41 results on '"Gryseels, Charlotte"'
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2. Why using bed nets is a challenge among minority populations in Central Vietnam
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Nguyen, Thuan Thi, Nguyen, Xa Xuan, Wilson-Barthes, Marta, Sawada, Ikumi, Muela, Joan, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Pham, Thanh Vinh, Van Nguyen, Hong, Van Nguyen, Van, Tran, Duong Thanh, Gryseels, Charlotte, D’Alessandro, Umberto, Grietens, Koen Peeters, and Erhart, Annette
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- 2022
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3. Strategic silences, eroded trust: The impact of divergent COVID-19 vaccine sentiments on healthcare workers' relations with peers and patients
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Heyerdahl, Leonardo W, Dielen, Stef, Dodion, Hélène, Van Riet, Carla, Nguyen, ToTran, Simas, Clarissa, Boey, Lise, Kattumana, Tarun, Vandaele, Nico, Larson, Heidi J., Grietens, Koen Peeters, Giles-Vernick, Tamara, and Gryseels, Charlotte
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- 2022
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4. Using a Syndemics Perspective to (Re)Conceptualize Vulnerability during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Scoping Review.
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Hernandez Barrios, Yisel, Perez Chacon, Dennis, Molina Gomez, Yosiel, Gryseels, Charlotte, Verdonck, Kristien, Peeters Grietens, Koen, and Nieto-Sanchez, Claudia
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- 2024
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5. Understanding how communities respond to COVID-19: experiences from the Orthodox Jewish communities of Antwerp city
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Vanhamel, Jef, Meudec, Marie, Van Landeghem, Ella, Ronse, Maya, Gryseels, Charlotte, Reyniers, Thijs, Rotsaert, Anke, Ddungu, Charles, Manirankunda, Lazare, Katsuva, Deogratias, Grietens, Koen Peeters, and Nöstlinger, Christiana
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- 2021
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6. Understanding adherence to reactive treatment of asymptomatic malaria infections in The Gambia
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Jaiteh, Fatou, Okebe, Joseph, Masunaga, Yoriko, D’Alessandro, Umberto, Achan, Jane, Gryseels, Charlotte, de Vries, Daniel, Ribera, Joan Muela, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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- 2021
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7. More than one crisis: COVID-19 response actors navigating multi-dimensional crises in Flanders, Belgium.
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Kattumana, Tarun, Heyerdahl, Leonardo W., Nguyen, ToTran, Dielen, Stef, Peeters Grietens, Koen, Vandamme, Anne-Mieke, Giles-Vernick, Tamara, Larson, Heidi J., Vandaele, Nico, Vandermeulen, Corinne, Gryseels, Charlotte, and Van Riet, Carla
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HEALTH policy ,COVID-19 vaccines ,VACCINATION coverage ,PATIENT-centered care ,INTERVIEWING ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,VACCINE hesitancy ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) ,TRUST - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted societies globally. Public health institutions were tasked with responding to the pandemic in a dynamic and uncertain context. This paper sheds light on the experiences of COVID-19 response actors as they navigated multi-dimensional crises associated with the pandemic in general and vaccine hesitancy in particular. This research was conducted during the initial phase of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Flanders, Belgium. Participants included informants across all levels of the COVID-19 vaccination strategy including but not limited to those producing scientific knowledge, providing policy input, or implementing public health directives locally. 'Crisis' was identified as a recurring theme in interviews with informants. The paper highlights multi-dimensional crises experienced by informants such as the: (i) crisis of prioritization, (ii) crisis of communication, (iii) crisis of the changing image of science, (iv) crisis of epistemic agency and autonomy, and (v) crisis of trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Efficacy of topical mosquito repellent (picaridin) plus long-lasting insecticidal nets versus long-lasting insecticidal nets alone for control of malaria: a cluster randomised controlled trial
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Sluydts, Vincent, Durnez, Lies, Heng, Somony, Gryseels, Charlotte, Canier, Lydie, Kim, Saorin, Van Roey, Karel, Kerkhof, Karen, Khim, Nimol, Mao, Sokny, Uk, Sambunny, Sovannaroth, Siv, Grietens, Koen Peeters, Sochantha, Tho, Menard, Didier, and Coosemans, Marc
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- 2016
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9. Community perspectives on treating asymptomatic infections for malaria elimination in The Gambia
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Jaiteh, Fatou, Masunaga, Yoriko, Okebe, Joseph, D’Alessandro, Umberto, Balen, Julie, Bradley, John, Gryseels, Charlotte, Ribera, Joan Muela, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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- 2019
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10. Importance of household-level risk factors in explaining micro-epidemiology of asymptomatic malaria infections in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia
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Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Srun, Set, Sluydts, Vincent, Gryseels, Charlotte, Mean, Vanna, Kim, Saorin, Sokny, Mao, Peeters Grietens, Koen, Coosemans, Marc, Menard, Didier, Tho, Sochantha, Van Bortel, Wim, and Durnez, Lies
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- 2018
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11. Where and why do we lose women from the continuum of care in maternal health? A mixed‐methods study in Southern Benin.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Dossou, Jean‐Paul, Vigan, Armelle, Boyi Hounsou, Christelle, Kanhonou, Lydie, Benova, Lenka, and Delvaux, Thérèse
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MATERNAL health services , *CONTINUUM of care , *HEALTH facilities , *POSTNATAL care , *PRENATAL care - Abstract
Objective: Continuum of care (CoC) in maternal health is built on evidence suggesting that the integration of effective interventions across pregnancy, childbirth, and the postnatal period leads to better perinatal health outcomes. We explored gaps along the CoC in maternal health in Benin. Methods: A mixed‐methods study triangulating results from a qualitative study in southern Benin with a quantitative analysis of Benin Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) data on the use of services along the CoC was conducted. Results: Benin Demographic and Health Survey analysis showed that although 89% of women reported at least one antenatal care (ANC) visit, only half initiated ANC in the first trimester and completed 4 or more visits. 85% reported facility‐based childbirth and 69% a postnatal check within 48 h after childbirth. Our qualitative study confirms early initiation of ANC and the transition from facility‐based childbirth to postnatal care are important gaps along the CoC and reveals late arrival at health facility for childbirth as an additional gap. These gaps interact with spiritual and alternative care practices that aim to safeguard pregnancy and prevent complications. Structural factors related to poverty and disrespectful care in health facilities compounded to limit the utilisation of formal healthcare. Conclusions: The combined use of BDHS and qualitative data contributed to highlighting critical gaps along the maternal CoC. A lack of integration of spiritual or alternative aspects of care into biomedical services, as well as structural factors, impeded access to healthcare in Benin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. In pursuit of a cure: The plural therapeutic landscape of onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy in Cameroon – A mixed methods study.
