38 results on '"Goepogui A"'
Search Results
2. Understanding the spatial distribution of trichiasis and its association with trachomatous inflammation—follicular
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Rebecca Mann Flueckiger, Emanuele Giorgi, Jorge Cano, Mariamo Abdala, Olga Nelson Amiel, Gilbert Baayenda, Ana Bakhtiari, Wilfrid Batcho, Kamal Hashim Bennawi, Michael Dejene, Balgesa Elkheir Elshafie, Aba Ange Elvis, Missamou François, André Goepogui, Khumbo Kalua, Biruck Kebede, Genet Kiflu, Michael P. Masika, Marilia Massangaie, Caleb Mpyet, Jean Ndjemba, Jeremiah M. Ngondi, Nicholas Olobio, Patrick Turyaguma, Rebecca Willis, Souleymane Yeo, Anthony W. Solomon, and Rachel L. Pullan
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Trachoma ,Trichiasis ,Blindness ,Visual impairment ,Neglected tropical disease ,Epidemiology ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Whilst previous work has identified clustering of the active trachoma sign “trachomatous inflammation—follicular” (TF), there is limited understanding of the spatial structure of trachomatous trichiasis (TT), the rarer, end-stage, blinding form of disease. Here we use community-level TF prevalence, information on access to water and sanitation, and large-scale environmental and socio-economic indicators to model the spatial variation in community-level TT prevalence in Benin, Cote d’Ivoire, DRC, Guinea, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sudan and Uganda. Methods We fit binomial mixed models, with community-level random effects, separately for each country. In countries where spatial correlation was detected through a semi-variogram diagnostic check we then fitted a geostatistical model to the TT prevalence data including TF prevalence as an explanatory variable. Results The estimated regression relationship between community-level TF and TT was significant in eight countries. We estimate that a 10% increase in community-level TF prevalence leads to an increase in the odds for TT ranging from 20 to 86% when accounting for additional covariates. Conclusion We find evidence of an association between TF and TT in some parts of Africa. However, our results also suggest the presence of additional, country-specific, spatial risk factors which modulate the variation in TT risk.
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- 2019
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3. The Prevalence of Trachomatous Trichiasis in People Aged 15 Years and Over in Six Evaluation Units of Gaoual, Labé, Dalaba and Beyla Districts, Guinea
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Bah, Midiaou M., primary, Sakho, Fatoumata, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Nieba, Luc C., additional, Cisse, Abdourahim, additional, Courtright, Paul, additional, Harte, Anna J., additional, Burgert-Brucker, Clara, additional, Jimenez, Cristina, additional, Lama, Pierre L., additional, Sagno, Michel, additional, Bakhtiari, Ana, additional, Boyd, Sarah, additional, Solomon, Anthony W., additional, Kelly, Michaela, additional, James, Fiona, additional, Tenkiano, Moise S.D., additional, Harding-Esch, Emma M., additional, and Dicko, Boubacar M., additional
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- 2023
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4. The global burden of trichiasis in 2016.
