49 results on '"Emmanuel Effa"'
Search Results
2. Evaluating the impact of the global evidence, local adaptation (GELA) project for enhancing evidence-informed guideline recommendations for newborn and young child health in three African countries: a mixed-methods protocol
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Tamara Kredo, Emmanuel Effa, Nyanyiwe Mbeye, Denny Mabetha, Bey-Marrié Schmidt, Anke Rohwer, Michael McCaul, Idriss Ibrahim Kallon, Susan Munabi-Babigumira, Claire Glenton, Taryn Young, Simon Lewin, Per Olav Vandvik, and Sara Cooper
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Poverty ,Related diseases ,Newborn and child health ,Sub ,Saharan Africa (SSA) ,Clinical practice guidelines ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Poverty-related diseases (PRD) remain amongst the leading causes of death in children under-5 years in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) based on the best available evidence are key to strengthening health systems and helping to enhance equitable health access for children under five. However, the CPG development process is complex and resource-intensive, with substantial scope for improving the process in SSA, which is the goal of the Global Evidence, Local Adaptation (GELA) project. The impact of research on PRD will be maximized through enhancing researchers and decision makers’ capacity to use global research to develop locally relevant CPGs in the field of newborn and child health. The project will be implemented in three SSA countries, Malawi, South Africa and Nigeria, over a 3-year period. This research protocol is for the monitoring and evaluation work package of the project. The aim of this work package is to monitor the various GELA project activities and evaluate the influence these may have on evidence-informed decision-making and guideline adaptation capacities and processes. The specific project activities we will monitor include (1) our ongoing engagement with local stakeholders, (2) their capacity needs and development, (3) their understanding and use of evidence from reviews of qualitative research and, (4) their overall views and experiences of the project. Methods We will use a longitudinal, mixed-methods study design, informed by an overarching project Theory of Change. A series of interconnected qualitative and quantitative data collections methods will be used, including knowledge translation tracking sheets and case studies, capacity assessment online surveys, user testing and in-depth interviews, and non-participant observations of project activities. Participants will comprise of project staff, members of the CPG panels and steering committees in Malawi, South Africa and Nigeria, as well as other local stakeholders in these three African countries. Discussion Ongoing monitoring and evaluation will help ensure the relationship between researchers and stakeholders is supported from the project start. This can facilitate achievement of common goals and enable researchers in South Africa, Malawi and Nigeria to make adjustments to project activities to maximize stakeholder engagement and research utilization. Ethical approval has been provided by South African Medical Research Council Human Research Ethics Committee (EC015-7/2022); The College of Medicine Research and Ethics Committee, Malawi (P.07/22/3687); National Health Research Ethics Committee of Nigeria (01/01/2007).
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- 2024
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3. Using a priority setting exercise to identify priorities for guidelines on newborn and child health in South Africa, Malawi, and Nigeria
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Solange Durão, Emmanuel Effa, Nyanyiwe Mbeye, Mashudu Mthethwa, Michael McCaul, Celeste Naude, Amanda Brand, Ntombifuthi Blose, Denny Mabetha, Moriam Chibuzor, Dachi Arikpo, Roselyn Chipojola, Gertrude Kunje, Per Olav Vandvik, Ekpereonne Esu, Simon Lewin, and Tamara Kredo
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Clinical practice guidelines ,Newborn ,Infant and child health ,Priority setting ,Sub-Saharan Africa ,Health policy ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Sub-Saharan Africa is the region with the highest under-five mortality rate globally. Child healthcare decisions should be based on rigorously developed evidence-informed guidelines. The Global Evidence, Local Adaptation (GELA) project is enhancing capacity to use global research to develop locally relevant guidelines for newborn and child health in South Africa (SA), Malawi, and Nigeria. The first step in this process was to identify national priorities for newborn and child health guideline development, and this paper describes our approach. Methods We followed a good practice method for priority setting, including stakeholder engagement, online priority setting surveys and consensus meetings, conducted separately in South Africa, Malawi and Nigeria. We established national Steering Groups (SG), comprising 10–13 members representing government, academia, and other stakeholders, identified through existing contacts and references, who helped prioritise initial topics identified by research teams and oversaw the process. Various stakeholders were consulted via online surveys to rate the importance of topics, with results informing consensus meetings with SGs where final priority topics were agreed. Results Based on survey results, nine, 10 and 11 topics were identified in SA, Malawi, and Nigeria respectively, which informed consensus meetings. Through voting and discussion within meetings, and further engagement after the meetings, the top three priority topics were identified in each country. In SA, the topics concerned anemia prevention in infants and young children and post-discharge support for caregivers of preterm and LBW babies. In Malawi, they focused on enteral nutrition in critically ill children, diagnosis of childhood cancers in the community, and caring for neonates. In Nigeria, the topics focused on identifying pre-eclampsia in the community, hand hygiene compliance to prevent infections, and enteral nutrition for LBW and preterm infants. Conclusions Through dynamic and iterative stakeholder engagement, we identified three priority topics for guideline development on newborn and child health in SA, Malawi and Nigeria. Topics were specific to contexts, with no overlap, which highlights the importance of contextualised priority setting as well as of the relationships with key decisionmakers who help define the priorities.
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- 2024
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4. Newborn and child health national and provincial clinical practice guidelines in South Africa, Nigeria and Malawi: a scoping review
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Mashudu Mthethwa, Nyanyiwe Masingi Mbeye, Emmanuel Effa, Dachi Arikpo, Ntombifuthi Blose, Amanda Brand, Moriam Chibuzor, Roselyn Chipojola, Solange Durao, Ekpereonne Esu, Idriss Ibrahim Kallon, Gertrude Kunje, Suzgika Lakudzala, Celeste Naude, Trudy D. Leong, Simon Lewin, Denny Mabetha, Michael McCaul, Martin Meremikwu, Per Olav Vandvik, and Tamara Kredo
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Clinical practice guidelines ,Newborn and child health ,Nigeria ,South Africa ,Malawi ,Scoping review ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Low and middle-income countries remain disproportionately affected by high rates of child mortality. Clinical practice guidelines are essential clinical tools supporting implementation of effective, safe, and cost-effective healthcare. High-quality evidence-based guidelines play a key role in improving clinical management to impact child mortality. We aimed to identify and assess the quality of guidelines for newborn and child health published in South Africa, Nigeria and Malawi in the last 5 years (2017–2022). Methods We searched relevant websites (June–July 2022), for publicly available national and subnational de novo or adapted guidelines, addressing newborn and child health in the three countries. Pairs of reviewers independently extracted information from eligible guidelines (scope, topic, target population and users, responsible developers, stakeholder consultation process, adaptation description, assessment of evidence certainty). We appraised guideline quality using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation (AGREE II) instrument. Results We identified 40-guidelines from the three countries. Of these, 8/40 reported being adopted from a parent guideline. More guidelines (n = 19) provided guidance on communicable diseases than on non-communicable diseases (n = 8). Guidelines were most often developed by national health ministries (n = 30) and professional societies (n = 14). Eighteen guidelines reported on stakeholder consultation; with Nigeria (10/11) and Malawi (3/6) faring better than South Africa (5/23) in reporting this activity. The Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) approach was used in 1/7 guidelines that reported assessing certainty of evidence. Overall guidelines scored well on two AGREE II domains: scope and purpose median (IQR) score 68% (IQR 47–83), and clarity of presentation 81% (67–94). Domains critical for ensuring credible guidance scored below 20%: rigour of development 11% (4–32) and editorial independence 6% (0–27). Conclusion National ministries and professional societies drive guideline activities in Malawi, Nigeria and South Arica. However, the methods and reporting do not adhere to global standards. We found low AGREE II scores for rigour of guideline development and editorial independence and limited use of GRADE or adaptation methods. This undermines the credibility of available guidelines to support evidence-informed care. Our findings highlight the importance of ongoing efforts to strengthen partnerships, capacity, and support for guideline development.
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- 2024
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5. Malaria in adults after the start of Covid-19 pandemic: an analysis of admission trends, demographics, and outcomes in a tertiary hospital in the Gambia
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Sheikh Omar Bittaye, Abubacarr Jagne, Lamin E. S. Jaiteh, Alfred Amambua-Ngwa, Abdul Karim Sesay, Bertha Ekeh, Behzad Nadjm, Williams Estrada Ramirez, Asmell Ramos, Basil Okeahialam, Emmanuel Effa, Ousman Nyan, and Ramou Njie
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Malaria ,Adults ,Trend ,Admission ,Outcome ,COVID-19 ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Malaria remains a major public health concern in The Gambia. The study assessed the trend of malaria admissions and outcome of adult patients admitted after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in a tertiary hospital in The Gambia. Methods This was a retrospective hospital-based study and data was collected from the 18th October 2020 to 28th February 2023. Demographic data, clinical features, investigations, treatment, and outcomes were recorded. Results A total of 499 malaria cases were admitted to the hospital over the 29 months of the study period. Data from 320 (67.2% of the total cases) adult patients admitted into the internal medicine department were analysed. The median age was 22 years, range (15–90) and 189 (59.1%) cases were youth with a youth (15–24 years) to older adult (> 24 years) ratio of 1.4:1. The majority of the patients were male 199 (62.2) with a male to female ratio of 1.6:1. The total number of malaria cases admitted into the internal medicine department increased from 103 cases in 2021 to 182 cases in 2022and admission peaked in November in both years. The total number of admitted malaria cases during the peak of the malaria season also increased from 92 patients between September 2021 and December 2021 to 132 patients from September 2022 to December 2022.There was also an increase in both severe and uncomplicated malaria during the same period. The total mortality was 31 (9.7%) and the rate was similar in 2021 9 (8.7%) and 2022 15 (8.4%). Patients with impaired consciousness were more likely to die when compared to those without impaired consciousness [19 (23.6%) vs 12 (5%), p ≤ 0.001]. Patients with acute kidney injury were also more likely to die when compared with those without acute kidney injury [10 (20.4%) vs 15 (7.7%), p = 0.009]. Conclusion The findings show an emerging and consistent trend of malaria admissions and the outcome in the youth and older adult population after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in The Gambia. This, therefore, suggests the need for the implementation of targeted malaria prevention interventions in this population to further prevent the spread of the disease to the more vulnerable population.