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Ronse, Maya, Irani, Julia, Gryseels, Charlotte, Smekens, Tom, Ekukole, Serge, Teh Monteh, Caroline, Tatah Ntaimah, Peter, Dierickx, Susan, Verdonck, Kristien, Colebunders, Robert, Njamnshi, Alfred K., O'Neill, Sarah, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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MEDICAL personnel ,EPILEPSY ,SPIRITUAL healing ,MIXED methods research ,ONCHOCERCIASIS - Abstract
Background: A high prevalence of epilepsy has been observed in several onchocerciasis-endemic villages in the Sanaga River basin, Cameroon. Recent studies suggest that ivermectin, a drug that is distributed annually with the aim of eliminating onchocerciasis, may have a protective effect against acquiring onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy (OAE). This study, therefore, provides an in-depth understanding of both the complex therapeutic landscape for epilepsy as well as the experiences related to the 'community-directed treatment with ivermectin' (CDTI) campaign in order to identify a more trenchant path forward in the fight against epilepsy. Methodology/Principal findings: Based on a mixed methods study combining a qualitative strand with a quantitative survey, we found that epilepsy was perceived to have had an epidemic emergence in the past and was still considered an important health issue in the study area. Socio-economic status, availability and accessibility of drugs and practitioners, as well as perceived aetiology shaped therapeutic itineraries for epilepsy, which included frequenting (in)formal biomedical health care providers, indigenous and/or faith healing practitioners. Ivermectin uptake for onchocerciasis was generally well known and well regarded. The CDTI faced structural and logistical bottlenecks undermining equal access and optimal adherence to the drug. Conclusions/Significance: Uninterrupted, sustainable and comprehensive health-service delivery is essential to help alleviate the epilepsy burden on afflicted households. Addressing structural challenges of CDTI and communicating the potential link with epilepsy to local populations at risk could optimize the uptake of this potentially significant tool in OAE prevention. Author summary: Regions where onchocerciasis–a parasitical infection transmitted by blackflies–is endemic also tend to suffer from high levels of epilepsy. Recent studies suggest that ivermectin, an anti- onchocerciasis drug distributed annually to entire populations in onchocerciasis-endemic regions, may protect against developing onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy (OAE). As the link between onchocerciasis and epilepsy has been poorly understood and scientifically neglected in the past, our mixed methods research investigated how residents in an affected Cameroonian area perceive and cope with epilepsy; how they interpret the (causes of the) illness; where they seek care and why there. Armed with this knowledge, epilepsy control programs can optimize interventions geared at relieving the burden of epilepsy–and potentially OAE–which is essential given the fact that, despite 15–20 years of ivermectin distribution, onchocerciasis transmission persists and epilepsy prevalence in these regions remains high. Our findings illustrate how crucial it is to ensure uninterrupted, sustainable and comprehensive health service delivery for epilepsy. Furthermore, the structural challenges associated with the mass ivermectin distribution campaign must be addressed in order to relieve the burden of onchocerciasis, and potentially OAE. Without first addressing these structural bottlenecks, uptake and adherence to ivermectin treatment will remain insufficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Misdirection in the margins of malaria elimination methods.
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Peeters Grietens, Koen, Gryseels, Charlotte, and Verschraegen, Gert
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MALARIA prevention , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *ATTENTION , *INSECT baits & repellents , *CASE studies , *MOSQUITO nets , *DISEASE eradication - Abstract
This paper proposes the term misdirection as a process by which attention is diverted from certain scientific approaches in the malaria elimination paradigm to justify specific methodological, scientific and political decisions. Misdirection, as it applies in magic, creates a sort of tunnel vision in which attention is diverted away from any action occurring outside the frame of the current paradigm. A crucial component of this misdirection process is the global standardization of intervention methodologies operating independent of local social contexts and the perceived impossibility to 'localize' such interventions. This conviction requires – and is simultaneously supported by- the production of decontextualized evidence through the application of methodologies aiming at generalizability, in detriment of social context and variability. This process produces pseudo measurements and conclusions that are at the same time real in their adherence to paradigmatically valid methodologies and fake as they either remain empty of empirical significance or whose validity cannot be assessed as we have lost sight of the (local, social, cultural) variation it has decided to ignore. Using the example of research on the effectiveness of bed nets and topical repellents as malaria prevention tools and their expected use within the current paradigm of malaria elimination, we show how the inherent ambiguity of the pseudo allows consequent misdirection processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. When 'substandard' is the standard, who decides what is appropriate? Exploring healthcare provision in Cambodia.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Kuijpers, Laura Maria Francisca, Jacobs, Jan, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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DRUG standards , *DRUG laws , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL protocols , *PUBLIC health , *QUALITATIVE research , *DATA analysis software , *DRUG counterfeiting - Abstract
Cambodia has experienced an impressive economic growth in the last two decades that has not been matched by equal investments in public health care. In combination with other historical and sociocultural factors, this has led to a set of private and public health care practices that divert from standards of clinical good practice. Based on qualitative data collected in malaria and (para)typhoid fever projects, we will describe falsified laboratory test results, dubious diagnostic practices of both unlicensed and licensed doctors, the sales of substandard preparations and combinations of medicines, and even surgeries for commercial interest instead of patient well-being. Patients navigate this complex medical landscape by circumventing costly clinical care – by self-diagnosing and self-medicating, using medicines bought from drug sellers – and by actively seeking out clinical interventions when the required financial investment is perceived to match the illness severity. We will explore what practices constitute healthcare in urban and rural Cambodian settings; what differentiates these practices from clinical 'good practice' guidelines in conventional medicine; and which mechanisms patients, drug sellers and medical doctors have developed to navigate a health care system that at the same time enables, encourages, and sanctions such unregulated practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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15. A Critical Enquiry into Variability of Insecticidal Net Use in Cambodia: Implications for Assessing Appropriateness of Malaria Elimination Interventions.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Uk, Sambunny, Set, Srun, Sokha Suon, Gerrets, René, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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- 2019
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16. Forest Goers and Multidrug-Resistant Malaria in Cambodia: An Ethnographic Study.
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Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Gryseels, Charlotte, Sokha, Suon, Lim Dara, Sereiboth, Noan, James, Nicola, Thavrin, Boukheng, Po Ly, Kheang Soy Ty, Grietens, Koen Peeters, Siv Sovannaroth, and Shunmay Yeung
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- 2019
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17. Enteric Fever in Cambodia: Community Perceptions and Practices Concerning Disease Transmission and Treatment.
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Kuijpers, Laura Maria Francisca, Gryseels, Charlotte, Uk, Sambunny, Panha Chung, Bory, Sotharith, Bun Sreng, Amy Parry, Jacobs, Jan, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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- 2018
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18. Community sensitization and decision-making for trial participation: A mixed-methods study from The Gambia.
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Dierickx, Susan, O'Neill, Sarah, Gryseels, Charlotte, Immaculate Anyango, Edna, Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Okebe, Joseph, Mwesigwa, Julia, Jaiteh, Fatou, Gerrets, René, Ravinetto, Raffaella, D'Alessandro, Umberto, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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DECISION making ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,MALARIA ,COMMUNITIES ,MALARIA treatment ,COMMUNICATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH education ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL research ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH ethics ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: Ensuring individual free and informed decision-making for research participation is challenging. It is thought that preliminarily informing communities through 'community sensitization' procedures may improve individual decision-making. This study set out to assess the relevance of community sensitization for individual decision-making in research participation in rural Gambia.Methods: This anthropological mixed-methods study triangulated qualitative methods and quantitative survey methods in the context of an observational study and a clinical trial on malaria carried out by the Medical Research Council Unit Gambia.Results/discussion: Although 38.7% of the respondents were present during sensitization sessions, 91.1% of the respondents were inclined to participate in the trial when surveyed after the sensitization and prior to the informed consent process. This difference can be explained by the informal transmission of information within the community after the community sensitization, expectations such as the benefits of participation based on previous research experiences, and the positive reputation of the research institute. Commonly mentioned barriers to participation were blood sampling and the potential disapproval of the household head.Conclusion: Community sensitization is effective in providing first-hand, reliable information to communities as the information is cascaded to those who could not attend the sessions. However, further research is needed to assess how the informal spread of information further shapes people's expectations, how the process engages with existing social relations and hierarchies (e.g. local political power structures; permissions of heads of households) and how this influences or changes individual consent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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19. What motivates Ebola survivors to donate plasma during an emergency clinical trial? The case of Ebola-Tx in Guinea.
