8 results on '"Don Mathanga"'
Search Results
2. Effect of adverse events on non-adherence and study non-completion in malaria chemoprevention during pregnancy trial: A nested case control study
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Noel Patson, Mavuto Mukaka, Ingrid Peterson, Titus Divala, Lawrence Kazembe, Don Mathanga, Miriam K. Laufer, and Tobias Chirwa
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background In drug trials, adverse events (AEs) burden can induce treatment non-adherence or discontinuation. The non-adherence and discontinuation induce selection bias, affecting drug safety interpretation. Nested case-control (NCC) study can efficiently quantify the impact of the AEs, although choice of sampling approach is challenging. We investigated whether NCC study with incidence density sampling is more efficient than NCC with path sampling under conditional logistic or weighted Cox models in assessing the effect of AEs on treatment non-adherence and participation in preventive antimalarial drug during pregnancy trial. Methods Using data from a trial of medication to prevent malaria in pregnancy that randomized 600 women to receive chloroquine or sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine during pregnancy, we conducted a NCC study assessing the role of prospectively collected AEs, as exposure of interest, on treatment non-adherence and study non-completion. We compared estimates from NCC study with incidence density against those from NCC with path sampling under conditional logistic and weighted Cox models. Results Out of 599 women with the outcomes of interest, 474 (79%) experienced at least one AE before delivery. For conditional logistic model, the hazard ratio for the effect of AE occurrence on treatment non-adherence was 0.70 (95% CI: 0.42, 1.17; p = 0.175) under incidence density sampling and 0.68 (95% CI: 0.41, 1.13; p = 0.137) for path sampling. For study non-completion, the hazard ratio was 1.02 (95% CI: 0.56, 1.83; p = 0.955) under incidence density sampling and 0.85 (95% CI: 0.45, 1.60; p = 0.619) under path sampling. We obtained similar hazard ratios and standard errors under incidence density sampling and path sampling whether weighted Cox or conditional logistic models were used. Conclusion NCC with incidence density sampling and NCC with path sampling are practically similar in efficiency whether conditional logistic or weighted Cox analytical methods although path sampling uses more unique controls to achieve the similar estimates. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01443130.
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- 2022
3. Joint international consensus statement on crowdsourcing challenge contests in health and medicine: results of a modified Delphi process
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Weiming Tang, Tiarney Ritchwood, Joseph Tucker, Larry Han, Don Mathanga, Phyllis Awor, Suzanne Day, Noel Juban, Shufang Wei, Huanyu Bao, Randall John, Eneyi Kpokiri, Diana Castro-Arroyave, Vibhu Ambil, Yuan Xiong, and Emmanuela Oppong
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To develop a consensus statement to provide advice on designing, implementing and evaluating crowdsourcing challenge contests in public health and medical contexts.Design Modified Delphi using three rounds of survey questionnaires and one consensus workshop.Setting Uganda for face-to-face consensus activities, global for online survey questionnaires.Participants A multidisciplinary expert panel was convened at a consensus-development conference in Uganda and included 21 researchers with experience leading challenge contests, five public health sector workers, and nine Ugandan end users. An online survey was sent to 140 corresponding authors of previously published articles that had used crowdsourcing methods.Results A subgroup of expert panel members developed the initial statement and survey. We received responses from 120 (85.7%) survey participants, which were presented at an in-person workshop of all 21 panel members. Panelists discussed each of the sections, revised the statement, and participated in a second round of the survey questionnaire. Based on this second survey round, we held detailed discussions of each subsection with workshop participants and further revised the consensus statement. We then conducted the third round of the questionnaire among the 21 expert panelists and used the results to finalize the statement. This iterative process resulted in 23 final statement items, all with greater than 80% consensus. Statement items are organised into the seven stages of a challenge contest, including the following: considering the appropriateness, organising a community steering committee, promoting the contest, assessing contributions, recognising contributors, sharing ideas and evaluating the contest (COPARSE).Conclusions There is high agreement among crowdsourcing experts and stakeholders on the design and implementation of crowdsourcing challenge contests. The COPARSE consensus statement can be used to organise crowdsourcing challenge contests, improve the rigour and reproducibility of crowdsourcing research and enable large-scale collaboration.