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Rebecca M Flueckiger, Paul Courtright, Mariamo Abdala, Amza Abdou, Zaid Abdulnafea, Tawfik K Al-Khatib, Khaled Amer, Olga Nelson Amiel, Sossinou Awoussi, Ana Bakhtiari, Wilfried Batcho, Assumpta Lucienne Bella, Kamal Hashim Bennawi, Simon J Brooker, Brian K Chu, Michael Dejene, Djore Dezoumbe, Balgesa Elkheir Elshafie, Aba Ange Elvis, Djouma Nembot Fabrice, Fatma Juma Omar, Missamou François, Drabo François, Jambi Garap, Michael Gichangi, André Goepogui, Jaouad Hammou, Boubacar Kadri, George Kabona, Martin Kabore, Khumbo Kalua, Mathias Kamugisha, Biruck Kebede, Kaba Keita, Asad Aslam Khan, Genet Kiflu, Makoy Yibi, Garae Mackline, Colin Macleod, Portia Manangazira, Michael P Masika, Marilia Massangaie, Takafira Mduluza, Nabicassa Meno, Nicholas Midzi, Abdallahi Ould Minnih, Sailesh Mishra, Caleb Mpyet, Nicholas Muraguri, Upendo Mwingira, Beido Nassirou, Jean Ndjemba, Cece Nieba, Jeremiah Ngondi, Nicholas Olobio, Alex Pavluck, Isaac Phiri, Rachel Pullan, Babar Qureshi, Boubacar Sarr, Do Seiha, Gloria Marina Serrano Chávez, Shekhar Sharma, Siphetthavong Sisaleumsak, Khamphoua Southisombath, Gretchen Stevens, Andeberhan Tesfazion Woldendrias, Lamine Traoré, Patrick Turyaguma, Rebecca Willis, Georges Yaya, Souleymane Yeo, Francisco Zambroni, Jialiang Zhao, and Anthony W Solomon
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundTrichiasis is present when one or more eyelashes touches the eye. Uncorrected, it can cause blindness. Accurate estimates of numbers affected, and their geographical distribution, help guide resource allocation.MethodsWe obtained district-level trichiasis prevalence estimates in adults for 44 endemic and previously-endemic countries. We used (1) the most recent data for a district, if more than one estimate was available; (2) age- and sex-standardized corrections of historic estimates, where raw data were available; (3) historic estimates adjusted using a mean adjustment factor for districts where raw data were unavailable; and (4) expert assessment of available data for districts for which no prevalence estimates were available.FindingsInternally age- and sex-standardized data represented 1,355 districts and contributed 662 thousand cases (95% confidence interval [CI] 324 thousand-1.1 million) to the global total. Age- and sex-standardized district-level prevalence estimates differed from raw estimates by a mean factor of 0.45 (range 0.03-2.28). Previously non- stratified estimates for 398 districts, adjusted by ×0.45, contributed a further 411 thousand cases (95% CI 283-557 thousand). Eight countries retained previous estimates, contributing 848 thousand cases (95% CI 225 thousand-1.7 million). New expert assessments in 14 countries contributed 862 thousand cases (95% CI 228 thousand-1.7 million). The global trichiasis burden in 2016 was 2.8 million cases (95% CI 1.1-5.2 million).InterpretationThe 2016 estimate is lower than previous estimates, probably due to more and better data; scale-up of trichiasis management services; and reductions in incidence due to lower active trachoma prevalence.
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- 2019
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5. Gender and neglected tropical disease front-line workers: Data from 16 countries.
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Erica A Shoemaker, Kelly Dale, Daniel A Cohn, Maureen P Kelly, Kathryn L Zoerhoff, Wilfrid E Batcho, Clarisse Bougouma, Georges B Nko'Ayissi, Aboulaye Meite, Benjamin Marfo, André Goepogui, Marc-Aurele Telfort, Lita Renata Sianipar, Mahamadou Traore, Pradip Rimal, Djibo Aichatou Alfari, Chukwuma Anyaike, Fatou N Badiane, Ibrahim Kargbo-Labour, Upendo J Mwingira, Marcel S Awoussi, Rachel D Stelmach, Carly L Smith, Jennifer Arney, Taroub Harb Faramand, Diana M Stukel, Bolivar Pou, Lisa A Rotondo, John D Kraemer, and Margaret C Baker
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundDelivery of preventive chemotherapy (PC) through mass drug administration (MDA) is used to control or eliminate five of the most common neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). The success of an MDA campaign relies on the ability of drug distributors and their supervisors-the NTD front-line workers-to reach populations at risk of NTDs. In the past, our understanding of the demographics of these workers has been limited, but with increased access to sex-disaggregated data, we begin to explore the implications of gender and sex for the success of NTD front-line workers.Methodology/principal findingsWe reviewed data collected by USAID-supported NTD projects from national NTD programs from fiscal years (FY) 2012-2017 to assess availability of sex-disaggregated data on the workforce. What we found was sex-disaggregated data on 2,984,908 trainees trained with financial support from the project. We then analyzed the percentage of males and females trained by job category, country, and fiscal year. During FY12, 59% of these data were disaggregated by sex, which increased to nearly 100% by FY15 and was sustained through FY17. In FY17, 43% of trainees were female, with just four countries reporting more females than males trained as drug distributors and three countries reporting more females than males trained as trainers/supervisors. Except for two countries, there were no clear trends over time in changes to the percent of females trained.Conclusions/significanceThere has been a rapid increase in availability of sex-disaggregated data, but little increase in recruitment of female workers in countries included in this study. Women continue to be under-represented in the NTD workforce, and while there are often valid reasons for this distribution, we need to test this norm and better understand gender dynamics within NTD programs to increase equity.
