7 results on '"Mubangizi, Alfred"'
Search Results
2. Spatial and temporal distribution of Taenia solium and its risk factors in Uganda
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Ngwili, Nicholas, Sentamu, Derrick N., Korir, Max, Adriko, Moses, Beinamaryo, Prudence, Dione, Michel M., Kaducu, Joyce Moriku, Mubangizi, Alfred, Mwinzi, Pauline Ngina, Thomas, Lian F., and Dixon, Matthew A.
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- 2023
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3. The praziquantel in preschoolers (PIP) trial: study protocol for a phase II PK/PD-driven randomised controlled trial of praziquantel in children under 4 years of age
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Webb, Emily L., Edielu, Andrew, Wu, Hannah W., Kabatereine, Narcis B., Tukahebwa, Edridah M., Mubangizi, Alfred, Adriko, Moses, Elliott, Alison M., Hope, William W., Mawa, Patrice A., Friedman, Jennifer F., and Bustinduy, Amaya L.
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- 2021
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4. Prevalence and intensity of soil-transmitted helminth infections among school-aged children in five districts in Uganda.
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Tinkitina, Benjamin, Beinamaryo, Prudence, Kyarisiima, Hilda, Nabatte, Betty, Arinaitwe, Moses, Mubangizi, Alfred, Emerson, Paul, and M. Sullivan, Kristin
- Abstract
Background: Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections, commonly caused by roundworms (Ascaris lumbricoides), whipworms (Trichuris trichiura), and hookworms (Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale), were widespread among Ugandan schoolchildren in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Since 2003, the Ugandan Ministry of Health has administered biannual preventive chemotherapy to children aged 1–14 years to control these infections. Twenty years after the program's inception, there is scant data to show the long-term impact of these national deworming efforts. Methods: To estimate the prevalence and intensity of STH infections among 10–14-year-old primary school children, school-based, cross-sectional surveys were conducted in November 2023 across five districts (Kamwenge, Sheema, Adjumani, Lamwo, and Zombo). Sixty-five children from five schools per district were selected for inclusion. Fecal egg counts were determined using the Kato-Katz microscopy technique, performed in duplicate by trained laboratory technicians. Results: The survey findings revealed a high prevalence of any STH infection in Kamwenge District (21.2%, 95% confidence limits (CL): 5.7%, 36.6%), while the remaining four districts exhibited lower prevalences, ranging from 0.4% (95% CL: 0.0%, 1.2%) in Adjumani District to 5.6% (95% CL: 0.0%, 11.4%) in Sheema District. The prevalence of moderate-to-heavy-intensity infections was below 1% across all districts. A. lumbricoides was identified infrequently. Hookworm infections were primarily identified in the western districts of Kamwenge and Sheema, while T. trichiura infections were common only in Kamwenge District. Hookworm and T. trichiura infections were uncommon in the northern districts of Adjumani, Lamwo, and Zombo. Conclusions: These surveys suggest that morbidity due to STH infections among schoolchildren may be well controlled in these five districts, as evidenced by low moderate-to-heavy-intensity infection prevalence. However, the prevalence of any intensity infection remains elevated in some districts, indicating the need for continued preventive chemotherapy distribution. A reduction from biannual treatment may be warranted in four districts, per World Health Organization recommendations. Author summary: Intestinal worm infections, also known as soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections, are a significant public health concern that can impair physical growth, lead to anemia, and affect cognitive development among children. Initial surveys in Uganda between 1998 and 2005 showed a high prevalence of STH infections, with over 50% of school-aged children affected in many districts. In response, the Ugandan Ministry of Health initiated biannual deworming campaigns targeting school-aged children, along with health education programs. Our follow-up surveys in November 2023 across five districts aimed to evaluate the impact of these deworming campaigns on the prevalence of STH infections. We found a substantial decrease in STH prevalence in four districts, suggesting that the national deworming program has been effective and could potentially reduce the frequency of deworming campaigns in these areas. However, in Kamwenge District, the STH prevalence remained elevated, indicating a need for further investigation to understand the persistence of infections and to enhance control measures to meet World Health Organization targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Baseline Prevalence of Trachoma in Refugee Settlements in Uganda: Results of 11 Population-based Surveys.
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Baayenda, Gilbert, Mugume, Francis, Mubangizi, Alfred, Turyaguma, Patrick, Tukahebwa, Edridah M., Byakika, Sarah, Kahwa, Binta, Kusasira, Darlson, Bakhtiari, Ana, Boyd, Sarah, Butcher, Robert, Solomon, Anthony W., Binagwa, Ben, Agunyo, Stella, Osilo, Martin, Crowley, Kathryn, Thuo, Wangeci, French, Mike, Plunkett, Elizabeth, and Mosher, Aryc W.
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REFUGEE children ,TRACHOMA ,SANITATION ,HEALTH of refugees ,REFUGEES ,TOILETS ,HYGIENE - Abstract
There are several settlements in the Northern and Western Regions of Uganda serving refugees from South Sudan and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), respectively. Trachoma prevalence surveys were conducted in a number of those settlements with the aim of determining whether interventions for trachoma are required. An evaluation unit (EU) was defined as all refugee settlements in one district. Cross-sectional population-based trachoma prevalence survey methodologies designed to adhere to World Health Organization recommendations were deployed in 11 EUs to assess prevalence of trachomatous inflammation—follicular (TF) in 1–9-year-olds and trachomatous trichiasis (TT) unknown to the health system in ≥15-year-olds. Household-level water, sanitation and hygiene coverage was also assessed in study populations. A total of 40,892 people were examined across 11 EUs between 2018 and 2020. The prevalence of TF in 1–9-year-olds was <5% in all EUs surveyed. The prevalence of trachomatous trichiasis (TT) unknown to the health system in ≥15-year-olds was <0.2% in 5 out of 11 EUs surveyed and ≥0.2% in the remaining 6 EUs. A high proportion of households had improved water sources, but a low proportion had improved latrines or quickly (within a 30-minute return journey) accessible water sources. Implementation of the antibiotic, facial cleanliness and environmental improvement components of the SAFE strategy is not needed for the purposes of trachoma's elimination as a public health problem in these refugee settlements; however, intervention with TT surgery is needed in six EUs. Since instability continues to drive displacement of people from South Sudan and DRC into Uganda, there is likely to be a high rate of new arrivals to the settlements over the coming years. These populations may therefore have trachoma surveillance needs that are distinct from the surrounding non-refugee communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Prevalence and intensity of soil-transmitted helminth infections in Uganda: Results from population-based prevalence surveys in five districts.