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Ronse, Maya, Marí Sáez, Almudena, Gryseels, Charlotte, Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Delamou, Alexandre, Guillard, Alain, Briki, Mustapha, Bigey, Frédéric, Haba, Nyankoye, van Griensven, Johan, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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EBOLA virus disease ,PLASMAPHERESIS ,SOCIAL dynamics ,PUBLIC health administration ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Introduction: During the 2014 Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) epidemic, the Ebola-Tx trial evaluated the use of convalescent plasma (CP) in Guinea. The effectiveness of plasmapheresis trials depends on the recruitment of plasma donors. This paper describes what motivated or deterred EVD survivors to donate CP, providing insights for future plasmapheresis trials and epidemic preparedness. Methods: This qualitative study, part of Ebola-Tx, researched and addressed emergent trial difficulties through interviewing, participant observation and focus group discussions. Sampling was theoretical and retroductive analysis was done in NVivo 10. Results: Willingness or hesitance to participate in plasma donation depended on factors at the interface of pre-existing social dynamics; the impact of the disease and the consequent emergency response including the trial set-up. For volunteers, motivation to donate was mainly related to the feeling of social responsibility inspired by having survived EVD and to positive perceptions of plasmapheresis technology despite still unknown trial outcomes. Conversely, confidentiality concerns when volunteering due to stigmatization of survivors and perceived decrease in vital strength and in antibodies when donating, leading to fears of loss in protection against EVD, were main deterrents. The dynamic (dis)trust in Ebola Response Actors and in other survivors further determined willingness to participate and lead to the emergence/decline of rumours related to blood stealing and treatment effectiveness. Historic inter-ethnic relations in the health care setting further defined volunteering along socio-economic and ethnic lines. Finally, lack of follow-up and of dedicated care further impacted on motivation to volunteer. Conclusions: Ebola-Tx was the first trial to solicit and evaluate blood-product donation as an experimental treatment on a large scale in Sub-Saharan Africa. An effective donation system requires directly engaging with emergent social barriers and providing an effective ethical response, including improved and transparent communication, effective follow-up after donation, assuring confidentiality and determining ethical incentives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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20. Defining micro-epidemiology for malaria elimination: systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Verdonck, Kristien, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Gryseels, Charlotte, Ribera, Joan Muela, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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RISK of malaria ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,META-analysis ,HEALTH behavior ,DISEASES & society ,ENVIRONMENTAL risk assessment - Abstract
Background: Malaria risk can vary markedly between households in the same village, or between villages, but the determinants of this "micro-epidemiological" variation in malaria risk remain poorly understood. This study aimed to identify factors that explain fine-scale variation in malaria risk across settings and improve definitions and methods for malaria micro-epidemiology. Methods: A systematic review of studies that examined risk factors for variation in malaria infection between individuals, households, clusters, hotspots, or villages in any malaria-endemic setting was conducted. Four databases were searched for studies published up until 6th October 2015. Crude and adjusted effect estimates for risk factors for malaria infection were combined in random effects meta-analyses. Bias was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale. Results: From 743 retrieved records, 51 studies were selected, representing populations comprising over 160,000 individuals in 21 countries, in high- and low-endemicity settings. Sixty-five risk factors were identified and meta-analyses were conducted for 11 risk factors. Most studies focused on environmental factors, especially increasing distance from a breeding site (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.86-0.92, 10 studies). Individual bed net use was protective (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.52-0.77, 12 studies), but not household bed net ownership. Increasing household size (OR 1.08, 95% CI 1.01-1.15, 4 studies) and household crowding (OR 1.79, 95% CI 1.48-2.16, 4 studies) were associated with malaria infection. Health seeking behaviour, medical history and genetic traits were less frequently studied. Only six studies examined whether individual-level risk factors explained differences in malaria risk at village or hotspot level, and five studies reported different risk factors at different levels of analysis. The risk of bias varied from low to high in individual studies. Insufficient reporting and comparability of measurements limited the number of meta-analyses conducted. Conclusions: Several variables associated with individual-level malaria infection were identified, but there was limited evidence that these factors explain variation in malaria risk at village or hotspot level. Social, population and other factors may confound estimates of environmental risk factors, yet these variables are not included in many studies. A structured framework of malaria risk factors is proposed to improve study design and quality of evidence in future micro-epidemiological studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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21. Local constraints to access appropriate malaria treatment in the context of parasite resistance in Cambodia: a qualitative study.
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Verschuere, Jesse, Decroo, Tom, Lim, Dara, Kindermans, Jean-Marie, Chea Nguon, Huy, Rekol, Alkourdi, Yasmine, Grietens, Koen Peeters, and Gryseels, Charlotte
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MALARIA treatment ,DRUG resistance ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ARTEMISININ ,HEALTH behavior ,PUBLIC health ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Despite emerging drug resistance in Cambodia, artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) is still the most efficacious therapy. ACT is available free of charge in the Cambodian public sector and at a subsidized rate in the private sector. However, un- and mistreated cases in combination with population movements may lead to the further spread of resistant parasites, stressing the importance of understanding how the perceived aetiology of malaria and associated health-seeking behaviour may delay access to appropriate treatment. A qualitative study explored these factors after an epidemiological survey confirmed parasite resistance in Preah Vihear province. Results: In Cambodian cosmology, illnesses can be inflicted by supernatural beings or originate from 'natural' causes because of disorder in the social, domestic or outdoor environment. Initial treatment options consist of cheap and accessible home-based care (manual therapy, herbs and biomedical medication) targeting single symptoms. If there is no steady recovery or if the condition quickly aggravates, care will be sought from 'village doctors', public health facilities, private pharmacies or, in case of suspicion of a supernatural cause, from a specialized indigenous healer. The choice of provider is mostly based on the family's financial situation, access to and trust in the provider, and the congruence between the suspected aetiology of the illness and the treatment offered by the provider. Different treatment options are often combined during the same illness episode through a serial process of trial and error guided by the observable improvements in the patient's condition. Conclusions: Cambodian perceptions of illness that focus on single symptoms and their perceived severity may lead to the identification of one or multiple illnesses at the same time, rarely suspecting malaria from the start and implying different patterns of health seeking behaviour and treatment choice. However, decisions to self-diagnose and treat at home are also pragmatic and must be understood in the context of poverty, a major barrier to seeking prompt and appropriate care for malaria in an area characterized by parasite resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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22. The Importance of Blood Is Infinite: Conceptions of Blood as Life Force, Rumours and Fear of Trial Participation in a Fulani Village in Rural Gambia.