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- 2019
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6. Global progress toward the elimination of active trachoma: an analysis of 38 countries
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Kristen K Renneker, Mariamo Abdala, James Addy, Tawfik Al-Khatib, Khaled Amer, Mouctar Dieng Badiane, Wilfrid Batcho, Lucienne Bella, Clarisse Bougouma, Victor Bucumi, Tina Chisenga, Tran Minh Dat, Djore Dézoumbé, Balgesa Elshafie, Mackline Garae, André Goepogui, Jaouad Hammou, George Kabona, Boubacar Kadri, Khumbo Kalua, Sarjo Kanyi, Asad Aslam Khan, Benjamin Marfo, Sultani Matendechero, Aboulaye Meite, Abdellahi Minnih, Francis Mugume, Nicholas Olobio, Fatma Juma Omar, Isaac Phiri, Salimato Sanha, Shekhar Sharma, Fikre Seife, Oliver Sokana, Raebwebwe Taoaba, Andeberhan Tesfazion, Lamine Traoré, Naomi Uvon, Georges Yaya, Makoy Yibi Logora, P J Hooper, Paul M Emerson, and Jeremiah M Ngondi
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Trachoma ,Child, Preschool ,Infant, Newborn ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Infant ,Mass Drug Administration ,Ethiopia ,Public Health ,General Medicine ,Child ,Infant, Newborn, Diseases ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Global elimination of trachoma as a public health problem was targeted for 2020. We reviewed progress towards the elimination of active trachoma by country and geographical group.In this retrospective analysis of national survey and implementation data, all countries ever known to be endemic for trachoma that had either implemented at least one trachoma impact survey shown in the publicly available Trachoma Atlas, or are in Africa were invited to participate in this study. Scale-up was described according to the number of known endemic implementation units and mass drug administration implementation over time. The prevalence of active trachoma-follicular among children aged 1-9 years (TFWe included data until Nov 10, 2021, for 38 countries, representing 2097 ever-endemic implementation units. Of these, 1923 (91·7%) have had mass drug administration. Of 1731 implementation units with a trachoma impact survey, the prevalence of TFGlobal elimination of trachoma as a public health problem by 2020 was not possible, but this finding masks the great progress achieved. Implementation units in high baseline categories and recrudescent TFNone.
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- 2022
7. Understanding the spatial distribution of trichiasis and its association with trachomatous inflammation—follicular
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Flueckiger, Rebecca Mann, Giorgi, Emanuele, Cano, Jorge, Abdala, Mariamo, Amiel, Olga Nelson, Baayenda, Gilbert, Bakhtiari, Ana, Batcho, Wilfrid, Bennawi, Kamal Hashim, Dejene, Michael, Elshafie, Balgesa Elkheir, Elvis, Aba Ange, François, Missamou, Goepogui, André, Kalua, Khumbo, Kebede, Biruck, Kiflu, Genet, Masika, Michael P., Massangaie, Marilia, Mpyet, Caleb, Ndjemba, Jean, Ngondi, Jeremiah M., Olobio, Nicholas, Turyaguma, Patrick, Willis, Rebecca, Yeo, Souleymane, Solomon, Anthony W., and Pullan, Rachel L.
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- 2019
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8. Sanitation and water supply coverage thresholds associated with active trachoma: Modeling cross-sectional data from 13 countries.