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- 2023
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6. Implementing health worker training on sepsis in South Eastern Nigeria using innovative digital strategies: an interventional study
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Akaninyene Otu, Obiageli Onwusaka, Daniel E. Otokpa, Ukam Edadi, Ubong Udoh, Peter Yougha, Chinelo Oduche, Okey Okuzu, Shevin T. Jacob, Jamie Rylance, and Emmanuel Effa
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Background: Sepsis is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality especially in low- and middle-income countries such as Nigeria. Training of health workers using digital platforms may improve knowledge and lead to better patient outcomes. Objectives: To assess the effectiveness of a digital health educational module on sepsis in improving the knowledge of medical doctors in Cross River State Nigeria on the diagnosis and management of patients presenting with sepsis. Design: Quasi-experimental analytical study. Methods: We developed and deployed a sepsis module through an innovative application (Sepsis tutorial app) to doctors in Calabar, Nigeria. We assessed quantitative pre- and post-intervention knowledge scores for those completing the tutorial on sepsis between both assessments. A user satisfaction survey evaluated the content of the tutorial and the usability of the app. Results: One hundred and two doctors completed the course. There were more males than females (58.8% versus 41.2%). Over half (52%) were junior doctors, a minority were general practitioners and house officers (3% and 5%, respectively), and 72.6% had practiced for periods ranging from 1 to 15 years post-qualification. Gender and age appeared to have no significant association with pre- and post-test scores. The oldest age group (61–70) had the lowest mean pre- and post-test scores, while general practitioners had higher mean pre- and post-test scores than other cadres. The majority (95%) of participants recorded higher post-test than pre-test scores with a significant overall increase in mean scores (25.5 ± 14.7%, p
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- 2024
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7. Learning from One-Health approaches to explore links between farming practices, animal, human and ecosystem health in Nigeria
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Akaninyene Otu, Obiageli Onwusaka, Clement Meseko, Emmanuel Effa, Bassey Ebenso, Isong Isong Abraham, Jeremiah Ijomanta, Ayokunle Omileye, Chinenye Emelife, Sunday Eziechina, Kabiru Suleiman, Chinwe Ochu, and Victor Adetimirin
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urbanization ,agricultural intensification ,zoonoses ,One-Health ,Nigeria ,URBANE ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Published
- 2024
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8. Task shifting roles, interventions and outcomes for kidney and cardiovascular health service delivery among African populations: a scoping review
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Ikechi G. Okpechi, Ijezie I. Chukwuonye, Udeme Ekrikpo, Jean Jacques Noubiap, Yemi R. Raji, Yusuf Adeshina, Samuel Ajayi, Zunaid Barday, Malini Chetty, Bianca Davidson, Emmanuel Effa, Stephen Fagbemi, Cindy George, Andre P. Kengne, Erika S. W. Jones, Hamidu Liman, Mohammad Makusidi, Hadiza Muhammad, Ikechukwu Mbah, Kwazi Ndlovu, Grace Ngaruiya, Chimezie Okwuonu, Ugochi Samuel-Okpechi, Elliot K. Tannor, Ifeoma Ulasi, Zulkifilu Umar, Nicola Wearne, and Aminu K. Bello
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Africa ,Cardiovascular disease ,Chronic kidney disease ,Diabetes ,Hypertension ,Health workforce ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Human resources for health (HRH) shortages are a major limitation to equitable access to healthcare. African countries have the most severe shortage of HRH in the world despite rising communicable and non-communicable disease (NCD) burden. Task shifting provides an opportunity to fill the gaps in HRH shortage in Africa. The aim of this scoping review is to evaluate task shifting roles, interventions and outcomes for addressing kidney and cardiovascular (CV) health problems in African populations. Methods We conducted this scoping review to answer the question: “what are the roles, interventions and outcomes of task shifting strategies for CV and kidney health in Africa?” Eligible studies were selected after searching MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), CINAHL, ISI Web of Science, and Africa journal online (AJOL). We analyzed the data descriptively. Results Thirty-three studies, conducted in 10 African countries (South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda, and Uganda) were eligible for inclusion. There were few randomized controlled trials (n = 6; 18.2%), and tasks were mostly shifted for hypertension (n = 27; 81.8%) than for diabetes (n = 16; 48.5%). More tasks were shifted to nurses (n = 19; 57.6%) than pharmacists (n = 6; 18.2%) or community health workers (n = 5; 15.2%). Across all studies, the most common role played by HRH in task shifting was for treatment and adherence (n = 28; 84.9%) followed by screening and detection (n = 24; 72.7%), education and counselling (n = 24; 72.7%), and triage (n = 13; 39.4%). Improved blood pressure levels were reported in 78.6%, 66.7%, and 80.0% for hypertension-related task shifting roles to nurses, pharmacists, and CHWs, respectively. Improved glycaemic indices were reported as 66.7%, 50.0%, and 66.7% for diabetes-related task shifting roles to nurses, pharmacists, and CHWs, respectively. Conclusion Despite the numerus HRH challenges that are present in Africa for CV and kidney health, this study suggests that task shifting initiatives can improve process of care measures (access and efficiency) as well as identification, awareness and treatment of CV and kidney disease in the region. The impact of task shifting on long-term outcomes of kidney and CV diseases and the sustainability of NCD programs based on task shifting remains to be determined.
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- 2023
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9. Clinical manifestations and outcomes of severe malaria in adult patients admitted to a tertiary hospital in the Gambia
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Sheikh Omar Bittaye, Abubacarr Jagne, Lamin ES Jaiteh, Behzad Nadjm, Alfred Amambua-Ngwa, Abdul Karim Sesay, Yankuba Singhateh, Emmanuel Effa, Ousman Nyan, and Ramou Njie
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Clinical features ,Outcome ,Severe malaria ,Adult ,Gambia ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Malaria is a major public health concern in The Gambia. There is limited data on the clinical manifestation and outcome of severe malaria in adult patients in The Gambia. The study therefore assessed the clinical manifestations and outcome of severe malaria in adult patients admitted at the Edward Francis Small Teaching Hospital. Methods The study retrospectively reviewed the records of all malaria patients admitted from 18th October 2020 to 2nd February 2022. Demographic data, clinical features, investigations, treatment, and outcomes were recorded. Results A total of 131 confirmed malaria patients were recruited into the study. The median age was 21 yrs, range (15–90) and most of them were within the youth age group (15–24yrs) 85 (64.9%). The majority of the patients were also male 88 (67.2%) with a male to female ratio of 2:1. The most common symptom at presentation was fever 119 (90.8%) and the most common sign was pallor 48 (36.6%). Seventy-six patients (58.1%) and 55 (41.9%) patients met the criteria for severe malaria and uncomplicated malaria diagnosis, respectively. The most common clinical feature amongst patients with severe malaria were impaired consciousness 34 (44.7%), severe anaemia 26 (34.2%) and acute kidney injury 20 (26.3%). Patients with severe malaria were younger with mean age of 22.9 vs. 29 yrs (p = 0.004), more likely to be referred from a lower-level health facility 62 (81.6%) vs. 34 (61.8%) (p = 0.012), to have a longer duration of admission (p = 0.024) and to die 13 (17.1%) vs. 0 (0%) (p = 0.001) as compared to patients with uncomplicated malaria. The total mortality was 13 (9.9%) and all the patients who died had severe malaria. Mortality was higher in patients with impaired consciousness 9 (26.5%) and there was a significant relationship between death and impaired consciousness 9 (69.3%) vs. 25 (21.4%) p = 0.001. Conclusion Severe malaria still affects young adults in an endemic area with significant mortality. This suggests the need for targeted malaria prevention, surveillance, case management and control strategies in this population group in The Gambia to help reduce morbidity and mortality of malaria.
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- 2022
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10. Predictors of antibiotic prescriptions: a knowledge, attitude and practice survey among physicians in tertiary hospitals in Nigeria
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Dimie Ogoina, Garba Iliyasu, Vivian Kwaghe, Akan Otu, Iorhen Ephram Akase, Olukemi Adekanmbi, Dalhat Mahmood, Micheal Iroezindu, Shamsudin Aliyu, Abisoye Sunday Oyeyemi, Stella Rotifa, Mukhtar Abdulmajid Adeiza, Uche Sonny Unigwe, Juliet Ijeoma Mmerem, Farouq Muhammad Dayyab, Zaiyad Garba Habib, Daniel Otokpa, Emmanuel Effa, and Abdulrazaq Garba Habib
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Antimicrobial resistance ,KAP ,Antibiotic prescriptions ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,Nigeria ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background As part of the Global Action Plan against antimicrobial resistance (AMR), countries are required to generate local evidence to inform context-specific implementation of national action plans against AMR (NAPAR). We aimed to evaluate the knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) regarding antibiotic prescriptions (APR) and AMR among physicians in tertiary hospitals in Nigeria, and to determine predictors of KAP of APR and AMR. Methods In this cross-sectional study, we enrolled physicians practicing in tertiary hospitals from all six geopolitical zones of Nigeria. Implementation of an antimicrobial stewardship programmes (ASP) by each selected hospital were assessed using a 12 item ASP checklist. We used a structured self-administered questionnaire to assess the KAP of APR and AMR. Frequency of prescriptions of 18 different antibiotics in the prior 6 months was assessed using a Likert’s scale. KAP and prescription (Pr) scores were classified as good (score ≥ 80%) or average/poor (score
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- 2021
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11. Hepatitis B virus knowledge and vaccination status among health-care workers in Calabar, Nigeria
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Mbang Kooffreh-Ada, Dorothy Okpokam, Evaristus Chukwudike, Afiong Oku, Soter Ameh, and Emmanuel Effa
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health-care workers ,hepatitis b vaccination ,hepatitis b virus ,Medicine - Abstract
Background and Objectives: The World Health Organization estimates that 2 million health-care workers (HCWs) are at risk of occupational exposure to hepatitis B virus (HBV), with the majority (90%) of such infections arising in sub-Saharan Africa. This study aimed to determine HBV knowledge and vaccination uptake among HCWs. Materials and Method: This was a cross sectional analytical study conducted among 392 HCWs from two major health institutions in Calabar i.e. the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) and the General Hospital Calabar (GHC), Cross river State. Multi-staged sampling method comprising of two stages was used to recruit participants into the study. The study population comprised of doctors, nurses, laboratory scientists/technologist, and other categories of HCWs such as pharmacists, ward orderlies, and mortuary attendants. A semi-structured self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain data on the socio-demographic characteristics of HCWs, the knowledge of HCWs regarding HBV and vaccine. The analysis of data was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. Study Design: This was a cross-sectional, study of HCWs in Calabar. Sampling Method: Multi-staged sampling method was used to select participants from two major health institutions in Calabar, i.e., the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) and the General Hospital Calabar (GHC). Thereafter, through balloting, simple random sampling technique was used to recruit the participants. Study Population: Three hundred and ninety-two HCWs were recruited from UCTH and GHC under the following categories: doctors, nurses, laboratory scientists/technologist, and other categories of HCWs such as pharmacists, ward orderlies, and mortuary attendants. Data Management: A semi-structured self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain data on the socio-demographic characteristics of HCWs, the knowledge of HCWs regarding HBV and vaccine. The analysis of data was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. Results: Overall, 67.9% of the respondents were found to have adequate knowledge of HBV vaccination and infection. Less than half (43.4%) of HCWs admitted receiving three doses (i.e., full coverage) of the vaccine. Difficulty in accessing the vaccine (48, 23.4%) was identified as the major reason given for suboptimal vaccination. Conclusion: The knowledge of HBV infection and vaccination is quite modest among HCWs in Calabar. Despite this observation, the vaccination status among HCWs is unsatisfactory. The implication of the findings of our study for health policy and practice is to prevent further occupational exposure of HCWs to HBV infection through mandatory vaccination.