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- 2021
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4. Development of a psycho-social intervention for reducing psychological distress among parents of children with intellectual disabilities in Malawi.
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Charles Masulani-Mwale, Felix Kauye, Melissa Gladstone, and Don Mathanga
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:The burden of intellectual disabilities in low and middle income countries (LMIC) is high and is associated with parental psychological distress. There are few services for children and parents in most developing countries and few interventions have been created that target the psychological issues among parents of such children. This study aimed to develop a contextualized intervention to provide psychological support for parents of children with intellectual disabilities in an African setting. METHODS:Six steps were adopted from the Medical Research Council framework for designing complex interventions. This include: literature review of similar interventions and models, qualitative studies to gain insights of lived experiences of parents of such children, a consensus process with an expert panel of professionals working with children with disabilities and piloting and pre-testing the draft intervention for its acceptability and practicability in this settings. RESULTS:21 intervention modules were found from a systematic search of the literature which were listed for possible use in our intervention along with four themes from our qualitative studies. An expert panel formed consensus on the eight most pertinent and relevant modules for our setting. This formed the intervention; "Titukulane." This intervention was piloted and found to have high acceptability and practicability when contextualized in the field. CONCLUSION:The use of a systematic framework for designing a complex intervention for supporting the mental health of parents of children with disabilities enables good acceptability and practicability for future use in low resource settings.
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- 2019
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5. Household costs and time to seek care for pregnancy related complications: The role of results-based financing.
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Jobiba Chinkhumba, Manuela De Allegri, Jacob Mazalale, Stephan Brenner, Don Mathanga, Adamson S Muula, and Bjarne Robberstad
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Results-based financing (RBF) schemes-including performance based financing (PBF) and conditional cash transfers (CCT)-are increasingly being used to encourage use and improve quality of institutional health care for pregnant women in order to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality in low-income countries. While there is emerging evidence that RBF can increase service use and quality, little is known on the impact of RBF on costs and time to seek care for obstetric complications, although the two represent important dimensions of access. We conducted this study to fill the existing gap in knowledge by investigating the impact of RBF (PBF+CCT) on household costs and time to seek care for obstetric complications in four districts in Malawi. The analysis included data on 2,219 women with obstetric complications from three waves of a population-based survey conducted at baseline in 2013 and repeated in 2014(midline) and 2015(endline). Using a before and after approach with controls, we applied generalized linear models to study the association between RBF and household costs and time to seek care. Results indicated that receipt of RBF was associated with a significant reduction in the expected mean time to seek care for women experiencing an obstetric complication. Relative to non-RBF, time to seek care in RBF areas decreased by 27.3% (95%CI: 28.4-25.9) at midline and 34.2% (95%CI: 37.8-30.4) at endline. No substantial change in household costs was observed. We conclude that the reduced time to seek care is a manifestation of RBF induced quality improvements, prompting faster decisions on care seeking at household level. Our results suggest RBF may contribute to timely emergency care seeking and thus ultimately reduce maternal and neonatal mortality in beneficiary populations.
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- 2017
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6. School-Age Children Are a Reservoir of Malaria Infection in Malawi.
