5 results on '"Robert H. Flecker"'
Search Results
2. Evaluating Healthcare Claims for Neurocysticercosis by Using All-Payer All-Claims Data, Oregon, 2010–2013
- Author
-
John M. Townes, Robert H. Flecker, and Seth E. O’Neal
- Subjects
Epidemiology ,Neurocysticercosis ,lcsh:Medicine ,parasitic diseases ,Epilepsy ,Oregon ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Taenia solium ,neglected tropical diseases ,brain disease ,health care economics and organizations ,Insurance Claim Reporting ,Dispatch ,Neglected Diseases ,Cysticercosis ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,Infectious Diseases ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Diagnosis code ,cestode infection ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Evaluating Healthcare Claims for Neurocysticercosis by Using All-Payer All-Claims Data, Oregon, 2010–2013 ,030231 tropical medicine ,helminthiasis ,Helminthiasis ,parasites ,History, 21st Century ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,cysticercosis ,lcsh:R ,medicine.disease ,Taenia infection ,Surgery ,Case-Control Studies ,central nervous system diseases ,epilepsy ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
To characterize the frequency of neurocysticercosis, associated diagnostic codes, and place of infection, we searched Oregon's All Payer All-Claims dataset for 2010-2013. Twice as many cases were found by searching inpatient and outpatient data than by inpatient data alone. Studies relying exclusively on inpatient data underestimate frequency and miss less severe disease.
- Published
- 2016
3. Hospitalization Frequency and Charges for Neurocysticercosis, United States, 2003–2012
- Author
-
Seth E. O’Neal and Robert H. Flecker
- Subjects
Male ,Epidemiology ,Neurocysticercosis ,lcsh:Medicine ,Taenia solium ,Hospital Costs ,brain disease ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Cysticercosis ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,neglected tropical disease ,Infectious Diseases ,parasitic disease ,Neglected tropical diseases ,economic burden ,Female ,cestode infection ,Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,helminthiasis ,Helminthiasis ,parasites ,History, 21st Century ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Young Adult ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,education ,Psychiatry ,Aged ,business.industry ,Public health ,Research ,cysticercosis ,lcsh:R ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Malaria ,Hospitalization Frequency and Charges for Neurocysticercosis, United States, 2003–2012 ,central nervous system diseases ,epilepsy ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Total hospital charges exceeded US $900 million, and nearly three-quarters of hospitalized patients were Hispanic., Neurocysticercosis, brain infection with Taenia solium larval cysts, causes substantial neurologic illness around the world. To assess the effect of neurocysticercosis in the United States, we reviewed hospitalization discharge data in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample for 2003–2012 and found an estimated 18,584 hospitalizations for neurocysticercosis and associated hospital charges totaling >US $908 million. The risk for hospitalization was highest among Hispanics (2.5/100,000 population), a rate 35 times higher than that for the non-Hispanic white population. Nearly three-quarters of all hospitalized patients with neurocysticercosis were Hispanic. Male sex and age 20–44 years also incurred increased risk. In addition, hospitalizations and associated charges related to cysticercosis far exceeded those for malaria and were greater than for those for all other neglected tropical diseases combined. Neurocysticercosis is an increasing public health concern in the United States, especially among Hispanics, and costs the US health care system a substantial amount of money.
- Published
- 2015
4. Assessing Ultrasonography as a Diagnostic Tool for Porcine Cysticercosis
- Author
-
Viterbo Ayvar, Saul J. Santivaňez, Victor Benavides, Robert H. Flecker, Ricardo Gamboa, Seth E. O’Neal, Luz Maria Moyano, Hector H. Garcia, Claudio Muro, and Ian W Pray
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Swine ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Serology ,Diagnostic Radiology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Zoonoses ,Ultrasound Imaging ,Taenia solium ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Taeniasis ,Cyst ,Taenia solium/physiology ,Ultrasonography ,2. Zero hunger ,Mammals ,Swine Diseases ,Swine Diseases/diagnosis/diagnostic imaging/parasitology ,Obstetrics ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Radiology and Imaging ,Cysticercosis ,Agriculture ,3. Good health ,Dissection ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Infectious Diseases ,Helminth Infections ,Vertebrates ,Cysticercosis/diagnosis/diagnostic imaging/parasitology/veterinary ,Anatomy ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.06 [https] ,Research Article ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Livestock ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Imaging Techniques ,030231 tropical medicine ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tongue ,Diagnostic Medicine ,medicine ,Parasitic Diseases ,Animals ,Mouth ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Gold standard (test) ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Surgery ,030104 developmental biology ,Ultrasonography/methods/veterinary ,Amniotes ,business ,Digestive System - Abstract
Background Taenia solium inflicts substantial neurologic disease and economic losses on rural communities in many developing nations. “Ring-strategy” is a control intervention that targets treatment of humans and pigs among clusters of households (rings) that surround pigs heavily infected with cysticerci. These pigs are typically identified by examining the animal’s tongue for cysts. However, as prevalence decreases in intervened communities, more sensitive methods may be needed to identify these animals and to maintain control pressure. The purpose of this study was to evaluate ultrasonography as an alternative method to detect pigs heavily infected with T. solium cysts. Methodology/Principal Findings We purchased 152 pigs representing all seropositive animals villagers were willing to sell from eight communities (pop. 2085) in Piura, Peru, where T. solium is endemic. Tongue and ultrasound examinations of the fore and hind-limbs were performed in these animals, followed by necropsy with fine dissection as gold standard to determine cyst burden. We compared the sensitivity and specificity of ultrasonography with tongue examination for their ability to detect heavy infection (≥ 100 viable cysts) in pigs. Compared to tongue examination, ultrasonography was more sensitive (100% vs. 91%) but less specific (90% vs. 98%), although these differences were not statistically significant. The greater sensitivity of ultrasound resulted in detection of one additional heavily infected pig compared to tongue examination (11/11 vs. 10/11), but resulted in more false positives (14/141 vs. 3/141) due to poor specificity. Conclusions/Significance Ultrasonography was highly sensitive in detecting heavily infected pigs and may identify more rings for screening or treatment compared to tongue examination. However, the high false positive rate using ultrasound would result in substantial unnecessary treatment. If specificity can be improved with greater operator experience, ultrasonography may benefit ring interventions where control efforts have stalled due to inadequate sensitivity of tongue examination., Author Summary Taenia solium is a cestode that infects humans and pigs. The parasite causes up to one-third of epilepsy in Latin America, Asia and Africa and results in economic harm to smallholder farmers who cannot sell the contaminated pork of their infected pigs. “Ring-strategy” is an intervention being evaluated as a potential method to control the spread of infection within communities. This strategy involves identifying heavily infected pigs and targeting treatment resources to humans and pigs living nearby these animals. Tongue examination of pigs is used to provide a simple yet crude technique for identifying the most heavily infected pigs. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the ability of ultrasonography to identify T. solium infection in pigs and to compare it to traditional tongue examination methods. We found that ultrasonography may be better at detecting heavily infected pigs than traditional tongue examination methods, but has limitations such as increased cost and a high false positive rate. With improvements in training and greater operator experience, ultrasound may have the potential to contribute to control interventions based on ring-strategy.