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O’Neill, Sarah, Dierickx, Susan, Okebe, Joseph, Dabira, Edgard, Gryseels, Charlotte, d’Alessandro, Umberto, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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BLOOD sampling ,MALARIA treatment ,PRIMAQUINE ,DRUG efficacy ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Clinical trials require high levels of participation and low drop-out rates to be successful. However, collecting blood samples from individuals recruited into clinical trials can be challenging when there is reticence about blood-taking. In addition to concerns regarding the feasibility of medical research, fears of ‘blood-stealing’ and ‘blood-selling’ have ethical implications related to cultural sensitivity and informed consent. This study explores anxieties around blood-taking during a malaria treatment trial in the Gambia. Methods: This case study is based on ethnographic research in one theoretically selected village due to the high reticence to screening for the clinical trial ‘Primaquine's gametocytocidal efficacy in malaria asymptomatic carriers treated with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine’ carried out in the Gambia between 2013 and 2014. Data collection tools included in-depth interviews, participant observation, informal conversations and group discussions. Results: In total only 176 of 411 habitants (42%) in the village accepted having a bloodspot taken to screen for malaria. Although trial recruitment was initially high in the village, some families refused screening when rumours started spreading that the trial team was taking too much blood. Concerns about ‘loss of blood’ were equated to loss of strength and lack of good food to replenish bodily forces. Families in the study village were concerned about the weakness of their body while they had to harvest their crops at the time of recruitment for the trial. Conclusion: A common recommendation to prevent and avoid rumours against public health interventions and trials is the provision of full and consistent information during the consent procedure, which is assumed to lead to more accurate knowledge of the purpose of the intervention and increased trial participation. However, even when information provision is continuous, the emergence of rumours can be related to times of uncertainty and perceptions of vulnerability, which are often a reflection of structural inequalities and diverging value orientations between communities and public health institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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23. 'Some anti-malarials are too strong for your body, they will harm you.' Socio-cultural factors influencing pregnant women's adherence to anti-malarial treatment in rural Gambia.
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Jaiteh, Fatou, Dierickx, Susan, Gryseels, Charlotte, O'Neill, Sarah, D'Alessandro, Umberto, Scott, Susana, Balen, Julie, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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MALARIA in pregnancy ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,MALARIA treatment ,PATIENT compliance ,ACQUISITION of data ,MOTHERS-in-law - Abstract
Background: Despite declining prevalence of malaria in The Gambia, non-adherence to anti-malarial treatment still remains a challenge to control efforts. There is limited evidence on the socio-cultural factors that influence adherence to anti-malarial treatment in pregnancy. This study explored perceptions of malaria in pregnancy and their influence on adherence to anti-malarial treatment in a rural area of The Gambia. Methods: An exploratory ethnographic study was conducted ancillary to a cluster-randomized trial on scheduled screening and treatment of malaria in pregnancy at village level in the Upper River Region of The Gambia from June to August 2014. Qualitative data were collected through interviewing and participant observation. Analysis was concurrent to data collection and carried out using NVivo 10. Results: Although women had good bio-medical knowledge of malaria in pregnancy, adherence to anti-malarial treatment was generally perceived to be low. Pregnant women were perceived to discontinue the provided anti-malarial treatment after one or 2 days mainly due to non-recognition of symptoms, perceived ineffectiveness of the anti-malarial treatment, the perceived risks of medication and advice received from mothers-in-law. Conclusion: Improving women's knowledge of malaria in pregnancy is not sufficient to assure adherence to anti-malarial treatment. Addressing structural barriers such as unclear health workers' messages about medication dosage, illness recognition, side effects of the medication and the integration of relatives, especially the mothers-in-law, in community-based programmes are additionally required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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24. Re-imagining adherence to treatment from the "other side": local interpretations of adverse anti-malarial drug reactions in the Peruvian Amazon.
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Ribera, Joan Muela, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Gryseels, Charlotte, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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PATIENT compliance ,MALARIA treatment ,MALARIA prevention ,DRUG side effects ,ANTIMALARIALS - Abstract
Background: Patients' adherence to malaria treatment is a key issue in malaria control and elimination efforts. Previous studies have reported on problems with adherence to anti-malarials, which in part can be related to adverse drug reactions (ADRs) of anti-malarials. However, there has been a relative inattention to the cultural and social aspects of these anti-malarial side-effects and, more broadly, to how cultural representations of body functions may affect people's behaviour. In this article, an in-depth analysis is presented of the cultural logics underlying local interpretations of adverse drug reactions to anti-malarials in the Peruvian Amazon. Methods: Ethnographic fieldwork was carried out during two periods of 3 months in 2007 and 2008. Fieldwork was carried out in 10 communities in the department of Loreto, the administrative area corresponding to the Peruvian Amazon. Thirty in-depth interviews of key and general informants, focusing on perceived adverse anti-malarial drug reactions, were carried out in Spanish, recorded, transcribed and analysed. Results: Informants reported surprisingly elevated problems of adverse drug reactions. Frequent statements about medication that "shocked", "cut the blood" or provoked "allergic reactions" are difficult to interpret from a biomedical perspective, and only make when considering the underlying cultural logics. The logic of maintaining a 'temperate' physical and moral balance by avoiding excesses of 'hot' or 'cold' or sudden changes of 'body heat' can explain the locally constructed adverse drug reactions to anti-malarials. Discussion: Adherence is a continuous process during which the patient evaluates and re-evaluates the course of his illness and the perceived benefits and risks of the treatment. What counts are the processes, the interpretations and the logics which underlie the decisions to adhere to or to abandon treatment. Adherence can only be adequately addressed if such interpretations are understood and taken into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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25. Factors Associated with Non-Participation and Non-Adherence in Directly Observed Mass Drug Administration for Malaria in The Gambia.
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Dierickx, Susan, Gryseels, Charlotte, Mwesigwa, Julia, O’Neill, Sarah, Bannister-Tyrell, Melanie, Ronse, Maya, Jaiteh, Fatou, Gerrets, René, D’Alessandro, Umberto, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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DRUG administration , *MALARIA , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *ARTEMISININ , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Introduction: The potential benefits of Mass Drug Administration (MDA) for malaria elimination are being considered in several malaria endemic countries where a decline in malaria transmission has been reported. For this strategy to work, it is important that a large proportion of the target population participates, requiring an in-depth understanding of factors that may affect participation and adherence to MDA programs. Methodology: This social science study was ancillary to a one-round directly observed MDA campaign with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, carried out in 12 villages in rural Gambia between June and August 2014. The social science study employed a mixed-methods approach combining qualitative methods (participant observation and in-depth interviewing) and quantitative methods (structured follow-up interviews among non-participating and non-adhering community members). Results: Of 3942 people registered in the study villages, 67.9% adhered to the three consecutive daily doses. For the remaining villagers, 12.6% did not attend the screening, 3.5% was not eligible and 16% did not adhere to the treatment schedule. The main barriers for non-participation and adherence were long and short-term mobility of individuals and specific subgroups, perceived adverse drug reactions and rumors, inconveniences related to the logistics of MDA (e.g. waiting times) and the perceived lack of information about MDA. Conclusion: While, there was no fundamental resistance from the target communities, adherence was 67.9%. This shows the necessity of understanding local perceptions and barriers to increase its effectiveness. Moreover, certain of the constraining factors were socio-spatially clustered which might prove problematic since focal areas of residual malaria transmission may remain allowing malaria to spread to adjacent areas where transmission had been temporarily interrupted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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26. Assuring access to topical mosquito repellents within an intensive distribution scheme: a case study in a remote province of Cambodia.