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Joshua V Garn, Sophie Boisson, Rebecca Willis, Ana Bakhtiari, Tawfik Al-Khatib, Khaled Amer, Wilfrid Batcho, Paul Courtright, Michael Dejene, Andre Goepogui, Khumbo Kalua, Biruck Kebede, Colin K Macleod, Kouakou IIunga Marie Madeleine, Mariamo Saide Abdala Mbofana, Caleb Mpyet, Jean Ndjemba, Nicholas Olobio, Alexandre L Pavluck, Oliver Sokana, Khamphoua Southisombath, Fasihah Taleo, Anthony W Solomon, and Matthew C Freeman
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Facial cleanliness and sanitation are postulated to reduce trachoma transmission, but there are no previous data on community-level herd protection thresholds. We characterize associations between active trachoma, access to improved sanitation facilities, and access to improved water sources for the purpose of face washing, with the aim of estimating community-level or herd protection thresholds.We used cluster-sampled Global Trachoma Mapping Project data on 884,850 children aged 1-9 years from 354,990 households in 13 countries. We employed multivariable mixed-effects modified Poisson regression models to assess the relationships between water and sanitation coverage and trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF). We observed lower TF prevalence among those with household-level access to improved sanitation (prevalence ratio, PR = 0.87; 95%CI: 0.83-0.91), and household-level access to an improved washing water source in the residence/yard (PR = 0.81; 95%CI: 0.75-0.88). Controlling for household-level water and latrine access, we found evidence of community-level protection against TF for children living in communities with high sanitation coverage (PR80-90% = 0.87; 95%CI: 0.73-1.02; PR90-100% = 0.76; 95%CI: 0.67-0.85). Community sanitation coverage levels greater than 80% were associated with herd protection against TF (PR = 0.77; 95%CI: 0.62-0.97)-that is, lower TF in individuals whose households lacked individual sanitation but who lived in communities with high sanitation coverage. For community-level water coverage, there was no apparent threshold, although we observed lower TF among several of the higher deciles of community-level water coverage.Our study provides insights into the community water and sanitation coverage levels that might be required to best control trachoma. Our results suggest access to adequate water and sanitation can be important components in working towards the 2020 target of eliminating trachoma as a public health problem.
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- 2018
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9. Assessing the presence of Wuchereria bancrofti in vector and human populations from urban communities in Conakry, Guinea
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Bernard L. Kouassi, Dziedzom K. de Souza, Andre Goepogui, Charles A. Narh, Sandra A. King, Baldé S. Mamadou, Lamia Diakité, Samuel K. Dadzie, Daniel A. Boakye, Jürg Utzinger, Moses J. Bockarie, and Benjamin G. Koudou
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Guinea ,Lymphatic filariasis ,Mass drug administration ,Transmission ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background The Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis was launched in 2000 with the goal of interrupting transmission of lymphatic filariasis (LF) through multiple rounds of mass drug administration (MDA). In Guinea, there is evidence of ongoing LF transmission, but little is known about the most densely populated parts of the country, including the capital Conakry. In order to guide the LF control and elimination efforts, serological and entomological surveys were carried out to determine whether or not LF transmission occurs in Conakry. Methods The prevalence of circulating filarial antigen (CFA) of Wuchereria bancrofti was assessed by an immuno-chromatography test (ICT) in people recruited from all five districts of Conakry. Mosquitoes were collected over a 1-year period, in 195 households in 15 communities. A proportion of mosquitoes were analysed for W. bancrofti, using dissection, loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay and conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Results CFA test revealed no infection in the 611 individuals examined. A total of 14,334 mosquitoes were collected; 14,135 Culex (98.6 %), 161 Anopheles (1.1 %) and a few other species. Out of 1,312 Culex spp. (9.3 %) and 51 An. gambiae (31.7 %) dissected, none was infected with any stage of the W. bancrofti parasite. However, the LAMP assay revealed that 1.8 % of An. gambiae and 0.31 % of Culex spp. were positive, while PCR determined respective prevalences of 0 % and 0.19 %. Conclusions This study revealed the presence of W. bancrofti DNA in mosquitoes, despite the apparent absence of infection in the human population. Although MDA interventions are not recommended where the prevalence of ICT is below 1 %, the entomological results are suggestive of the circulation of the parasite in the population of Conakry. Therefore, rigorous surveillance is still warranted so that LF transmission in Conakry would be identified rapidly and adequate responses being implemented.