- Published
- 2017
5. Spatial relationship between Taenia solium tapeworm carriers and necropsy cyst burden in pigs
- Author
-
Viterbo Ayvar, Ricardo Gamboa, Seth E. O’Neal, Ian W Pray, Claudio Muro, Robert H. Flecker, Hector H. Garcia, Victor Benavides, and Luz Maria Moyano
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Swine ,Physiology ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Geographical locations ,Serology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Carrier State/epidemiology/veterinary ,Pig Models ,Zoonoses ,Swine Diseases/epidemiology/parasitology ,Peru ,Taenia solium ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Parasite hosting ,Taeniasis ,Cyst ,Defecation ,2. Zero hunger ,Tapeworm infection ,Swine Diseases ,Mammals ,Antibodies, Helminth/blood ,Transmission (medicine) ,Cysts ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Cysticercosis ,Animal Models ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,3. Good health ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,Infectious Diseases ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Cysticercosis/epidemiology/veterinary ,Helminth Infections ,Carrier State ,Vertebrates ,Female ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.06 [https] ,Research Article ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,Swine/parasitology ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,030231 tropical medicine ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Medicine ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Parasitic Diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Spatial Analysis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,South America ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Logistic Models ,Taenia solium/isolation & purification ,Amniotes ,People and places ,Physiological Processes ,Peru/epidemiology ,Cysts/parasitology/veterinary - Abstract
Background Taenia solium, a parasite that affects humans and pigs, is the leading cause of preventable epilepsy in the developing world. Geographic hotspots of pigs testing positive for serologic markers of T. solium exposure have been observed surrounding the locations of human tapeworm carriers. This clustered pattern of seropositivity in endemic areas formed the basis for geographically targeted control interventions, which have been effective at reducing transmission. In this study, we further explore the spatial relationship between human tapeworm carriers and infected pigs using necroscopic examination as a quantitative gold-standard diagnostic to detect viable T. solium cyst infection in pigs. Methodology/Principal findings We performed necroscopic examinations on pigs from 7 villages in northern Peru to determine the number of viable T. solium cysts in each pig. Participating humans in the study villages were tested for T. solium tapeworm infection (i.e., taeniasis) with an ELISA coproantigen assay, and the distances from each pig to its nearest human tapeworm carrier were calculated. We assessed the relationship between proximity to a tapeworm carrier and the prevalence of light, moderate, and heavy cyst burden in pigs. The prevalence of pig infection was greatest within 50 meters of a tapeworm carrier and decreased monotonically as distance increased. Pigs living less than 50 meters from a human tapeworm carrier were 4.6 times more likely to be infected with at least one cyst than more distant pigs. Heavier cyst burdens, however, were not more strongly associated with proximity to tapeworm carriers than light cyst burdens. Conclusion/Significance Our study shows that human tapeworm carriers and pigs with viable T. solium cyst infection are geographically correlated in endemic areas. This finding supports control strategies that treat humans and pigs based on their proximity to other infected individuals. We did not, however, find sufficient evidence that heavier cyst burdens in pigs would serve as improved targets for geographically focused control interventions., Author summary Taenia solium, the pork tapeworm, is a parasite transmitted between humans and pigs. The disease is most common in developing countries where access to sanitation is limited and domestic pigs are allowed to roam freely. Humans infected with the intestinal tapeworm release T. solium eggs into the environment when they defecate outside, and pigs become infected with the larval stage of the disease, cysticercosis, upon consuming these eggs in human feces. Prior work using serologic testing of pigs has shown that proximity to human tapeworm carriers is a possible risk factor for porcine cysticercosis. Our study investigated if proximity to human tapeworm carriers was associated with established cyst infection in pigs, and if proximity to tapeworm carriers also increased the degree of cyst infection in pigs (i.e., the number of T. solium cysts a pig was infected with). The results confirmed that human tapeworm carriers and infected pigs are geographically correlated, but did not uncover a stronger relationship for heavily infected pigs. It is important to continue to investigate this spatial relationship as some control strategies rely on the assumption that human tapeworm carriers will be found in close proximity to heavily infected pigs. Future control strategies would benefit from a precise knowledge of the degree of pig infection that best predicts for nearby tapeworm carriers.
- Published
- 2016
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.