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Jenny A Walldorf, Lauren M Cohee, Jenna E Coalson, Andy Bauleni, Kondwani Nkanaunena, Atupele Kapito-Tembo, Karl B Seydel, Doreen Ali, Don Mathanga, Terrie E Taylor, Clarissa Valim, and Miriam K Laufer
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Malaria surveillance and interventions in endemic countries often target young children at highest risk of malaria morbidity and mortality. We aimed to determine whether school-age children and adults not captured in surveillance serve as a reservoir for malaria infection and may contribute to malaria transmission. Cross-sectional surveys were conducted in one rainy and one dry season in southern Malawi. Demographic and health information was collected for all household members. Blood samples were obtained for microscopic and PCR identification of Plasmodium falciparum. Among 5796 individuals aged greater than six months, PCR prevalence of malaria infection was 5%, 10%, and 20% in dry, and 9%, 15%, and 32% in rainy seasons in Blantyre, Thyolo, and Chikhwawa, respectively. Over 88% of those infected were asymptomatic. Participants aged 6-15 years were at higher risk of infection (OR=4.8; 95%CI, 4.0-5.8) and asymptomatic infection (OR=4.2; 95%CI, 2.7-6.6) than younger children in all settings. School-age children used bednets less frequently than other age groups. Compared to young children, school-age children were brought less often for treatment and more often to unreliable treatment sources.School-age children represent an underappreciated reservoir of malaria infection and have less exposure to antimalarial interventions. Malaria control and elimination strategies may need to expand to include this age group.
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- 2015
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7. Quality of malaria case management in Malawi: results from a nationally representative health facility survey.
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Laura C Steinhardt, Jobiba Chinkhumba, Adam Wolkon, Madalitso Luka, Misheck Luhanga, John Sande, Jessica Oyugi, Doreen Ali, Don Mathanga, and Jacek Skarbinski
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Malaria is endemic throughout Malawi, but little is known about quality of malaria case management at publicly-funded health facilities, which are the major source of care for febrile patients.In April-May 2011, we conducted a nationwide, geographically-stratified health facility survey to assess the quality of outpatient malaria diagnosis and treatment. We enrolled patients presenting for care and conducted exit interviews and re-examinations, including reference blood smears. Moreover, we assessed health worker readiness (e.g., training, supervision) and health facility capacity (e.g. availability of diagnostics and antimalarials) to provide malaria case management. All analyses accounted for clustering and unequal selection probabilities. We also used survey weights to produce estimates of national caseloads.At the 107 facilities surveyed, most of the 136 health workers interviewed (83%) had received training on malaria case management. However, only 24% of facilities had functional microscopy, 15% lacked a thermometer, and 19% did not have the first-line artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), artemether-lumefantrine, in stock. Of 2,019 participating patients, 34% had clinical malaria (measured fever or self-reported history of fever plus a positive reference blood smear). Only 67% (95% confidence interval (CI): 59%, 76%) of patients with malaria were correctly prescribed an ACT, primarily due to missed malaria diagnosis. Among patients without clinical malaria, 31% (95% CI: 24%, 39%) were prescribed an ACT. By our estimates, 1.5 million of the 4.4 million malaria patients seen in public facilities annually did not receive correct treatment, and 2.7 million patients without clinical malaria were inappropriately given an ACT.Malawi has a high burden of uncomplicated malaria but nearly one-third of all patients receive incorrect malaria treatment, including under- and over-treatment. To improve malaria case management, facilities must at minimum have basic case management tools, and health worker performance in diagnosing malaria must be improved.
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- 2014
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8. Bednets and malaria in Africa
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Malcolm E. Molyneux and Don Mathanga
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Program evaluation ,Mosquito Control ,Developing country ,Force of infection ,Disease ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Environmental protection ,law ,Environmental health ,parasitic diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,Bedding and Linens ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Social marketing ,Malaria ,Child, Preschool ,Africa ,business ,Commentary (The Lancet) - Abstract
In Africa four randomized trials found a reduction in deaths among children under 5 years of age with the use of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) (three trials) or insecticide-treated curtains. These results are encouraging; however they pose several additional issues. First is the issue of translating efficacy of the scientific trial into effectiveness which means success when implemented as a health-service program. Although results of the KINET project in the Ifakara district in promoting ITNs through social marketing have been positive and are encouraging the question of whether the methods can work elsewhere in Africa remains. Another question for the promoters of ITNs is posed in the claim that reducing the force of infection in some human diseases might similarly increase the incidence of the disease and its mortality. In terms of malaria reducing infection rates could possibly lead to an increase in the frequency of the disease. However ITN programs should proceed in spite of such a possibility. Monitoring must be conducted in populations subjected to a variety of transmission patterns so that any adverse consequences can be identified and tackled.
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- 2001
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