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- 2021
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12. Nature-Based One Health Approaches to Urban Agriculture Can Deliver Food and Nutrition Security
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Bassey Ebenso, Akaninyene Otu, Alessandro Giusti, Philipe Cousin, Victor Adetimirin, Hary Razafindralambo, Emmanuel Effa, Vasileios Gkisakis, Ousmane Thiare, Vincent Levavasseur, Sonagnon Kouhounde, Kifouli Adeoti, Abdur Rahim, and Majid Mounir
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nature-based ,one health ,urban agriculture ,food and nutrition security ,climate-smart ,postbiotic ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
The increasing global human population is projected to reach 9.7 billion people by 2050. This population growth is currently linked to the trends of world-wide urbanization, growth of megacities and shifting dietary patterns. While humankind faces the daunting challenge of feeding and providing healthy lives for its teeming populations, urban agriculture holds promise for improving the quality of life in cities. Fortunately, policymakers and planners are accepting the need to support peri-urban farmers to increase the resilience of food systems while efficiently managing already strained natural resources. We argue that for urban agriculture to significantly increase food yields, it is crucial to adopt a One Health approach to agriculture and environmental stewardship. Here, we propose six nature-based and climate-smart approaches to accelerate the transition toward more sustainable food systems. These approaches include reducing the reliance on synthetic agricultural inputs, increasing biodiversity through producing locally adapted crops and livestock breeds, using probiotics and postbiotics, and adopting portable digital decision-support systems. Such radical approaches to transforming food production will require cross-sectoral stakeholder engagement at international, national, and community levels to protect biodiversity and the environment whilst ensuring sustainable and nutritious diets that are culturally acceptable, accessible, and affordable for all.
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- 2022
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13. Publication practices of sub-Saharan African Cochrane authors: a bibliometric study
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Taryn Young, Solange Durão, Lawrence Mbuagbaw, Charles Shey Wiysonge, Anel Schoonees, Ameer Hohlfeld, Joy Oliver, Dachi Arikpo, and Emmanuel Effa
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Cochrane Africa (https://africa.cochrane.org/) aims to increase Cochrane reviews addressing high priority questions in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Researchers residing in SSA, despite often drawing on Cochrane methods, training or resources, conduct and publish systematic reviews outside of Cochrane. Our objective was to investigate the extent to which Cochrane authors from SSA publish Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews.Methods We conducted a bibliometric study of systematic reviews and overviews of systematic reviews from SSA, first by identifying SSA Cochrane authors, then retrieving their first and last author systematic reviews and overviews from PubMed (2008 to April 2019) and using descriptive analyses to investigate the country of origin, types of reviews and trends in publishing Cochrane and non-Cochrane systematic reviews over time. To be eligible, a review had to have predetermined objectives, eligibility criteria, at least two databases searched, data extraction, quality assessment and a first or last author with a SSA affiliation.Results We identified 657 Cochrane authors and 757 eligible systematic reviews. Most authors were from South Africa (n=332; 51%), followed by Nigeria (n=126; 19%). Three-quarters of the reviews (71%) were systematic reviews of interventions. The intervention reviews were more likely to be Cochrane reviews (60.3% vs 39.7%). Conversely, the overviews (23.8% vs 76.2%), qualitative reviews (14.8% vs 85.2%), diagnostic test accuracy reviews (16.1% vs 83.9%) and the ‘other’ reviews (11.1% vs 88.9%) were more likely to be non-Cochrane reviews. During the study period, the number of non-Cochrane reviews increased more than the number of Cochrane reviews. About a quarter of the reviews covered infectious disease topics.Conclusion Cochrane authors from SSA are increasingly publishing a diverse variety of systematic reviews and overviews of systematic reviews, often opting for non-Cochrane journals.
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- 2021
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14. Training health workers at scale in Nigeria to fight COVID-19 using the InStrat COVID-19 tutorial app: an e-health interventional study
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Akaninyene Otu, Okey Okuzu, Emmanuel Effa, Bassey Ebenso, Soter Ameh, Nrip Nihalani, Obiageli Onwusaka, Tomisin Tawose, Adebola Olayinka, and John Walley
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Background: Health worker training is an essential component of epidemic control; rapid delivery of such training is possible in low-middle income countries with digital platforms. Methods: Based on prior experience with the Ebola outbreak, we developed and deployed a bespoke InStrat COVID-19 tutorial app, to deliver accurate and regularly updated information about COVID-19 to frontline health workers and epidemic response officers across 25 states of Nigeria. The potential effectiveness of this app in training frontline health workers was assessed through online pre- and post-tests and a survey. Results: A total of 1051 health workers from 25 states across Nigeria undertook the e-learning on the InStrat COVID-19 training app. Of these, 627 (57%) completed both the pre- and post-tests in addition to completing the training modules. Overall, there were statistically significant differences between pre- and post-tests knowledge scores (54 increasing to 74). There were also differences in the subcategories of sex, region and cadre. There were higher post-test scores in males compared with females, younger versus older and southern compared with northern Nigeria. A total of 65 (50%) of the participants reported that the app increased their understanding of COVID-19, while 69 (53%) stated that they had applied the knowledge and skills learnt at work. Overall, the functionality and usability of the app were satisfactory. Conclusion: Capacity building for epidemic control using e-health applications is potentially effective, can be delivered at minimal cost and service disruption and can serve as a tool for capacity building in similar contexts.
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- 2021
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15. Clinical Diagnosis and Reporting of COVID-19 in the Absence of Effective Access to Laboratory Testing in Africa
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John Walley, Akaninyene Otu, Emmanuel Effa, Laura French, and Obiageli Onwusaka
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COVID-19 ,testing ,Africa ,clinical diagnosis ,clinical algorithm ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2021
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16. Introduction of Mobile Health Tools to Support COVID-19 Training and Surveillance in Ogun State Nigeria
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Akaninyene Otu, Okey Okuzu, Bassey Ebenso, Emmanuel Effa, Nrip Nihalani, Adebola Olayinka, and Sanni Yaya
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mobile health ,health workers ,training ,COVID-19 ,Ogun State ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Mobile health (mhealth) tools delivered through wireless technology are emerging as effective strategies for delivering quality training, ensuring rapid clinical decision making, and monitoring implementation of simple and effective interventions in under-resourced settings. We share our early experience of developing and deploying the InStrat COVID-19 health worker training application (App) in Ogun State, Western Nigeria where the country's first COVID-19 case was reported. This App was designed to directly provide frontline health workers with accurate and up-to-date information about COVID-19; enable them to quickly identify, screen and manage COVID-19 suspects; provide guidance on specimen collection techniques and safety measures to observe within wards and quarantine centers dealing with COVID-19. The App was deployed in 271 primary health care facilities in Ogun state and a total of 311 health workers were trained to use it. Of the 123 health workers who completed knowledge pre- and post-tests, their average test score improved from 47.5 (±9.4) to 73.1(±10.0) %, P < 0.0001 after using the tutorial. Rapid adoption and uptake were driven largely by public-private sector involvement as well as certification of health workers with reported satisfaction levels of over 95% among those who completed pre- and post-test surveys. Challenges encountered included a lack of universal availability of android phones for frontline health workers, lack of internet access in remote areas and a need to incentivize the workers. The timely deployment of this App targeting primary health care workers, mostly in hard-to-reach areas, obviated the need for conventional didactic training with potential of savings in training costs and time and could be applied to similar contexts.
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- 2021
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17. Private sector initiatives to tackle the burden of COVID-19: experiences from the Nigerian frontline
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Akaninyene Otu, Emmanuel Effa, Victor Umoh, Nicholas Maxwell, and Andrew Ekpenyong
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covid-19 ,private sector ,nigeria ,Medicine - Abstract
Across Africa, there is some evidence of COVID-19 private sector activities to tackle COVID-19 which include the development of rapid diagnostic kits, deployment of e-health platforms for bespoke health workforce training, disease surveillance, reporting, auto-screening and advisories. Inequities in living and access to care by disadvantaged populations in the rural areas have been ameliorated by multi-pronged responses such as that mounted by the Joseph Ukpo Hospitals and Research Institute (JUHRI) in Nigeria. The provision, production and donationof personal protective equipment (PPE), the production of hand sanitizers and the engagement of the local community in the process represents an effective strategy to contain COVID-19, protect health workers and provide pathways for economic support for people whose sources of income have been upended during the pandemic.The JUHRI experience underpinned by Catholic medical ethics provides concrete evidence of the value of private sector participation in dealing with public health emergencies.