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Heng, Somony, Durnez, Lies, Gryseels, Charlotte, Van Roey, Karel, Mean, Vanna, Uk, Sambunny, Siv, Sovannaroth, Peeters Grietens, Koen, Sochantha, Tho, Coosemans, Marc, and Sluydts, Vincent
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INSECT baits & repellents ,MOSQUITO control ,PUBLIC health ,REGRESSION analysis ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Background: The public health value of a vector control tool depends on its epidemiological efficacy, but also on its ease of implementation. This study describes an intensive distribution scheme of a topical repellent implemented in 2012 and 2013 for the purpose of a cluster-randomized trial using the existing public health system. The trial aimed to assess the effectiveness of repellents in addition to long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLIN) and occurred in a province of Cambodia. Determinants for accessibility and consumption of this tool were explored. Methods: 135 individuals were appointed to be repellent distributors in 57 villages. A 2-weekly bottle exchange programme was organized. Distributors recorded information regarding the amount of bottles exchanged, repellent leftover, and reasons for not complying in household data sheets. Distributor-household contact rates and average 2-weekly consumption of repellent were calculated. Household and distributors characteristics were obtained using questionnaires, surveying 50 households per cluster and all distributors. Regression models were used to explore associations between contact and consumption rates and determinants such as socio-economic status. Operational costs for repellent and net distribution were obtained from the MalaResT project and the provincial health department. Results: A fourfold increase in distributor-household contact rates was observed in 2013 compared to 2012 (median
2012 = 20 %, median2013 = 88.9 %). Consumption rate tripled over the 2-year study period (median2012 = 20 %, median2013 = 57.89 %). Contact rates were found to associate with district, commune and knowing the distributor, while consumption was associated with district and household head occupation. The annual operational cost per capita for repellent distribution was 31 times more expensive than LLIN distribution (USD 4.33 versus USD 0.14). Discussion: After the existing public health system was reinforced with programmatic and logistic support, an intense 2-weekly distribution scheme of a vector control tool over a 2-year period was operated successfully in the field. Lack of associations with socio-economic status suggested that the free distribution strategy resulted in equitable access to repellents. The operational costs for the repellent distribution and exchange programme were much higher than LLIN distribution. Such effort could only be justified in the context of malaria elimination where these interventions are expected to be limited in time [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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27. High Mobility and Low Use of Malaria Preventive Measures among the Jarai Male Youth along the Cambodia-Vietnam Border.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Grietens, Koen Peeters, Dierickx, Susan, Xa Nguyen Xuan, Uk, Sambunny, Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Trienekens, Suzan, Ribera, Joan Muela, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Gerrets, René, D'Alessandro, Umberto, Sochantha, Tho, Coosemans, Marc, and Erhart, Annette
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- 2015
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28. Re-imagining malaria: heterogeneity of human and mosquito behaviour in relation to residual malaria transmission in Cambodia.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Durnez, Lies, Gerrets, René, Uk, Sambunny, Suon, Sokha, Set, Srun, Phoeuk, Pisen, Sluydts, Vincent, Heng, Somony, Sochantha, Tho, Coosemans, Marc, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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MINORITIES , *MOSQUITOES , *ANTHROPOLOGICAL research ,MALARIA transmission - Abstract
Background: In certain regions in Southeast Asia, where malaria is reduced to forested regions populated by ethnic minorities dependent on slash-and-burn agriculture, malaria vector populations have developed a propensity to feed early and outdoors, limiting the effectiveness of long-lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLIN) and indoor residual spraying (IRS). The interplay between heterogeneous human, as well as mosquito behaviour, radically challenges malaria control in such residual transmission contexts. This study examines human behavioural patterns in relation to the vector behaviour. Methods: The anthropological research used a sequential mixed-methods study design in which quantitative survey research methods were used to complement findings from qualitative ethnographic research. The qualitative research existed of in-depth interviews and participant observation. For the entomological research, indoor and outdoor human landing collections were performed. All research was conducted in selected villages in Ratanakiri province, Cambodia. Results: Variability in human behaviour resulted in variable exposure to outdoor and early biting vectors: (i) indigenous people were found to commute between farms in the forest, where malaria exposure is higher, and village homes; (ii) the indoor/outdoor biting distinction was less clear in forest housing often completely or partly open to the outside; (iii) reported sleeping times varied according to the context of economic activities, impacting on the proportion of infections that could be accounted for by early or nighttime biting; (iv) protection by LLINs may not be as high as self-reported survey data indicate, as observations showed around 40% (non-treated) market net use while (v) unprotected evening resting and deep forest activities impacted further on the suboptimal use of LLINs. Conclusions: The heterogeneity of human behaviour and the variation of vector densities and biting behaviours may lead to a considerable proportion of exposure occurring during times that people are assumed to be protected by the distributed LLINs. Additional efforts in improving LLIN use during times when people are resting in the evening and during the night might still have an impact on further reducing malaria transmission in Cambodia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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29. Foul wind, spirits and witchcraft: illness conceptions and health-seeking behaviour for malaria in the Gambia.
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O'Neill, Sarah, Gryseels, Charlotte, Dierickx, Susan, Mwesigwa, Julia, Okebe, Joseph, d'Alessandro, Umberto, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
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DISEASE research , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *HEALTH ,MALARIA transmission - Abstract
Background: As the disease burden in the Gambia has reduced considerably over the last decade, heterogeneity in malaria transmission has become more marked, with infected but asymptomatic individuals maintaining the reservoir. The identification, timely diagnosis and treatment of malaria-infected individuals are crucial to further reduce or eliminate the human parasite reservoir. This ethnographic study focused on the relationship between local beliefs of the cause of malaria and treatment itineraries of suspected cases. Methods: An ethnographic qualitative study was conducted in twelve rural communities in the Upper River Region and the Central River Region in the Gambia. The data collection methods included in-depth interviews, participant observation, informal conversations, and focus group discussions. Results: While at first glance, the majority of people seek biomedical treatment for 'malaria', there are several constraints to seeking treatment at health centres. Certain folk illnesses, such as Jontinooje and Kajeje, translated and interpreted as 'malaria' by healthcare professionals, are often not considered to be malaria by local populations but rather as self-limiting febrile illnesses -- consequently not leading to seeking care in the biomedical sector. Furthermore, respondents reported delaying treatment at a health centre while seeking financial resources, and consequently relying on herbal treatments. In addition, when malaria cases present symptoms, such as convulsions, hallucinations and/or loss of consciousness, the illness is often interpreted as having a supernatural aetiology, leading to diagnosis and treatment by traditional healers. Conclusion: Although malaria diagnostics and treatment-seeking in the biomedical sector has been reported to be relatively high in the Gambia compared to other sub-Saharan African countries, local symptom interpretation and illness conceptions can delay or stop people from seeking timely biomedical treatment, which may contribute to maintaining a parasite reservoir of undiagnosed and untreated malaria patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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30. Spatial clustering and risk factors of malaria infections in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia.
