9 results on '"Ramaiah, Manjula"'
Search Results
2. Beyond remedicalisation: a community-led PrEP demonstration project among sex workers in India.
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Lazarus, Lisa, Reza-Paul, Sushena, Rahman, Syed Hafeez Ur, Ramaiah, Manjula, Venugopal, M.S., Venukumar, K.T., Moses, Stephen, Becker, Marissa, and Lorway, Robert
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SEX workers ,PILOT projects ,COMMUNITY involvement ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,CIVIC leaders - Abstract
Global health policy-makers have called for demonstration projects to better understand pre-exposure prophylaxis' (PrEP) effectiveness across geographies and populations. Ashodaya, a sex worker collective, initiated a PrEP project in Mysore, India. We conducted a project ethnography to explore the role that community participation played within the project. Although the project proved immensely successful in terms of retention and adherence, to explain these findings we point towards Ashodaya's history of collectivisation around sexual health—a history of community action that has given rise to new spaces of belonging and accumulated knowledges that became instrumental in the formulation of strategies to confront anticipated challenges during the project. These strategies included: (1) the participation of community leaders as the first participants to take PrEP, followed by the sharing of their experiences through testimonials to their peers; (2) the endorsement of PrEP among community leaders living with HIV, to avoid social divisions around HIV status; and (3) ongoing community-level support from outreach workers that went beyond administering PrEP to address the various needs of the community. These community-led approaches demonstrate that communities hold key insights into the delivery of clinically-oriented interventions, suggesting the vital role they continue to play in planning and implementing new prevention technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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3. Pragmatic women: negotiating sex work, pregnancy, and parenting in Mysore, South India.
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du Plessis, Elsabé, Chevrier, Claudyne, Lazarus, Lisa, Reza-Paul, Sushena, Rahman, Syed Hafeez Ur, Ramaiah, Manjula, Avery, Lisa, and Lorway, Robert
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SEX work ,PREGNANCY ,SEX workers ,MATERNAL health ,PARENTS - Abstract
Persisting inequities in maternal health pose a particular burden for marginalised populations such as sex workers. However, current literature on pregnancy and sex work is limited to mostly quantitative studies focusing on contraception use, unplanned and/or undesired pregnancies and unsafe abortions. Additionally, emphasis has been placed on the prevention, treatment and care of STIs and HIV with less attention accorded to women's pregnancy desires and implications to work. In this paper, we explore sex workers' conflicted experiences surrounding pregnancy, parenthood, and work. Forty-six women participated in in-depth interviews as part of a qualitative exploratory study conducted in close collaboration with a sex worker collective in the city of Mysore (South India). Our analysis focuses on women's pragmatic responses to pregnancy desires, workplace challenges during and after pregnancy, strategies for managing risk and approaches to managing work and childcare. We show that women confront various intersecting challenges with respect to pregnancy and sex work. Women's complex decision-making balances multiple considerations while highlighting the temporal dimension of pragmatism as women respond not only to the immediacy of an encounter but also in anticipation of a better future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. The Ashodaya PrEP project: Lessons and implications for scaling up PrEP from a community-led demonstration project among female sex workers in Mysore, India.
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Reza-Paul, Sushena, Lazarus, Lisa, Maiya, Raviprakash, Haldar, Partha, Rewari, B. B., Venugopal, M. S., Hafeez Ur Rahman, Syed, Venukumar, K. T., Ramaiah, Manjula, Pasha, Akram, Sharma, Mukta, Steen, Richard, and Lorway, Robert
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HIV prevention ,CONDOMS ,HIV ,PATIENT aftercare ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL screening ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,SEX work ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,TIME ,WOMEN'S health ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DATA analysis software ,TENOFOVIR ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
To inform PrEP roll out, Ashodaya Samithi, a sex workers' collective, conducted a community-led prospective demonstration project among female sex workers in Mysore and Mandya, India. Following a community preparedness phase and pre-screening, participants were recruited for clinical screening and enrolment, provided PrEP as part of combination HIV prevention, and followed for 16 months. Adherence was measured by self-reported pill intake and by tenofovir blood level testing among a subset of participants. Of the 647 participants enrolled, 640 completed follow-up. Condom use remained stable and no HIV seroconversions occurred. Self-reported daily PrEP intake over the last month was 97.97% at the end of the study. Tenofovir blood levels >40 ng/mL (consistent with steady state dosing) were detected among 80% (n = 68/85) and 90.48% (n = 76/84) of participants at month 3 and 6, respectively. Our study holds important insights for rolling out PrEP in community settings as part of targeted HIV prevention interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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5. Evaluation of sperm DNA fragmentation using multiple methods: a comparison of their predictive power for male infertility.