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- 2021
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18. Applications of Probiotic-Based Multi-Components to Human, Animal and Ecosystem Health: Concepts, Methodologies, and Action Mechanisms
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Sonagnon Kouhounde, Kifouli Adéoti, Majid Mounir, Alessandro Giusti, Paulo Refinetti, Akaninyene Otu, Emmanuel Effa, Bassey Ebenso, Victor O. Adetimirin, Josep Mercader Barceló, Ousmane Thiare, Holy N. Rabetafika, and Hary L. Razafindralambo
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probiotics ,prebiotics ,synbiotics ,postbiotics ,human health ,animal health ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Probiotics and related preparations, including synbiotics and postbiotics, are living and non-living microbial-based multi-components, which are now among the most popular bioactive agents. Such interests mainly arise from the wide range and numerous beneficial effects of their use for various hosts. The current minireview article attempts to provide an overview and discuss in a holistic way the concepts, methodologies, action mechanisms, and applications of probiotic-based multi-components in human, animal, plant, soil, and environment health. Probiotic-based multi-component preparations refer to a mixture of bioactive agents, containing probiotics or postbiotics as main functional ingredients, and prebiotics, protectants, stabilizers, encapsulating agents, and other compounds as additional constituents. Analyzing, characterizing, and monitoring over time the traceability, performance, and stability of such multi-component ingredients require relevant and sensitive analytical tools and methodologies. Two innovative profiling and monitoring methods, the thermophysical fingerprinting thermogravimetry–differential scanning calorimetry technique (TGA-DSC) of the whole multi-component powder preparations, and the Advanced Testing for Genetic Composition (ATGC) strain analysis up to the subspecies level, are presented, illustrated, and discussed in this review to respond to those requirements. Finally, the paper deals with some selected applications of probiotic-based multi-components to human, animal, plant, soil and environment health, while mentioning their possible action mechanisms.
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- 2022
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19. Microfluidic Microcirculation Mimetic as a Tool for the Study of Rheological Characteristics of Red Blood Cells in Patients with Sickle Cell Anemia
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Marcus Inyama Asuquo, Emmanuel Effa, Oluwabukola Gbotosho, Akaninyene Otu, Nicole Toepfner, Soter Ameh, Sruti-Prathivadhi Bhayankaram, Noah Zetocha, Chisom Nwakama, William Egbe, Jochen Guck, and Andrew Ekpenyong
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sickle cell disorder ,vaso-occlusive crisis ,hydroxyurea ,microcirculation ,microfluidics ,personalized medicine ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Sickle cell disorder (SCD) is a multisystem disease with heterogeneous phenotypes. Although all patients have the mutated hemoglobin (Hb) in the SS phenotype, the severity and frequency of complications are variable. When exposed to low oxygen tension, the Hb molecule becomes dense and forms tactoids, which lead to the peculiar sickled shapes of the affected red blood cells, giving the disorder its name. This sickle cell morphology is responsible for the profound and widespread pathologies associated with this disorder, such as vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC). How much of the clinical manifestation is due to sickled erythrocytes and what is due to the relative contributions of other elements in the blood, especially in the microcapillary circulation, is usually not visualized and quantified for each patient during clinical management. Here, we used a microfluidic microcirculation mimetic (MMM), which has 187 capillary-like constrictions, to impose deformations on erythrocytes of 25 SCD patients, visualizing and characterizing the morpho-rheological properties of the cells in normoxic, hypoxic (using sodium meta-bisulfite) and treatment conditions (using hydroxyurea). The MMM enabled a patient-specific quantification of shape descriptors (circularity and roundness) and transit time through the capillary constrictions, which are readouts for morpho-rheological properties implicated in VOC. Transit times varied significantly (p < 0.001) between patients. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of microfluidics-based monitoring of individual patients for personalized care in the context of SCD complications such as VOC, even in resource-constrained settings.
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- 2022
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20. Cochrane Africa: a network of evidence-informed health-care decision making across sub-saharan Africa
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Lawrence Mbuagbaw, Pierre Ongolo Zogo, Tamara Kredo, Solange Durao, Taryn Young, Emmanuel Effa, Martin Meremikwu, Ameer Hohlfeld, and Charles Wiysonge
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cochrane africa ,evidence-informed healthcare ,health outcomes ,systematic reviews ,Medicine - Abstract
Cochrane Africa is a network of researchers and health stakeholders who aim to support the use of high quality Cochrane evidence to improve health outcomes in Africa. It comprises a coordinating centre in South Africa, a Francophone hub directed from Cameroon, a Southern and Eastern Africa Hub directed from South Africa and a West Africa Hub directed from Nigeria. The network supports the engagement with healthcare decision makers to guide priorities, production of high quality context-relevant Cochrane systematic reviews, capacity building to conduct and use reviews, dissemination of evidence, knowledge translation, partnerships for evidence-informed healthcare and the creation of opportunities to expand the network.
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- 2018
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21. The Pattern of Respiratory Disease Morbidity and Mortality in a Tertiary Hospital in Southern-Eastern Nigeria
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Victor Aniedi Umoh, Akaninyene Otu, Henry Okpa, and Emmanuel Effa
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Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Background. Respiratory complaints are commonly encountered in medicine and respiratory diseases place a high burden on healthcare infrastructure. Healthcare planning should be based on adequate information: this study will help us to analyze the pattern of respiratory disease admissions in the medical wards in a developing country. Methods. The medical records of patients admitted into the medical wards over a 5-year period were retrieved and reviewed. Information obtained included demography, diagnosis, comorbid conditions, and risk factors for respiratory disease. Results. Three thousand four hundred and ninety patients were admitted into the medical wards with 325 (9.3%) of them diagnosed with a respiratory condition. There were 121 females and 204 males. The average age of the patients was 40.7 ± 14.7 years. Only 7% of the patients smoked cigarette. The commonest respiratory conditions were tuberculosis (66.8%) and pneumonia (24.9%). The commonest comorbidity was HIV infection (39.7%). Tuberculosis/HIV coinfection rate was 50.7%. HIV infection was the single most important predictor of an adverse outcome (OR 5.1, 95% CI 2.05–12.7, P
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- 2013
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22. Association between Urinary N-Acetyl-Beta-D-Glucosaminidase and Microalbuminuria in Diabetic Black Africans
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Francis Patrick Udomah, Udeme Ekpenyong Ekrikpo, Emmanuel Effa, Babatunde Salako, Ayodeji Arije, and Solomon Kadiri
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Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is the commonest cause of ESRD worldwide and third most common cause in Nigeria. Recent reports from Nigeria indicate the prevalence of diabetic nephropathy as an aetiology of ESRD is increasing necessitating early diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy. We measured the urinary excretion of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), NAG/creatinine ratio, urinary protein-creatinine ratio and calculated eGFR in 30 recently diagnosed nonhypertensive diabetics and 67 controls. The age and sex distribution, systolic blood pressure, serum and urinary creatinine were similar for both groups. There was higher urinary excretion of NAG (304 versus 184 μmol/h/L, 𝑃
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- 2012
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23. Early Identification of CKD—A Scoping Review of the Global Populations
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Ikechi G. Okpechi, Fergus J. Caskey, Abduzhappar Gaipov, Elliot K. Tannor, Jean Jacques Noubiap, Emmanuel Effa, Udeme E. Ekrikpo, Laura N. Hamonic, Gloria Ashuntantang, Aminu K. Bello, Jo-Ann Donner, Ana E. Figueiredo, Reiko Inagi, Magdalena Madero, Charu Malik, Monica Moorthy, Roberto Pecoits-Filho, Vladimir Tesar, Adeera Levin, and Vivekanand Jha
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Nephrology - Abstract
Decisions on whether to screen for chronic kidney disease (CKD) or not remain contentious in nephrology. This study provides a global overview of early CKD identification efforts.Guidelines for scoping reviews were followed and studies were identified by searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, ISI Web of Science, and PsycINFO. Data extracted from included studies focused on the following 4 themes: study population, measurement methods, interventions used, and available policies.We identified 290 CKD screening and detection programs from 83 countries. Overall sample size was 3.72 million (North East Asia: 1.19 million), detection of CKD was the aim in 97.6%, 63.1% used population-based screening methods, and only 12.4% were in rural populations. Reported CKD prevalence (stages 3-5) was higher in targeted- (14.8%) than population-based studies (8.0%). Number of persons needed to screen (NNS) to identify 1 case was also lower in targeted studies (7 vs. 13). Single measurements (80%) and the combination of estimation of glomerular filtration rate with a urine test (albuminuria/proteinuria) (71.4%) were frequently used to detect CKD. Only 2.8% of studies included an intervention such as pharmacotherapy in identified cases. Policies on early identification were available in 30.1% of countries included.Methods for early CKD identification vary worldwide, often leading to wide variations in the reported prevalence. Efforts to standardize measurement methods for early detection focusing on high-risk populations and ensuring appropriate interventions are available to those identified with CKD will improve the value of programs and improve patient outcomes.