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Tinkitina, Benjamin, Beinamaryo, Prudence, Adriko, Moses, Nabatte, Betty, Arinaitwe, Moses, Mubangizi, Alfred, Emerson, Paul, Dhakal, Sanjaya, and Sullivan, Kristin M.
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HELMINTHIASIS ,FECAL egg count ,SCHOOL children ,CHILDBEARING age ,OLDER women ,ASCARIS lumbricoides - Abstract
Background: Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections are caused by roundworms (Ascaris lumbricoides), whipworms (Trichuris trichiura), and hookworms (Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale). In Uganda, baseline surveys conducted during the late 1990s and early 2000s suggested STH infections were common, with prevalence >50% among surveyed schoolchildren. In 2003, a national program was launched with mass preventative chemotherapy (PC) and health education for children 1–14 years old. Little evidence is available to show the impact of national deworming. Methods: We conducted population-based, cross-sectional household surveys in five districts (Buikwe, Kassanda, Kiryandongo, Kisoro, and Rubanda) in March and May 2022. Our primary objective was to estimate STH prevalence by species due to infections of any intensity and infections of moderate-to-heavy intensity among preschool-aged children (PSAC, 1–4 years old), school-aged children (SAC, 5–14 years old), and women of reproductive age (WRA, 15–49 years old). Laboratory technicians used duplicate Kato-Katz microscopy to determine fecal egg count. Results: Overall, 3,352 PSAC; 3,884 SAC; and 1,226 WRA provided stool samples. The prevalence of any infection remained high in Kisoro at or above ~50% within all risk groups. In other districts, the prevalence of any infection ranged from approximately 5 to 16% among PSAC, 6 to 23% among SAC, and 12 to 19% among WRA. Moderate-to-heavy intensity infection prevalence was highest in Kisoro (~15–26%), followed by Rubanda (<5%), and was ≤1% in other districts. A. lumbricoides and T. trichiura infections were largely confined to Kisoro and Rubanda, whereas hookworm was most common in other districts. Conclusions: The STH prevalence has decreased markedly in three districts in Uganda. Based on our findings, the national deworming program should consider decreasing PC distribution frequency in these districts per the World Health Organization guidelines. Efforts are needed to understand why the Kisoro and Rubanda districts did not demonstrate similar gains. Author summary: Intestinal worm infections—formally known as soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections—are a public health problem that can potentially reduce physical growth, cause anemia, and hinder cognitive development. In Uganda, baseline surveys conducted between 1998 and 2005 indicated that STH infection prevalence was over 50% among school-aged children in most surveyed districts. As a result of these findings, in the early 2000s, the Ugandan Ministry of Health began twice-a-year national deworming campaigns and health education among preschool- and school-aged children. In March and May of 2022, we conducted follow-up surveys in five districts to determine how well the deworming campaigns have reduced infection prevalence in these communities. Among surveyed groups (preschool-aged children, school-aged children, and women of reproductive age), we found that in three of the five surveyed districts, STH prevalence had substantially decreased. In these areas, the national deworming program may consider reducing the frequency of the deworming campaigns from its current twice-a-year schedule. The prevalence remained high in the remaining two districts despite several years of deworming. Further investigation is needed to determine why. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Productivity, efficiency and gender equity of community mobilisation approaches in trichiasis campaigns: analysis of programmatic data from seven sub-Saharan African countries.
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Hassan, Ehtisham ul, Kelly, Michaela, Waititu, Titus, Olobio, Nicholas, Kabona, George, Mkocha, Harran, Kivumbi, Peter, Mwale, Consity, Mubangizi, Alfred, Mugume, Francis, Baayenda, Gilbert, Mayeku, Robert, Massangaie, Marilia, Mbofana, Mariamo Abdala, Cumaio, Mércia, Sisay, Alemayehu, Mersha, Tolossa, and Courtright, Paul
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TRACHOMA ,GENDER inequality ,DATA analysis ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
Background Achieving elimination of trachoma as a public health problem in trichiasis-endemic districts requires a systematic approach to trichiasis case finding and outreach. Methods Programme monitoring data from seven countries for 2017–2019 were used to explore the efficiency of different community mobilisation approaches and uptake of trichiasis surgical services. Results Three countries (Ethiopia, Kenya and Mozambique) using broad-based community mobilisation strategies had large numbers of people presenting at outreach but only 2.9% of them had trichiasis, while in four countries (Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia) using house-to-house case finding, 37.5% of outreach attendees had trichiasis. Countries using house-to-house case finding have proportionally more women attending outreach compared with countries using broad-based mobilisation. Among trichiasis cases offered surgery 86% accepted, which was similar for men and women. Conclusions In these settings, house-to-house case finding appears to be a more effective and efficient approach to ensure that trichiasis cases, particularly in women, obtain access to surgical services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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