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Javed, Aamir, Talkad, Muralidhar Srinivasaih, and Ramaiah, Manjula Kannasandra
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MALE infertility ,INFERTILITY ,MALE reproductive health ,MULTIPLE comparisons (Statistics) ,DNA - Abstract
Objective: The usual seminal profile has been customarily used for diagnosing male infertility based on an examination of semen samples. However, sperm DNA fragmentation has also been causally linked to reproductive failure, suggesting that it should be evaluated as part of male infertility assessments. To compare the ability of the five most widely utilized methodologies of measuring DNA fragmentation to predict male infertility and reactive oxygen species by Oxisperm kit assay. Methods: In this case-control study, which received ethical committee approval, the participants were divided into fertile and infertile groups (50 patients in each group). Results: The alkaline comet test showed the best ability to predict male infertility, followed by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labelling (TUNEL) assay, the sperm chromatin dispersion (SCD) test, and the sperm chromatin structure assay (SCSA), while the neutral comet test had no predictive power. For our patient population, the projected cut-off point for the DNA fragmentation index was 22.08% using the TUNEL assay, 19.90% using SCSA, 24.74% using the SCD test, 48.47% using the alkaline comet test, and 36.37% using the neutral comet test. Significant correlations were found between the results of the SCD test and those obtained using SCSA and TUNEL (r =0.70 and r =0.68, respectively; p<0.001), and a statistically significant correlation was also found between the results of SCSA and the TUNEL assay (r =0.77, p<0.001). Likewise, the results of the alkaline comet test showed significant correlations with those of the SCD, SCSA, and TUNEL tests (r =0.59, r =0.57, and r =0.72, respectively; p<0.001). Conclusion: The TUNEL assay, SCSA, SCD, and the alkaline comet test were effective for distinguishing between fertile and infertile patients, and the alkaline comet test was the best predictor of male infertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Community action for people with HIV and sex workers during the COVID-19 pandemic in India.
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Reza-Paul, Sushena, Lazarus, Lisa, Haldar, Partha, Paul, Manisha Reza, Lakshmi, Bhagya, Ramaiah, Manjula, Pasha, Akram, Ur Rahman, Syed Hafeez, Venukumar, K. T., Venugopal, M. S., Rewari, Bharat Bhushan, and Lorway, Robert
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- 2020
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7. Prioritizing Risk in Preparation for a Demonstration Project: A Mixed Methods Feasibility Study of Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PREP) among Female Sex Workers in South India.
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Reza-Paul, Sushena, Lazarus, Lisa, Doshi, Monika, Hafeez Ur Rahman, Syed, Ramaiah, Manjula, Maiya, Raviprakash, MS, Venugopal, Venukumar, K. T., Sundararaman, Sundar, Becker, Marissa, Moses, Stephen, and Lorway, Robert
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PREVENTIVE medicine ,HIV prevention ,SEX workers ,DISEASE prevalence ,DATA analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Background: HIV prevalence among female sex workers (FSWs) in India remains well above the national average. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a new HIV prevention technology, may help to reduce HIV incidence, but there is a dearth of research that can inform the potential scale-up of PrEP in India. In partnership with Ashodaya Samithi, a local sex worker collective, we conducted a feasibility study to assess acceptance of a planned PrEP demonstration project, willingness to use PrEP, and recommendations for project roll-out among FSWs in southern Karnataka. Methods: From January–April 2015, 6 focus group discussions, 47 in-depth interviews, and 427 interviewer-administered questionnaires were completed by female sex workers. All participants were 18 years of age or older and practiced sex work. Qualitative data were coded for key themes and emergent categories. Univariate descriptive analysis was employed to summarise the quantitative data. Results: Qualitative. PrEP was described as an exciting new prevention technology that places control in the hands of FSWs and provides a “double safety” in combination with condom use. Participants expressed agreement that women who may experience more HIV risk in their occupational environments should be prioritized for enrollment into a demonstration project. Quantitative. 406 participants (95%) expressed interest in PrEP. Participants prioritized the inclusion of FSWs under the age of 25 (79%), those who do not use condoms when clients offer more money (58%), who do not consistently use condoms with regular partners (57%), who drink alcohol regularly (49%), and who do not use condoms consistently with clients (48%). Discussion: This feasibility study indicated strong interest in PrEP and a desire to move forward with the demonstration project. Participants expressed their responses in terms of public health discourses surrounding risk, pointing to the importance of situating PrEP scale up within the trusted spaces of community-based organizations as a means of supporting PrEP uptake and adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. Corrigendum to "Evaluation of sperm DNA fragmentation using multiple methods: a comparison of their predictive power for male infertility".
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Javed A, Talkad MS, and Ramaiah MK
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- 2019
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9. ICSI using fresh and frozen PESA-TESA spermatozoa to examine assisted reproductive outcome retrospectively.
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Javed A, Ramaiah MK, and Talkad MS
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Objective: The male reproductive system generates, accumulates, and transports the sperm. In this study, 2 methods of surgically retrieving sperm, namely, testicular sperm aspiration (TESA) and percutaneous epididymal sperm aspiration (PESA), are discussed and studied in men aged ≤38 years to achieve successful conception using assisted reproductive technology. The purpose was to assess the fertilization rate (FA), clinical pregnancy, and live birth rate (LBR) with sperm., Methods: A total of 287 semen samples were divided into 4 groups as follows: fresh PESA (n=73), frozen PESA (n=65), fresh TESA (n=128), and frozen TESA (n=21). The DNA fragmentation test using sperm chromatin dispersion assay was measured and reported., Results: FA was 70.3% and 65.5%, ( P <0.022) for fresh and frozen epididymal sperm and 53.8% and 49.5%, ( P <0.032) for fresh and frozen testicular sperm. LBR was 33.6% and 30.2% ( P <0.075) for fresh and frozen epididymal sperm (PESA) and 22.7% and 18.2% ( P <0.063) for fresh and frozen-thawed TESA sperm., Conclusion: Exposure to tissue shearing may adversely affect sperm quality. Increased sperm DNA damage due to long-term exposure while teasing enhances reactive oxygen species production foremost to membrane damage because of the oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acid in lipids (lipid peroxidation), oxidation of amino acid in proteins, and inactivation of specific enzymes, all leading to enzymatic dipping and possibility of less fertilization and conception as indicated by the increase in LBR with fresh/frozen PESA compared to with fresh/frozen TESA., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported., (Copyright © 2019 Korean Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology.)
- Published
- 2019
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