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Sluydts, Vincent, Somony Heng, Coosemans, Marc, Van Roey, Karel, Gryseels, Charlotte, Canier, Lydie, Saorin Kim, Nimol Khim, Sovannaroth Siv, Sambunny Uk, Sochantha Tho, Menard, Didier, Durnez, Lies, Vanna Mean, and Grietens, Koen Peeters
- Abstract
Background: Malaria incidence worldwide has steadily declined over the past decades. Consequently, increasingly more countries will proceed from control to elimination. The malaria distribution in low incidence settings appears patchy, and local transmission hotspots are a continuous source of infection. In this study, species-specific clusters and associated risk factors were identified based on malaria prevalence data collected in the north-east of Cambodia. In addition, Plasmodium falciparum genetic diversity, population structure and gene flows were studied. Method: In 2012, blood samples from 5793 randomly selected individuals living in 117 villages were collected from Ratanakiri province, Cambodia. Malariometric data of each participant were simultaneously accumulated using a standard questionnaire. A two-step PCR allowed for species-specific detection of malaria parasites, and SNPgenotyping of P. falciparum was performed. SaTScan was used to determine species-specific areas of elevated risk to infection, and univariate and multivariate risk analyses were carried out. Result: PCR diagnosis found 368 positive individuals (6.4%) for malaria parasites, of which 22% contained mixed species infections. The occurrence of these co-infections was more frequent than expected. Specific areas with elevated risk of infection were detected for all Plasmodium species. The clusters for Falciparum, Vivax and Ovale malaria appeared in the north of the province along the main river, while the cluster for Malariae malaria was situated elsewhere. The relative risk to be a malaria parasite carrier within clusters along the river was twice that outside the area. The main risk factor associated with three out of four malaria species was overnight stay in the plot hut, a human behaviour associated with indigenous farming. Haplotypes did not show clear geographical population structure, but pairwise Fst value comparison indicated higher parasite flow along the river. Discussion: Spatial aggregation of malaria parasite carriers, and the identification of malaria species-specific risk factors provide key insights in malaria epidemiology in low transmission settings, which can guide targeted supplementary interventions. Consequently, future malaria programmes in the province should implement additional specific policies targeting households staying overnight at their farms outside the village, in addition to migrants and forest workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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31. An innovative tool for moving malaria PCR detection of parasite reservoir into the field.
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Canier, Lydie, Khim, Nimol, Saorin Kim, Sluydts, Vincent, Somony Heng, Dany Dourng, Eam, Rotha, Sophy Chy, Khean, Chanra, Loch, Kaknika, Ken, Malen, Lim, Hokkean, Siv, Sovannaroath, Tho, Sochantha, Masse-Navette, Pascal, Gryseels, Charlotte, Sambunny, U. k., Van Roey, Karel, Grietens, Koen Peeters, and Mao Sokny
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MALARIA transmission ,PLASMODIUM falciparum ,DIAGNOSTIC equipment ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms - Abstract
Background To achieve the goal of malaria elimination in low transmission areas such as in Cambodia, new, inexpensive, high-throughput diagnostic tools for identifying very low parasite densities in asymptomatic carriers are required. This will enable a switch from passive to active malaria case detection in the field. Methods DNA extraction and real-time PCR assays were implemented in an "in-house" designed mobile laboratory allowing implementation of a robust, sensitive and rapid malaria diagnostic strategy in the field. This tool was employed in a survey organized in the context of the MalaResT project (NCT01663831). Results The real-time PCR screening and species identification assays were performed in the mobile laboratory between October and November 2012, in Rattanakiri Province, to screen approximately 5,000 individuals in less than four weeks and treat parasite carriers within 24- 48 hours after sample collection. An average of 240 clinical samples (and 40 quality control samples) was tested every day, six/seven days per week. Some 97.7% of the results were available <24 hours after the collection. A total of 4.9% were positive for malaria. Plasmodium vivax was present in 61.1% of the positive samples, Plasmodium falciparum in 45.9%, Plasmodium malariae in 7.0% and Plasmodium ovale in 2.0%. Conclusions The operational success of this diagnostic set-up proved that molecular testing and subsequent treatment is logistically achievable in field settings. This will allow the detection of clusters of asymptomatic carriers and to provide useful epidemiological information. Fast results will be of great help for staff in the field to track and treat asymptomatic parasitaemic cases. The concept of the mobile laboratory could be extended to other countries for the molecular detection of malaria or other pathogens, or to culture vivax parasites, which does not support long-time delay between sample collection and culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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32. What Role Do Traditional Beliefs Play in Treatment Seeking and Delay for Buruli Ulcer Disease?--Insights from a Mixed Methods Study in Cameroon.
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Grietens, Koen Peeters, Toomer, Elizabeth, Boock, Alphonse Um, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Peeters, Hans, Kanobana, Kirezi, Gryseels, Charlotte, and Ribera, Joan Muela
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BURULI ulcer ,MENTAL healing ,MEDICAL care costs ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: Victims of Buruli ulcer disease (BUD) frequently report to specialized units at a late stage of the disease. This delay has been associated with local beliefs and a preference for traditional healing linked to a reportedly mystical origin of the disease. We assessed the role beliefs play in determining BUD sufferers' choice between traditional and biomedical treatments. Methods: Anthropological fieldwork was conducted in community and clinical settings in the region of Ayos and Akonolinga in Central Cameroon. The research design consisted of a mixed methods study, triangulating a qualitative strand based on ethnographic research and quantitative data obtained through a survey presented to all patients at the Ayos and Akonolinga hospitals (N = 79) at the time of study and in four endemic communities (N = 73) belonging to the hospitals' catchment area. Results: The analysis of BUD sufferers' health-seeking behaviour showed extremely complex therapeutic itineraries, including various attempts and failures both in the biomedical and traditional fields. Contrary to expectations, nearly half of all hospital patients attributed their illness to mystical causes, while traditional healers admitted patients they perceived to be infected by natural causes. Moreover, both patients in hospitals and in communities often combined elements of both types of treatments. Ultimately, perceptions regarding the effectiveness of the treatment, the option for local treatment as a cost prevention strategy and the characteristics of the doctor-patient relationship were more determinant for treatment choice than beliefs. Discussion: The ascription of delay and treatment choice to beliefs constitutes an over-simplification of BUD health-seeking behaviour and places the responsibility directly on the shoulders of BUD sufferers while potentially neglecting other structural elements. While more efficacious treatment in the biomedical sector is likely to reduce perceived mystical involvement in the disease, additional decentralization could constitute a key element to reduce delay and increase adherence to biomedical treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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33. Doctors and Vampires in Sub-Saharan Africa: Ethical Challenges in Clinical Trial Research.
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Peeters Grietens, Koen, Ribera, Joan Muela, Erhart, Annette, Hoibak, Sarah, Ravinetto, Raffaella M., Gryseels, Charlotte, Dierickx, Susan, O'Neill, Sarah, Hausmann Muela, Susanna, and D'Alessandro, Umberto
- Published
- 2014
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34. Diagnostic Practices and Treatment for P. vivax in the InterEthnic Therapeutic Encounter of South-Central Vietnam: A Mixed-Methods Study.
