS patients ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,HIV - Abstract
Summary: We aimed to establish HIV prevalence and uptake of unlinked anonymous testing and voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) among tuberculosis (TB) patients in Jogjakarta, Indonesia. We introduced unlinked anonymous HIV testing for TB patients attending directly observed treatment, short-course services between April and December 2006. Patients were additionally offered VCT services. Of 1269 TB patients who were offered unlinked anonymous testing, 989 (77.9%; 95% CI 75.6–80.1%) accepted. HIV prevalence was 1.9% (95% CI 1.6–2.2%). HIV infections were less frequently diagnosed among TB patients who attended a public health centre [odds ratio (OR) 0.15; 95% CI 0.03–0.70] rather than public hospital. They were more frequent in TB patients with a university education background (OR 5.16; 95% CI 1.01–26.63) or a history of HIV testing (OR 57.87; 95% CI 9.42–355.62). Of the 989 patients who accepted unlinked anonymous testing, only 133 (13.4%; 95% CI 11.5–15.7%) expressed interest in VCT. Of these, 52 (39.1%; 95% CI 31.2–47.6%) attended VCT, but interest was higher among students and those offered VCT by public health centres. The HIV prevalence in Jogjakarta is higher than expected and needs to be monitored cautiously. Unlinked anonymous HIV testing is well accepted and can be implemented with modest additional efforts. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Vigilancia pupal de Aedes aegypti como una herramienta en el control de este vector en un municipio con baja densidad poblacional en la Ciudad de La Habana, Cuba.
- Author
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Bisset, Juan, del Carmen Marquetti, María, García, Aimara, Vandelerberghe, Veerle, Leyva, Maureen, Van der Stuyft, Patrick, Rodríguez, Magdalena, and Infante, Eddy
- Subjects
AEDES aegypti ,PUPAE ,INSECT development ,DENGUE ,MOSQUITOES ,HEALTH surveys - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Biomedica is the property of Centro de Investigaciones Regionales Dr. Hideyo Noguchi; Facultad de Medicina, UADY and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
50. The unbearable lightness of technocratic efforts at dengue control.
- Author
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Toledo, Maria E., Baly, Alberto, Vanlerberghe, Veerle, Rodríguez, Maritza, Benitez, Juan R., Duvergel, Jacinto, and Van der Stuyft, Patrick
- Subjects
DENGUE ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,AEDES aegypti ,ARBOVIRUS diseases - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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