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- 2022
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24. Establishing a hepatitis care centre to promote integrated care and population-level liver cancer prevention in Nigeria: experiences and opportunities
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Akaninyene Otu, Mbang Kooffreh-Ada, Emmanuel Effa, Soter Ameh, Uchenna Okonkwo, Udong Udoh, Ubong Akpan, Asa Itam-Eyo, Evaristus Chukwudike, Obaji Akpet, Ofonime Essien, Joan Ikobah, Simon Ereh, Ekaette Onoyom, and John Walley
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Infectious Diseases ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,Liver Neoplasms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Nigeria ,Parasitology ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis A - Published
- 2022
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25. Newborn and child health national and provincial clinical practice guidelines in South Africa, Nigeria and Malawi: a scoping review
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Mashudu Mthethwa, Nyanyiwe Masingi Mbeye, Emmanuel Effa, Dachi Arikpo, Ntombifuthi Blose, Amanda Brand, Moriam Chibuzor, Roselyn Chipojola, Solange Durao, Ekpereonne Esu, Idriss Ibrahim Kallon, Gertrude Kunje, Suzgika Lakudzala, Celeste Naude, Trudy Leong, Simon Lewin, Denny Matheba, Michael Mccaul, Martin Meremikwu, Per Olav Vandvik, and Tamara Kredo
- Abstract
Background Low and middle-income countries remain disproportionately affected by high rates of childhood mortality, often caused by preventable conditions. Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) are essential policy tools in supporting implementation of effective, safe, and cost-effective healthcare. High-quality evidence-based CPGs play a key role in improving clinical management aiming to impact child mortality. We aimed to identify and assess the quality of CPGs for newborn and child health published in South Africa, Nigeria and Malawi.Methods We searched relevant websites (June–July 2022), for publicly available national and subnational de novo or adapted CPGs, addressing newborn and child health in the three countries. Pairs of reviewers independently extracted information from eligible CPGs (scope, topic, target population and users, responsible developers, stakeholder consultation process, adaptation description, assessment of evidence certainty). We appraised CPG quality using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation (AGREE II) instrument.Results We identified 40 CPGs from the three countries. Of these, 8/40 reported being adopted from a parent CPG. More CPGs (n = 19) provided guidance on communicable diseases than on non-communicable diseases (n = 8). CPGs were most often developed by national health ministries and professional societies. Eighteen CPGs reported on stakeholder consultation; with Nigeria (10/11) and Malawi (3/6) faring better than South Africa (5/23) in reporting this activity. GRADE was used in 1/7 CPGs that reported assessing certainty of evidence. Overall CPGs scored well on two AGREE II domains: scope and purpose median (IQR) score 68% (IQR 47–83), and clarity of presentation 81% (67–94). Domains critical for ensuring credible guidance scored below 20%: rigour of development 11% (4–32) and editorial independence 6% (0–27).Conclusion Topics covered by the identified CPGs did not always match country level burden of disease likely representing substantial gaps in available guidance for healthcare providers, parents, caregivers, and patients. Our study found low AGREE II scores for CPG development processes, possibly undermining the credibility of the available CPGs to provide evidence-informed care. Our findings highlight the importance of ongoing efforts to strengthen capacity and support CPG development with collaboration between policymakers, researchers and the public.
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- 2023
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26. Triaging and Managing Covid – Inequities and Ethical Decision-Making
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Emmanuel Effa and Akaninyene Otu
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- 2023
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27. Performance and Dry Matter Accumulation of Groundnut in an Ultisol Amended with Phosphorus and Lime
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Jessica Eno Effiong, A. E. Uko, Emmanuel Effa, and Isong Abraham Isong
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Crops, Agricultural ,Arachis ,Randomized block design ,Nigeria ,chemistry.chemical_element ,engineering.material ,Soil ,Animal science ,Sand ,Cations ,Soil pH ,Magnesium ,Dry matter ,Biomass ,Fertilizers ,Lime ,Mathematics ,biology ,Hypogaea ,Phosphorus ,Sodium ,Oxides ,Factorial experiment ,Ultisol ,Calcium Compounds ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant Leaves ,chemistry ,Potassium ,engineering ,Calcium ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
lt;bgt;Background and Objective:lt;/bgt; Adequate yield improvement in groundnut may not be achieved in acid sand Ultisol through the application of mineral phosphorus alone, however, a combined application of lime and phosphorus fertilizer may be a better management option in such soils. Hence, this study evaluated the effects of four levels of lime (0, 2.0, 4.0 and 8.0 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt;) and four phosphorus (P) levels (0, 25, 50 and 75 kg halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt;) on the performance of groundnut (lt;igt;Arachis hypogaealt;/igt;L.) in the humid rainforest of South Eastern Nigeria.lt;bgt;Materials and Methods:lt;/bgt; The study was a factorial experiment laid out in a Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD) and consisted of sixteen treatment combinations replicated three times each.lt;bgt;Results:lt;/bgt; The result obtained showed that the application of phosphorus fertilizer and lime had a significant (p0.05) effect on plant height, number of leaves per plant, number of branches per plant, 75 kg halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; P and 8.0 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; lime resulted in the highest growth parameter. Similarly, 75 kg halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; P and 8.0 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; lime significantly improved the number of pods per plant 30.67, pod yield 3.58 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt;, biomass yield of 4.68 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt;, seed yield of 2.1 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; and 100 seed weight of 44.58 g, seed yield of groundnut while curtailing the number of unfilled pods 2.33.lt;bgt;Conclusion:lt;/bgt; Application of phosphorus and lime at 75 kg halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; P and 8.0 t halt;supgt;1lt;/supgt; lime is a beneficial agronomic practice that could enhance the productivity of groundnut in the Calabar rainforest zone of Cross River State.
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- 2021
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28. Africa needs to prioritize One Health approaches that focus on the environment, animal health and human health
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Friday Okonofua, Rauna Athingo, Eve Namisango, Akaninyene Otu, Simeon Cadmus, Clement Meseko, Bassey Ebenso, Emmanuel Effa, Chinwe Ochu, and Dimie Ogoina
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0301 basic medicine ,Economic growth ,Zoonotic Infection ,Animal health ,Armed conflict ,General Medicine ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Human health ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,One Health ,Deforestation ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Urbanization ,Business ,Environment animal - Abstract
Urbanization, armed conflict, and deforestation in African countries have increased the risk of zoonotic infections, which requires a One Health approach focused on the environment, animal health and human health.
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- 2021
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29. A roadmap for kidney care in Africa: An analysis of International Society of Nephrology–Global Kidney Health Atlas Africa data describing current gaps and opportunities
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Ikechi Okpechi, Abdou Niang, Mohammed Hafez, Gloria Ashuntantang, Deenaz Zaidi, Feng Ye, Aliyu Abdu, Adanze Asinobi, Rasheed Balogun, Innocent Chukwuonye, Hassane Diongole, Emmanuel Effa, Udeme Ekrikpo, Zaghloul Gouda, Jibrin Hussaini, Francois Kaze, Kajiru Kilonzo, Robert Kalyesubula, Amna Kununa, Muhammad Makusidi, Ikechukwu Mbah, Mignon McCullough, Yewondwossen Mengistu, Mothusi Moloi, George Moturi, Kwazi Ndlovu, John Ngigi, Yannick Nklandu, Joseph Ntarindwa, Julius Okel, Timothy Olanrewaju, Charlotte Osafo, Ugochi Samuel-Okpechi, Mazin Shigidi, Ernest Sumaili, Ifeoma Ulasi, Theophilus Umeizudike, Nicola Wearne, Vivekanand Jha, Adeera Levin, David Johnson, and Aminu Bello
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology - Abstract
Delivery of kidney care in Africa is significantly constrained by various factors. In this review, we used International Society of Nephrology–Global Kidney Health Atlas (ISN–GKHA) data for Africa to address sub-regional differences in care delivery in the continent with focus on infrastructure, workforce, and the economic aspects of kidney care. Forty two African countries participated in the survey conducted in 2018. North Africa had the highest proportions of nephrologists [12.53 per million population (pmp)], nephrology trainees (2.19 pmp) and haemodialysis (HD) centres (8.58 pmp); whereas southern Africa had the highest proportions of peritoneal dialysis (PD) centres (0.89 pmp) and kidney transplant (KT) centres (0.29 pmp); West Africa had the greatest nephrology workforce shortages. The annual median costs of HD (US$22,731 [interquartile range (IQR): US$1,560–43,902]) and PD (US$34,165 [US$34,165–34,165]) were highest in Central Africa and only Algeria, Egypt and South Africa reported zero co-payment for all modalities of kidney replacement therapy in the public sector. Policies on chronic kidney disease and non-communicable diseases were scarcely available across all African sub-regions. The ISN–GKHA African data highlight a stark difference in kidney care measures between North and sub-Saharan Africa and also suggest the need for a more cohesive approach to policy formulations that support and protect patients with kidney disease in the continent, especially from the excessive costs associated with care. Using the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Action Plan for noncommunicable diseases, this paper proposes an African roadmap for optimal kidney care.
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- 2022
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30. Upscaling health worker training on sepsis in South Eastern Nigeria using innovative digital strategies: an interventional study
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Akaninyene Otu, Obiageli Onwusaka, Daniel E. Otokpa, Ukam Edadi, Ubong Udoh, Peter Yougha, Chinelo Oduche, Okey Okuzu, Shevin T Jacob, Jamie Rylance, and Emmanuel Effa
- Abstract
IntroductionSepsis is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) such as Nigeria, the disproportionately high mortality rate is linked to lack of awareness, poor recognition, and late implementation of sepsis care bundles among health workers. Training of health workers using digital platforms may improve knowledge and skills and lead to better patient outcomes.MethodsThis Cross-sectional study involved developing and deploying a sepsis module through an innovative application (FHIND/ARCS Sepsis tutorial app) to doctors in Calabar, Nigeria. We assessed quantitative pre- and post-intervention knowledge scores for those completing the electronic training module on sepsis between both assessments. A user satisfaction survey evaluated the content of the tutorial and the usability of the app.ResultsOne hundred and two doctors completed the course. There were more males than females (58.8% versus 41.2%). Over half (52%) were junior doctors, a minority were general practitioners and house officers (3% and 5%, respectively) and 72.6% had practiced for periods ranging from one to 15 years post qualification. Gender and age appeared to have no statistically significant association with pre- and post-test scores. The oldest age group (61-70) had the lowest mean pre- and post-test scores while general practitioners had higher mean pre- and post-test scores than other cadres.The majority (95%) of participants recorded higher post-test than pre-test scores demonstrated by a statistically significant overall increase in mean scores (25.5% ±14.7, PParticipants were satisfied with the content and multimodal delivery of the material and found the app useable.ConclusionDigital training in sub-Saharan Africa is feasible and can sustainably close the critical knowledge gap required to respond more effectively to medical emergencies such as sepsis in LMIC settings.