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Nguyen, Thuan Thi, Nguyen, Xa Xuan, Ronse, Maya, Nguyen, Quynh Truc, Ho, Phuc Quang, Tran, Duong Thanh, Gerrets, Rene, Thriemer, Kamala, Ley, Benedikt, Marfurt, Jutta, Price, Ric N., Grietens, Koen Peeters, and Gryseels, Charlotte
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MEDICAL personnel ,MALARIA ,GLUCOSE-6-phosphate dehydrogenase ,GLUCOSE-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency ,PATIENT compliance ,DIAGNOSIS ,NATALIZUMAB - Abstract
Malaria elimination in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region is challenged by a rising proportion of malaria attributable to P. vivax. Primaquine (PQ) is effective in eliminating the parasite's dormant liver stages and can prevent relapsing infections, but it induces severe haemolysis in patients with Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, highlighting the importance of testing enzyme activity prior to treatment. A mixed-method study was conducted in south-central Vietnam to explore the factors that affect acceptability of G6PD testing, treatment-seeking behaviors, and adherence to current regimens. The majority of respondents (75.7%) were unaware of the different parasite species and rather differentiated malaria by perceived severity. People sought a diagnosis if suspected of malaria fever but not if they perceived their fevers as mild. Most respondents agreed to take prescribed medication to treat asymptomatic infection (94.1%) and to continue medication even if they felt better (91.5%). Health professionals did not have G6PD diagnostic tools nor the means to prescribe PQ safely. Adherence to treatment was linked to trust in public providers, who were perceived to make therapeutic decisions in the interest of the patient. Greater focus on providing acceptable ways of assessing G6PD deficiency will be needed to ensure the timely elimination of malaria in Vietnam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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35. Precarity at the Margins of Malaria Control in the Chittagong Hill Tracts in Bangladesh: A Mixed-Methods Study.
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Matin, Mohammad Abdul, Sarkar, Nandini D. P., Phru, Ching Swe, Ley, Benedikt, Thriemer, Kamala, Price, Ric N., Peeters Grietens, Koen, Ali Khan, Wasif, Alam, Mohammad Shafiul, and Gryseels, Charlotte
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MALARIA ,MEDICAL personnel ,PRECARITY ,HEALTH facilities ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,TRADITIONAL medicine - Abstract
Bangladesh has achieved significant progress towards malaria elimination, although health service delivery for malaria remains challenging in remote forested areas such as the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT). The aim of this study was to investigate perceptions of malaria and its treatment among the local population to inform contextualized strategies for rolling out radical cure for P. vivax in Bangladesh. The study comprised two sequential strands whereby the preliminary results of a qualitative strand informed the development of a structured survey questionnaire used in the quantitative strand. Results show that ethnic minority populations in the CHT live in precarious socio-economic conditions which increase their exposure to infectious diseases, and that febrile patients often self-treat, including home remedies and pharmaceuticals, before attending a healthcare facility. Perceived low quality of care and lack of communication between Bengali health providers and ethnic minority patients also affects access to public healthcare. Malaria is viewed as a condition that affects vulnerable people weakened by agricultural work and taking away blood is perceived to increase such vulnerability. Healthcare providers that initiate and sustain a dialogue about these issues with ethnic minority patients may foster the trust that is needed for local malaria elimination efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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36. Quantifying primaquine effectiveness and improving adherence: a round table discussion of the APMEN Vivax Working Group.
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Thriemer, Kamala, Bobogare, Albino, Ley, Benedikt, Gudo, Clarice Samo, Alam, Mohammad Shafiul, Anstey, Nick M., Ashley, Elizabeth, Baird, J. Kevin, Gryseels, Charlotte, Jambert, Elodie, Lacerda, Marcus, Laihad, Ferdinand, Marfurt, Jutta, Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka, Poespoprodjo, Jeanne Rini, Sutanto, Inge, Taylor, Walter R., van den Boogaard, Christel, Battle, Katherine E., and Dysoley, Lek
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MALARIA prevention ,PLASMODIUM vivax ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,PRIMAQUINE ,ANTIMALARIALS - Abstract
The goal to eliminate malaria from the Asia-Pacific by 2030 will require the safe and widespread delivery of effective radical cure of malaria. In October 2017, the Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network Vivax Working Group met to discuss the impediments to primaquine (PQ) radical cure, how these can be overcome and the methodological difficulties in assessing clinical effectiveness of radical cure. The salient discussions of this meeting which involved 110 representatives from 18 partner countries and 21 institutional partner organizations are reported. Context specific strategies to improve adherence are needed to increase understanding and awareness of PQ within affected communities; these must include education and health promotion programs. Lessons learned from other disease programs highlight that a package of approaches has the greatest potential to change patient and prescriber habits, however optimizing the components of this approach and quantifying their effectiveness is challenging. In a trial setting, the reactivity of participants results in patients altering their behaviour and creates inherent bias. Although bias can be reduced by integrating data collection into the routine health care and surveillance systems, this comes at a cost of decreasing the detection of clinical outcomes. Measuring adherence and the factors that relate to it, also requires an in-depth understanding of the context and the underlying sociocultural logic that supports it. Reaching the elimination goal will require innovative approaches to improve radical cure for vivax malaria, as well as the methods to evaluate its effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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37. Characterizing Types of Human Mobility to Inform Differential and Targeted Malaria Elimination Strategies in Northeast Cambodia.
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Peeters Grietens, Koen, Gryseels, Charlotte, Dierickx, Susan, Bannister-Tyrrell, Melanie, Trienekens, Suzan, Uk, Sambunny, Phoeuk, Pisen, Suon, Sokha, Set, Srun, Gerrets, René, Hoibak, Sarah, Muela Ribera, Joan, Hausmann-Muela, Susanna, Tho, Sochantha, Durnez, Lies, Sluydts, Vincent, d'Alessandro, Umberto, Coosemans, Marc, and Erhart, Annette
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MALARIA , *PROTOZOAN diseases , *HUMAN migrations , *MOSQUITO vectors , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Human population movements currently challenge malaria elimination in low transmission foci in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Using a mixed-methods design, combining ethnography (n = 410 interviews), malariometric data (n = 4996) and population surveys (n = 824 indigenous populations; n = 704 Khmer migrants) malaria vulnerability among different types of mobile populations was researched in the remote province of Ratanakiri, Cambodia. Different structural types of human mobility were identified, showing differential risk and vulnerability. Among local indigenous populations, access to malaria testing and treatment through the VMW-system and LLIN coverage was high but control strategies failed to account for forest farmers' prolonged stays at forest farms/fields (61% during rainy season), increasing their exposure (p = 0.002). The Khmer migrants, with low acquired immunity, active on plantations and mines, represented a fundamentally different group not reached by LLIN-distribution campaigns since they were largely unregistered (79%) and unaware of the local VMW-system (95%) due to poor social integration. Khmer migrants therefore require control strategies including active detection, registration and immediate access to malaria prevention and control tools from which they are currently excluded. In conclusion, different types of mobility require different malaria elimination strategies. Targeting mobility without an in-depth understanding of malaria risk in each group challenges further progress towards elimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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38. Factors influencing the use of topical repellents: implications for the effectiveness of malaria elimination strategies.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Sluydts, Vincent, Coosemans, Marc, Peeters Grietens, Koen, Uk, Sambunny, Phoeuk, Pisen, Suon, Sokha, Set, Srun, Heng, Somony, Siv, Sovannaroth, Tho, Sochantha, Durnez, Lies, and Gerrets, René
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INSECT baits & repellents , *MALARIA prevention , *HUMAN behavior , *MALARIA - Abstract
In Cambodia, despite an impressive decline in prevalence over the last 10 years, malaria is still a public health problem in some parts of the country. This is partly due to vectors that bite early and outdoors reducing the effectiveness of measures such as Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets. Repellents have been suggested as an additional control measure in such settings. As part of a cluster-randomized trial on the effectiveness of topical repellents in controlling malaria infections at community level, a mixed-methods study assessed user rates and determinants of use. Repellents were made widely available and Picaridin repellent reduced 97% of mosquito bites. However, despite high acceptability, daily use was observed to be low (8%) and did not correspond to the reported use in surveys (around 70%). The levels of use aimed for by the trial were never reached as the population used it variably across place (forest, farms and villages) and time (seasons), or in alternative applications (spraying on insects, on bed nets, etc.). These findings show the key role of human behavior in the effectiveness of malaria preventive measures, questioning whether malaria in low endemic settings can be reduced substantially by introducing measures without researching and optimizing community involvement strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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39. Injections, Cocktails and Diviners: Therapeutic Flexibility in the Context of Malaria Elimination and Drug Resistance in Northeast Cambodia.