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- 2022
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31. Yield Performance and Leaf Nutrient Composition of Bambara Groundnut Under Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Inoculation in a Poultry Manure Amended Ultisol
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Isong Abraham Isong, Jessica Eno Effiong, Emmanuel Effa, and A. E. Uko
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Crops, Agricultural ,Randomized block design ,Biology ,complex mixtures ,Poultry ,Feces ,Nutrient ,Mycorrhizae ,Yield (wine) ,Animals ,Soil Microbiology ,Inoculation ,Vigna ,fungi ,Fungi ,food and beverages ,Ultisol ,Manure ,Plant Leaves ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,Composition (visual arts) ,Seasons ,Poultry manure ,Nutritive Value ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Background and objective Researchers are now targeting the possibility of sustainably producing crops without polluting the soil and groundwater through the integrated use of Poultry Manure (PM) and Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi (AMF). The present study was undertaken to investigate the yield response and leaf nutrient composition of Bambara groundnut under arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculation in poultry manure amended ultisol during the 2016 and 2017 cropping seasons. Materials and methods The study was a 4×5 factorial experiment consisting of four levels of poultry manure and four inoculums of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi plus the un-inoculated control and was laid out in a Randomized Complete Block design (RCBD) with three replications to give 20 treatment combinations. Results Sole applications of poultry manure and AMF inoculums significantly increased P, K, Ca and Mg contents in the leaves of Bambara groundnut over control plants in both years of study. Soil amended with 8 t ha-1 of poultry manure and at the same time inoculated with Gigaspora gigantea gave the highest pod yield in both years, while soil amended with 12 t ha-1 of PM and inoculated with Glomus clarum as well as soil amended with 8 t ha-1 of PM and inoculated with Gigaspora gigantea gave the highest seed yield. Conclusion The results of this study showed that soil inoculated with Glomus clarum and Gigaspora gigantea and amended with 8 and 12 tons ha-1 of poultry manure in single or combination were more efficient and consistent in the enhancement of growth on marginal soils.
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- 2020
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32. Microfluidic Microcirculation Mimetic as a Tool for the Study of Rheological Characteristics of Red Cells in Patients With Sickle Cell Anaemia
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Marcus Inyama Asuquo, Emmanuel Effa, Oluwabukola Gbotosho, Akaninyene Otu, Nicole Tofner, Ameh Soter, Bhayankaram Sruti-Prathivadhi, Noah Zetocha, Chisom Nwakama, William Ohobu Egbe, Jochen Guck, and Andrew E. Ekpenyong
- Subjects
pathology_pathobiology - Abstract
Sickle cell disorder (SCD) is a multisystem disease with heterogeneous phenotypes. Although all patients have the mutated haemoglobin (Hb) in the SS phenotype, the severity and frequency of complications are variable. When exposed to low oxygen tension, the Hb molecule becomes dense and, forms tactoids which, lead to the peculiar sickled shapes of the affected red blood cells, giving the disorder its name. This sickle cell morphology is responsible for the profound and widespread pathologies associated with this disorder, such as vaso-occlusive crisis, (VOC). How much of the clinical manifestation is due to sickled erythrocytes and what is due to the relative contributions of other elements in the blood, especially in the microcapillary circulation, is usually not visualized and quantified for each patient during clinical management. Here, we used a microfluidic microcirculation mimetic (MMM) which has 187 capillary-like constrictions to impose deformations on erythrocytes of SCD patients, visualizing and characterizing the morpho-rheological properties of the cells in normoxic, hypoxic (using of sodium meta-bisulfite) and in treatment conditions (using hydroxyurea). The MMM enabled a patient-specific quantification of shape descriptors (circularity and roundness) and transit time through the capillary constrictions, which are readouts for morphorheological properties implicated in VOC. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of microfluidics-based monitoring of individual patients for personalized care in the context of SCD complications such as VOC, even in re-source-challenged settings.
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- 2022
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33. Publication practices of sub-Saharan African Cochrane authors: a bibliometric study
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Tamara Kredo, Charles Shey Wiysonge, Ameer Hohlfeld, Joy Oliver, Anel Schoonees, Emmanuel Effa, Taryn Young, Lawrence Mbuagbaw, Solange Durao, and Dachi Arikpo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sub saharan ,education ,statistics & research methods ,Psychological intervention ,Nigeria ,Health informatics ,South Africa ,human resource management ,Research Methods ,Medicine ,Humans ,health informatics ,business.industry ,Quality assessment ,Diagnostic test ,General Medicine ,Research Personnel ,Systematic review ,Publishing ,Bibliometrics ,Family medicine ,business ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
IntroductionCochrane Africa (https://africa.cochrane.org/) aims to increase Cochrane reviews addressing high priority questions in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Researchers residing in SSA, despite often drawing on Cochrane methods, training or resources, conduct and publish systematic reviews outside of Cochrane. Our objective was to investigate the extent to which Cochrane authors from SSA publish Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews.MethodsWe conducted a bibliometric study of systematic reviews and overviews of systematic reviews from SSA, first by identifying SSA Cochrane authors, then retrieving their first and last author systematic reviews and overviews from PubMed (2008 to April 2019) and using descriptive analyses to investigate the country of origin, types of reviews and trends in publishing Cochrane and non-Cochrane systematic reviews over time. To be eligible, a review had to have predetermined objectives, eligibility criteria, at least two databases searched, data extraction, quality assessment and a first or last author with a SSA affiliation.ResultsWe identified 657 Cochrane authors and 757 eligible systematic reviews. Most authors were from South Africa (n=332; 51%), followed by Nigeria (n=126; 19%). Three-quarters of the reviews (71%) were systematic reviews of interventions. The intervention reviews were more likely to be Cochrane reviews (60.3% vs 39.7%). Conversely, the overviews (23.8% vs 76.2%), qualitative reviews (14.8% vs 85.2%), diagnostic test accuracy reviews (16.1% vs 83.9%) and the ‘other’ reviews (11.1% vs 88.9%) were more likely to be non-Cochrane reviews. During the study period, the number of non-Cochrane reviews increased more than the number of Cochrane reviews. About a quarter of the reviews covered infectious disease topics.ConclusionCochrane authors from SSA are increasingly publishing a diverse variety of systematic reviews and overviews of systematic reviews, often opting for non-Cochrane journals.
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- 2021
34. Performance of Mungbeans (Vigna radiata (L) Willczek) in Soil Amended with Oil Palm Bunch Ash and Poultry Manure in Humid Tropical Environment of South Eastern Nigeria
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A. E. Uko, Emmanuel Effa, and Isong Abraham Isong
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Vigna ,Agronomy ,biology ,Yield (wine) ,Radiata ,Humid subtropical climate ,Palm oil ,Environmental science ,General Medicine ,Poultry manure ,Organic manure ,biology.organism_classification ,South eastern - Abstract
Aim: A study was conducted to evaluate supplementary effects of oil palm bunch ash (OPBA) and poultry manure (PM) on the growth and yield performance of mungbeans. Study Design: The study used a 3 x 3 factorial experiment laid out in randomized complete block design with three replications. Place and Duration of Study: The experiment was carried out at the University of Calabar Teaching and Research farm, Calabar, Nigeria during the 2014 and 2015 cropping seasons respectively Methodology: Mung bean variety NM 92 was planted in a well prepared field to evaluate its response to PM and OPBA applications. The treatments included three levels of OPBA (0, 5 and 10 t ha-1) and three levels of PM (0, 5 and 10 t ha-1. PM was cured and applied two weeks before planting while the OPBA was applied at planting. Plant growth data including plant height, number of leaves, number of branches and leaf area were measured at 2,4, 6 weeks after planting whereas the yield data including days to fifty percent flowering, number of pods, pod length , pod and seed yield were recorded Results: The highest agronomic parameters as well as yield attributing characters and yield were obtained when 10 t ha-1 OPBA or 10 t ha-1 of PM were applied. Each of the levels of applications significantly decreased the number of days to 50% flowering. The highest seed yields of 0.77 t ha-1 in 2014 and 0.82 t ha-1 in 2015 were obtained with the applications of 5 t ha-1 OPBA + 10 t ha-1 PM and 10 t ha-1 OPBA + 10 t ha-1 PM, respectively. Conclusion: The best agronomic, yield attributing characters and yield of mungbeans were obtained when 10 t ha-1 OPBA or 10 t ha-1 of PM were applied. Also the combined application of 5 t ha-1 OPBA + 10 t ha-1 PM or 10 t ha-1 OPBA + 10 t ha-1 PM gave significantly higher increment in yield. Hence, from our study, it was found that both organic matter sources may be used to obtain higher yields in mungbeans.
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- 2019
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35. Training health workers at scale in Nigeria to fight COVID-19 using the InStrat COVID-19 tutorial app: an e-health interventional study
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Soter Ameh, Okey Okuzu, Emmanuel Effa, Tomisin Tawose, Adebola Olayinka, Nrip Nihalani, John Walley, Obiageli Onwusaka, Bassey Ebenso, and Akaninyene Otu
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Medical education ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,e-Learning at scale ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,COVID-19 ,Nigeria ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,pandemics ,Training (civil) ,Infectious Diseases ,Scale (social sciences) ,Pandemic ,e-Health ,frontline health workers ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Psychology ,Epidemic control ,Health worker ,Original Research - Abstract
Background: Health worker training is an essential component of epidemic control; rapid delivery of such training is possible in low-middle income countries with digital platforms. Methods: Based on prior experience with the Ebola outbreak, we developed and deployed a bespoke InStrat COVID-19 tutorial app, to deliver accurate and regularly updated information about COVID-19 to frontline health workers and epidemic response officers across 25 states of Nigeria. The potential effectiveness of this app in training frontline health workers was assessed through online pre- and post-tests and a survey. Results: A total of 1051 health workers from 25 states across Nigeria undertook the e-learning on the InStrat COVID-19 training app. Of these, 627 (57%) completed both the pre- and post-tests in addition to completing the training modules. Overall, there were statistically significant differences between pre- and post-tests knowledge scores (54 increasing to 74). There were also differences in the subcategories of sex, region and cadre. There were higher post-test scores in males compared with females, younger versus older and southern compared with northern Nigeria. A total of 65 (50%) of the participants reported that the app increased their understanding of COVID-19, while 69 (53%) stated that they had applied the knowledge and skills learnt at work. Overall, the functionality and usability of the app were satisfactory. Conclusion: Capacity building for epidemic control using e-health applications is potentially effective, can be delivered at minimal cost and service disruption and can serve as a tool for capacity building in similar contexts.
- Published
- 2021
36. Africa needs to prioritize One Health approaches that focus on the environment, animal health and human health
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Akaninyene, Otu, Emmanuel, Effa, Clement, Meseko, Simeon, Cadmus, Chinwe, Ochu, Rauna, Athingo, Eve, Namisango, Dimie, Ogoina, Friday, Okonofua, and Bassey, Ebenso
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Conservation of Natural Resources ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Zoonoses ,Africa ,Animals ,Humans ,One Health ,Environment ,Developing Countries - Published
- 2021
37. Predictors of antibiotic prescriptions: a knowledge, attitude and practice survey among physicians in tertiary hospitals in Nigeria
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Abdulrazaq G. Habib, Emmanuel Effa, Garba Iliyasu, Juliet Ijeoma Mmerem, Shamsudin Aliyu, Dimie Ogoina, Farouq Muhammad Dayyab, Vivian Kwaghe, Mukhtar A Adeiza, Zaiyad Garba Habib, Daniel Otokpa, Dalhat Mahmood, Akan A. Otu, Stella Rotifa, Olukemi Adekanmbi, Iorhen Ephram Akase, Abisoye Oyeyemi, Uche S. Unigwe, and Micheal Iroezindu
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Antibiotic prescriptions ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Adolescent ,030106 microbiology ,Nigeria ,Inappropriate Prescribing ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,Logistic regression ,Antimicrobial resistance ,Likert scale ,Tertiary Care Centers ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physicians ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Inappropriate Prescriptions ,Checklist ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Family medicine ,Scale (social sciences) ,KAP ,Female ,business - Abstract
BackgroundAs part of the Global Action Plan against antimicrobial resistance (AMR), countries are required to generate local evidence to inform context-specific implementation of national action plans against AMR (NAPAR). We aimed to evaluate the knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) regarding antibiotic prescriptions (APR) and AMR among physicians in tertiary hospitals in Nigeria, and to determine predictors of KAP of APR and AMR.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study, we enrolled physicians practicing in tertiary hospitals from all six geopolitical zones of Nigeria. Implementation of an antimicrobial stewardship programmes (ASP) by each selected hospital were assessed using a 12 item ASP checklist. We used a structured self-administered questionnaire to assess the KAP of APR and AMR. Frequency of prescriptions of 18 different antibiotics in the prior 6 months was assessed using a Likert’s scale. KAP and prescription (Pr) scores were classified as good (score ≥ 80%) or average/poor (score ResultsA total of 1324 physicians out of 1778 (74% response rate) practicing in 12 tertiary hospitals in 11 states across all six geopolitical zones participated in the study. None of the participating hospitals had a formal ASP programme and majority did not implement antimicrobial stewardship strategies. The median KAPPr scores were 71.1%, 77%, 75% and 53.3%, for the knowledge, attitude, practice, and prescription components, respectively. Only 22.3%, 40.3%, 31.6% and 31.7% of study respondents had good KAPPr, respectively. All respondents had prescribed one or more antibiotics in the prior 6 months, mostly Amoxicillin-clavulanate (98%), fluoroquinolones (97%), and ceftriaxone (96.8%). About 68% of respondents had prescribed antibiotics from the World Health Organization reserve group. Prior AMR training, professional rank, department, and hospital of practice were independently associated with good KAPPr.ConclusionsOur study suggests gaps in knowledge and attitude of APR and AMR with inappropriate prescriptions of antibiotics among physicians practicing in tertiary hospitals in Nigeria. Nigeria’s NAPAR should also target establishment and improvement of ASP in hospitals and address institutional, educational, and professional factors that may influence emergence of AMR in Nigeria.
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- 2021
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38. Tillage Methods and Poultry Manure Application Effects on the Growth and Yield of Groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) in Calabar, Nigeria
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Emmanuel Effa, Uko AniefiokEffiong, and Isong IsongAbraham
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0106 biological sciences ,Crop yield ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Arachis hypogaea ,Tillage ,Agronomy ,Yield (wine) ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Leaf area index ,Poultry manure ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Published
- 2018
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39. Hardware Evaluation of Cluster-Based Agricultural IoT Network
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Emmanuel Effah, Ousmane Thiare, and Alexander M. Wyglinski
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Agricultural IoT (Agri-IoT) ,bluetooth low-energy (BLE) ,cluster-based agricultural IoT (CA-IoT) ,wireless sensor network-based agricultural IoT (WSN-based Agri-IoT) ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
In this paper, we present a real-world hardware evaluation of a robust, affordable, location-independent, simple, and infrastructure-less cluster-based agricultural Internet of Things (CA-IoT) network based on a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) Bluetooth Low-Energy (BLE) communication technique and Raspberry Pi module 3 B + (RPI 3 B +) to address global food insecurity caused by climate change and increasing global population via precision farming and greenhouses. Using an engineering design approach, an initial centralized agricultural IoT hardware test-bed was implemented with the aid of BLE, RPi 3 B +, DHT22, STEMMA soil moisture sensors, UM25 meters, and LoPy /low-power Wi-Fi modules, among other devices. This test-bed was adapted and modified after the proposed cluster-based architecture to evaluate the performance of CA-IoT networks. This study provides holistic account of our location-independent CA-IoT solution covering the design and deployment experiences that can serve as a reference document to the agricultural Internet of Things (Agri-IoT) community. Additionally, the proposed solution performed satisfactorily when tested under indoor and outdoor (on-farm) environmental conditions in the USA and Senegal. Unlike existing Agri-IoT test-beds, a sample performance evaluation showed that our context-relevant CA-IoT technology is simple to deploy and manage by inexperienced users and is energy-efficient, location-independent, robust, and task- and size-scalable to provide a rich set of measurements for both educational and commercial purposes.
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- 2024
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40. SAT-137 COMMUNITY BASED SCREENING FOR RISK FACTORS OF CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE IN CROSS RIVER STATE, NIGERIA
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S. Kadiri, Emmanuel Effa, H. Okpara, Udeme E. Ekrikpo, B. Rayner, Obiageli Onwusaka, O. Enang, and H. Okpa
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Community based ,Nephrology ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Cross river ,medicine.disease ,business ,Kidney disease - Published
- 2020
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41. Hardware Development and Evaluation of Multihop Cluster-Based Agricultural IoT Based on Bluetooth Low-Energy and LoRa Communication Technologies
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Emmanuel Effah, George Ghartey, Joshua Kweku Aidoo, and Ousmane Thiare
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Internet of Things (IoT) ,agricultural IoT (Agri-IoT) ,multihop cluster-based agricultural IoT (MCA-IoT) ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
In this paper, we present the development and evaluation of a contextually relevant, cost-effective, multihop cluster-based agricultural Internet of Things (MCA-IoT) network. This network utilizes commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) Bluetooth Low-Energy (BLE) and LoRa communication technologies, along with the Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+ (RPi 3 B+), to address the challenges of climate change-induced global food insecurity in smart farming applications. Employing the lean engineering design approach, we initially implemented a centralized cluster-based agricultural IoT (CA-IoT) hardware testbed incorporating BLE, RPi 3 B+, STEMMA soil moisture sensors, UM25 m, and LoPy low-power Wi-Fi modules. This system was subsequently adapted and refined to assess the performance of the MCA-IoT network. This study offers a comprehensive reference on the novel, location-independent MCA-IoT technology, including detailed design and deployment insights for the agricultural IoT (Agri-IoT) community. The proposed solution demonstrated favorable performance in indoor and outdoor environments, particularly in water-stressed regions of Northern Ghana. Performance evaluations revealed that the MCA-IoT technology is easy to deploy and manage by users with limited expertise, is location-independent, robust, energy-efficient for battery operation, and scalable in terms of task and size, thereby providing a versatile range of measurements for future applications. Our results further demonstrated that the most effective approach to utilizing existing IoT-based communication technologies within a typical farming context in sub-Saharan Africa is to integrate them.
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- 2024
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42. Hepatitis B virus knowledge and vaccination status among health-care workers in Calabar, Nigeria
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Dorothy Okpokam, Mbang Kooffreh-Ada, Soter Ameh, Emmanuel Effa, Evaristus Chukwudike, and Afiong Oku
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Hepatitis B virus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hepatitis b virus ,business.industry ,health care facilities, manpower, and services ,education ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,World health ,Vaccination ,Vaccination status ,Family medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Medicine ,Cross river ,Population study ,health-care workers ,hepatitis b vaccination ,business ,Health policy - Abstract
Background and Objectives: The World Health Organization estimates that 2 million health-care workers (HCWs) are at risk of occupational exposure to hepatitis B virus (HBV), with the majority (90%) of such infections arising in sub-Saharan Africa. This study aimed to determine HBV knowledge and vaccination uptake among HCWs. Materials and Method: This was a cross sectional analytical study conducted among 392 HCWs from two major health institutions in Calabar i.e. the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) and the General Hospital Calabar (GHC), Cross river State. Multi-staged sampling method comprising of two stages was used to recruit participants into the study. The study population comprised of doctors, nurses, laboratory scientists/technologist, and other categories of HCWs such as pharmacists, ward orderlies, and mortuary attendants. A semi-structured self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain data on the socio-demographic characteristics of HCWs, the knowledge of HCWs regarding HBV and vaccine. The analysis of data was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. Study Design: This was a cross-sectional, study of HCWs in Calabar. Sampling Method: Multi-staged sampling method was used to select participants from two major health institutions in Calabar, i.e., the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH) and the General Hospital Calabar (GHC). Thereafter, through balloting, simple random sampling technique was used to recruit the participants. Study Population: Three hundred and ninety-two HCWs were recruited from UCTH and GHC under the following categories: doctors, nurses, laboratory scientists/technologist, and other categories of HCWs such as pharmacists, ward orderlies, and mortuary attendants. Data Management: A semi-structured self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain data on the socio-demographic characteristics of HCWs, the knowledge of HCWs regarding HBV and vaccine. The analysis of data was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. Results: Overall, 67.9% of the respondents were found to have adequate knowledge of HBV vaccination and infection. Less than half (43.4%) of HCWs admitted receiving three doses (i.e., full coverage) of the vaccine. Difficulty in accessing the vaccine (48, 23.4%) was identified as the major reason given for suboptimal vaccination. Conclusion: The knowledge of HBV infection and vaccination is quite modest among HCWs in Calabar. Despite this observation, the vaccination status among HCWs is unsatisfactory. The implication of the findings of our study for health policy and practice is to prevent further occupational exposure of HCWs to HBV infection through mandatory vaccination.