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Gryseels, Charlotte, Uk, Sambunny, Erhart, Annette, Gerrets, René, Sluydts, Vincent, Durnez, Lies, Muela Ribera, Joan, Hausmann Muela, Susanna, Menard, Didier, Heng, Somony, Sochantha, Tho, D’Alessandro, Umberto, Coosemans, Marc, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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MALARIA prevention , *MALARIA treatment , *DRUG resistance , *CAMBODIANS , *DRUG design , *PUBLIC health , *COCKTAILS , *DISEASES - Abstract
Background:Adherence to effective malaria medication is extremely important in the context of Cambodia’s elimination targets and drug resistance containment. Although the public sector health facilities are accessible to the local ethnic minorities of Ratanakiri province (Northeast Cambodia), their illness itineraries often lead them to private pharmacies selling “cocktails” and artemether injections, or to local diviners prescribing animal sacrifices to appease the spirits. Methods:The research design consisted of a mixed methods study, combining qualitative (in-depth interviews and participant observation) and quantitative methods (household and cross-sectional survey). Results:Three broad options for malaria treatment were identified: i) the public sector; ii) the private sector; iii) traditional treatment based on divination and ceremonial sacrifice. Treatment choice was influenced by the availability of treatment and provider, perceived side effects and efficacy of treatments, perceived etiology of symptoms, and patient-health provider encounters. Moreover, treatment paths proved to be highly flexible, changing mostly in relation to the perceived efficacy of a chosen treatment. Conclusions:Despite good availability of anti-malarial treatment in the public health sector, attendance remained low due to both structural and human behavioral factors. The common use and under-dosage of anti-malaria monotherapy in the private sector (single-dose injections, single-day drug cocktails) represents a threat not only for individual case management, but also for the regional plan of drug resistance containment and malaria elimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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40. Could the Decision of Trial Participation Precede the Informed Consent Process? Evidence From Burkina Faso.
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Paré Toe, Lea, Ravinetto, Raffaella M., Dierickx, Susan, Gryseels, Charlotte, Tinto, Halidou, Rouamba, Noèl, Diallo, Ibrahim, Cissao, Yacouba, Bayala, Korotimi, Hausmann, Susanna, Muela, Joan, D’Alessandro, Umberto, and Peeters Grietens, Koen
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CLINICAL trials ,MEDICAL decision making ,MEDICAL quality control ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,PUBLIC health ,PEDIATRICS ,MALARIA - Abstract
Background:Over the last years, the number of clinical trials carried out in low-income countries with poor medical infrastructure and limited access to health care has increased. In these settings, the decision of participating in a clinical study may be influenced by factors related to participants’ vulnerability that limit the efficacy of the informed consent. Methods:A mixed methods social science study, based on the triangulation of qualitative and quantitative data, was carried out in a socio-economically disadvantaged and semi-urban area of Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso. The study aimed at assessing the relevance of the informed consent procedure on the decision-making process of the parents and/or guardians of potential participants in a pediatric malaria trial. Results:For most parents (70.4%), the decision of participating had already been taken before undergoing the informed consent process and was based on the information conveyed through the community. Access to free and good quality health care often inspired this decision. In addition, the parents’ willingness to have their child included in the trial made them develop active strategies to achieve this purpose. Discussion:In a context of socio-economic vulnerability and poor access to free health care, the process of informed consent does not always accomplish its goal of informing people and enabling them to make a free and informed decision. This information role is somehow anticipated by the community and trial participation becomes a strategic action to secure otherwise unavailable health resources leading community members to decide on participation even prior to the informed consent process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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41. Strategic silences, eroded trust: The impact of divergent COVID-19 vaccine sentiments on healthcare workers' relations with peers and patients.
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Heyerdahl, Leonardo W, Dielen, Stef, Dodion, Hélène, Van Riet, Carla, Nguyen, ToTran, Simas, Clarissa, Boey, Lise, Kattumana, Tarun, Vandaele, Nico, Larson, Heidi J., Grietens, Koen Peeters, Giles-Vernick, Tamara, and Gryseels, Charlotte
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MEDICAL personnel , *COVID-19 vaccines , *PEER relations , *TRUST , *VACCINE hesitancy - Abstract
• Healthcare workers report difficulties discussing vaccines with peers and patients. • Vaccine skeptical healthcare workers fear inducing patient anxieties or complaints. • In scarce resource contexts unvaccinated Covid-19 patients can face suboptimal care. • This difficult climate threatens peer and patient trust relationships. Polarized debates about Covid-19 vaccination and vaccine mandates for healthcare workers (HCWs) challenge Belgian HCWs ability to discuss Covid-19 vaccine sentiments with peers and patients. Although studies have identified drivers of HCWs vaccine hesitancy, they do not include effects of workplace interactions and have not addressed consequences beyond vaccine coverage. Interviews and focus group discussions with 74 HCWs practicing in Belgium addressed Covid-19 vaccine sentiments and experiences of discussing vaccination with peers and patients. Most participating HCWs reported difficulties discussing Covid-19 vaccination with peers and patients. Unvaccinated HCWs often feared that expressing their vaccine sentiments might upset patients or peers and that they would be suspended. Consequently, they used social cues to evaluate others' openness to vaccine-skeptical discourses and avoided discussing vaccines. Surprisingly, some vaccine-confident HCWs hid their vaccine sentiments to avoid peer and patient conflicts. Both vaccinated and unvaccinated HCWs observed that unvaccinated patients occasionally received suboptimal care. Suboptimal care was central in unvaccinated HCW unwillingness to express their vaccine sentiments to peers. Both vaccinated and unvaccinated HCWs described loss of trust and ruptured social relations with peers and patients holding divergent vaccine sentiments. Belgian HCW perceived Covid-19 vaccines as a risky discussion topic and engaged in "strategic silences" around vaccination to maintain functional work relationships and employment in health institutions. Loss of trust between HCW and peers or patients, along with suboptimal patient care based on vaccination status, threaten to weaken Belgium's, and by implication, other health systems, and to catalyze preventable disease outbreaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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