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- 2021
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43. SAT-138 Community based study of risk factors and prevalence of chronic kidney disease in Cross River State, Nigeria
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O. Enang, S. Kadiri, H. Okpara, D. Otokpa, B. Rayner, H. Okpa, Udeme E. Ekrikpo, O. Onwusaka Chiezey, P. Mbu, and Emmanuel Effa
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Nephrology ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Medicine ,Cross river ,business ,medicine.disease ,Community based study ,Kidney disease - Published
- 2020
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44. A Tutorial on Agricultural IoT: Fundamental Concepts, Architectures, Routing, and Optimization
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Emmanuel Effah, Ousmane Thiare, and Alexander M. Wyglinski
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Bluetooth Low-Energy (BLE) ,cluster-based Agricultural IoT (CA-IoT) ,fault management (FM) ,multi-objective optimization (MOO) ,wireless sensor network-based Agricultural IoT (WSN-based Agri-IoT) ,Computer software ,QA76.75-76.765 ,Technology ,Cybernetics ,Q300-390 - Abstract
This paper presents an in-depth contextualized tutorial on Agricultural IoT (Agri-IoT), covering the fundamental concepts, assessment of routing architectures and protocols, and performance optimization techniques via a systematic survey and synthesis of the related literature. The negative impacts of climate change and the increasing global population on food security and unemployment threats have motivated the adoption of the wireless sensor network (WSN)-based Agri-IoT as an indispensable underlying technology in precision agriculture and greenhouses to improve food production capacities and quality. However, most related Agri-IoT testbed solutions have failed to achieve their performance expectations due to the lack of an in-depth and contextualized reference tutorial that provides a holistic overview of communication technologies, routing architectures, and performance optimization modalities based on users’ expectations. Thus, although IoT applications are founded on a common idea, each use case (e.g., Agri-IoT) varies based on the specific performance and user expectations as well as technological, architectural, and deployment requirements. Likewise, the agricultural setting is a unique and hostile area where conventional IoT technologies do not apply, hence the need for this tutorial. Consequently, this tutorial addresses these via the following contributions: (1) a systematic overview of the fundamental concepts, technologies, and architectural standards of WSN-based Agri-IoT, (2) an evaluation of the technical design requirements of a robust, location-independent, and affordable Agri-IoT, (3) a comprehensive survey of the benchmarking fault-tolerance techniques, communication standards, routing and medium access control (MAC) protocols, and WSN-based Agri-IoT testbed solutions, and (4) an in-depth case study on how to design a self-healing, energy-efficient, affordable, adaptive, stable, autonomous, and cluster-based WSN-specific Agri-IoT from a proposed taxonomy of multi-objective optimization (MOO) metrics that can guarantee an optimized network performance. Furthermore, this tutorial established new taxonomies of faults, architectural layers, and MOO metrics for cluster-based Agri-IoT (CA-IoT) networks and a three-tier objective framework with remedial measures for designing an efficient associated supervisory protocol for cluster-based Agri-IoT networks.
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- 2023
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45. Intra-Row Spacing and Variety Interaction Effects on the Yield Performance of Sunflower (Helianthus Annuus L.) in Calabar
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U. L. Undie, Joseph. E. O. Ansa, A. E. Uko, and Emmanuel Effa
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Crop ,Horticulture ,Achene ,Helianthus annuus ,Randomized block design ,Factorial experiment ,Interaction ,Sunflower ,Hybrid ,Mathematics - Abstract
There is an increasing interest in Sunflower production in Nigeria as a substitute oil crop to complement oil palm and soybean. Two year field experiments were conducted at the Teaching and Research Farm of the University of Calabar to evaluate the interactive effects of intra-row spacing on sunflower varieties, using a 3 x 4 factorial experiment consisting of four spacing regimes (75 x 25, 75 x 30, 75 x 35 and 75 x 40 cm) and three sunflower hybrids (SSL 807, 806 and 803) in randomized complete block design having three replications. The 40 cm intra-row spacing resulted in the highest yield of sunflower seeds (3.95 t ha-1), while SSL 806 and 803 were statistically similar in yield (3.44 and 3.05 t ha-1). The interaction between SSL 806 at 75 x 40 cm gave the best achene yields (5.61 t ha-1). Therefore variety SSL 806 is a more promising variety for production in Calabar.
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- 2018
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46. Evaluation of tigecycline activity on wound isolates of methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus from hospital and communityacquired infections in Cross River State, Nigeria
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Ubong Udoh, Ernest Ochang, Emmanuel Effa, Kenneth Onyedibe, Usang Usang, Onyebuchi Osakwe, and Joseph Asuquo
- Abstract
Background/Objective: Tigecycline belongs to the glycylcycline class of antibiotics with in-vitroactivity against most gram-positive bacteria, including multidrug-resistant pathogens. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is one of such pathogen, which has been associated with community and hospital-acquired infections. Tigecycline is considered to be a newer treatment option for emerging multidrug-resistant bacteria. This study aims to determine the in-vitro activity of tigecycline against community and hospital-acquired MRSA isolated from infected traumatic wounds in Cross River State. Material and Methods: A total of 60 MRSA were isolated from wound samples, 30 each from the community and hospital settings. These were tested for tigecycline susceptibility by the E-test method. Detection of methicillin resistance was performed using cefoxitin (30µg) disk. All strains were identified according to standard bacteriological methods. Results: Of the 60 isolates, 55 (91.7%) were sensitive to tigecycline with MIC50 and MIC90 values of 0.25 and 0.5μg/ml, respectively. Twenty-seven (90.0%) of the 30 community-acquired isolates were susceptible to tigecycline, while 28 (93.3%) of the 30 hospital-acquired isolates were susceptible. Conclusions: Tigecycline showed excellent in-vitro activity against MRSA wound isolates and, therefore may be a drug of choice for empirical therapy of skin and soft tissue infections in areas where MRSA is prevalent.
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- 2017
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47. Yield Performance of Popcorn (Zea mays L. everta) under Lime and Nitrogen Fertilization on an Acid Soil
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G. O. Ukoha, G. A. Iwo, Ekemini Edet Obok, D. F. Uwah, and Emmanuel Effa
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coastal plain ,Field experiment ,Amendment ,Sowing ,chemistry.chemical_element ,engineering.material ,Nitrogen ,Zea mays ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Yield (wine) ,engineering ,Lime ,Mathematics - Abstract
A two-year field experiment was carried out on the acidic coastal plain sands of South Eastern Nigeria during the year 2009 and 2010 planting seasons to study the effect of lime levels (L = 0, 500 and 1000 kg ha-1) and nitrogen rates (N = 0, 40, 80 and 120 kg ha-1) on -popcorn varieties (Yellow composite and Ashland). Results showed that N application resulted in significantly (p=0.05) higher grain yield at 80kg N ha-1 in 2010 than that obtained at 120 kg Nha-1 in 2009. Yield in 2010 outstripped yield in 2009 by 23.65%. Results also showed that lime at 500 kg ha-1 gave the highest popcorn yields in 2010, a yield increase of 18.03 % above control, whereas there was no yield response to lime in 2009. Based on the results obtained, it can be concluded that popcorn sown at 80 kg N ha-1 and 500 kg ha-1 rates of lime significantly increased the crop productivity compared to those sown at other N and lime rates. The study demonstrated the effect of lime amendment in reducing rates of inorganic N applied to popcorn especially with resource poor farmers who form the bulk of maize producers in Nigeria.
- Published
- 2012
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48. Corrigendum to 'Antidiabetic Effect of Young and Old Ethanolic Leaf Extracts of Vernonia amygdalina: A Comparative Study'
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Du-Bois Asante, Emmanuel Effah-Yeboah, Precious Barnes, Heckel Amoabeng Abban, Elvis Ofori Ameyaw, Johnson Nyarko Boampong, Eric Gyamerah Ofori, and Joseph Budu Dadzie
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Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Published
- 2017
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49. Antidiabetic Effect of Young and Old Ethanolic Leaf Extracts of Vernonia amygdalina: A Comparative Study
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Du-Bois Asante, Emmanuel Effah-Yeboah, Precious Barnes, Heckel Amoabeng Abban, Elvis Ofori Ameyaw, Johnson Nyarko Boampong, Eric Gyamerah Ofori, and Joseph Budu Dadzie
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Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
The young leaves of Vernonia amygdalina are often utilized as vegetable and for medicinal purpose compared to the old leaves. This study was designed to evaluate and compare the antidiabetic effects between ethanolic leaf extracts of old and young V. amygdalina on streptozotocin (STZ) induced diabetic rat for four weeks. Preliminary screening of both young and old ethanolic extracts revealed the presence of the same phytochemicals except flavonoids which was only present in the old V. amygdalina. Difference in antioxidant power between the young and old leaf extracts was statistically significant (p
- Published
- 2016
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