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- 2015
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10. Gender equity in mass drug administration for neglected tropical diseases: data from 16 countries
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Rachel Dee Stelmach, Bolivar Pou, Joseph B. Koroma, Mamadou Ndiaye, André Goepogui, Wilfrid Batcho, Jean-Frantz Lemoine, Sitti Ganefa, Yakuba Madina Bah, Pia Mingkwan, Margaret Baker, Benjamin Marfo, Marilia Massangaie, Issa Gnandou, Francois Drabo, Pradip Rimal, Maureen Kelly, Lisa Rotondo, Ifeoma Anagbogu, John D. Kraemer, Daniel Cohn, Edridah M. Tukahebwa, Upendo Mwingira, Nebiyu Negussu, Kathryn L. Zoerhoff, Marcel S. Awoussi, and Kalpana Bhandari
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,030231 tropical medicine ,Global Health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tropical Medicine ,Environmental health ,Global health ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Healthcare Disparities ,Mass drug administration ,Sustainable development ,Equity (economics) ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Neglected Diseases ,Tropical disease ,Coverage data ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Geography ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Mass Drug Administration ,Female ,Corrigendum - Abstract
Background Gender equity in global health is a target of the Sustainable Development Goals and a requirement of just societies. Substantial progress has been made towards control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) via mass drug administration (MDA). However, little is known about whether MDA coverage is equitable. This study assesses the availability of gender-disaggregated data and whether systematic gender differences in MDA coverage exist. Methods Coverage data were analyzed for 4784 district-years in 16 countries from 2012 through 2016. The percentage of districts reporting gender-disaggregated data was calculated and male–female coverage compared. Results Reporting of gender-disaggregated coverage data improved from 32% of districts in 2012 to 90% in 2016. In 2016, median female coverage was 85.5% compared with 79.3% for males. Female coverage was higher than male coverage for all diseases. However, within-country differences exist, with 64 (3.3%) districts reporting male coverage >10 percentage points higher than female coverage. Conclusions Reporting of gender-disaggregated data is feasible. And NTD programs consistently achieve at least equal levels of coverage for women. Understanding gendered barriers to MDA for men and women remains a priority.
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- 2019
11. Elimination Delayed is Not Elimination Denied: Progress Toward GET2020
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Kristen K. Renneker, Mariamo Abdala, James Addy, Tawfik Al-Khatib, Khaled Amer, Mouctar Dieng Badiane, Wilfred Batcho, Lucienne Bella, Clarisse Bougouma, Victor Bucumi, Tina Chisenga, Tran Minh Dat, Djore Dézoumbe, Balgesa Elkheir Elshafie, Mackline Garae, André Goepogui, Jaouad Hammou, George Kabona, Boubacar Kadri, khumbo kalua, Sarjo Kanyi, Asad Aslam Khan, Benjamin Marfo, Sultani Matendechero, Aboulaye Meite, Abdellahi Minnih, Francis Mugume, Nicholas Olobio, Fatma Juma Omar, Issac Phiri, Salimata Salah, Shekhar Sharma, Fikre Seife, Oliver Sokana, Raebwebwe Taoaba, Andeberhan Tesfazion, Lamine Traoré, Naomi Uvon, Georges Yaya, Makoy Yibi Lagora, PJ Hooper, Paul M. Emerson, and Jeremiah M. Ngondi
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- 2021
12. Efficacy and safety of short duration azithromycin eye drops versus azithromycin single oral dose for the treatment of trachoma in children: a randomised, controlled, double-masked clinical trial
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Cochereau, Isabelle, Goldschmidt, Pablo, Goepogui, Andre, Afghani, Tayyab, Delval, Laurent, Pouliquen, Pascale, Bourcier, Tristan, and Robert, Pierre-Yves
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Trachoma -- Care and treatment ,Azithromycin -- Dosage and administration ,Ophthalmic solutions -- Research ,Oral medication -- Research ,Children -- Diseases ,Children -- Care and treatment ,Health - Published
- 2007
13. Detection by broad-range real-time PCR assay of Chlamydia species infecting human and animals
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Goldschmidt, P., Rostane, H., Sow, M., Goepogui, A., Batellier, L., and Chaumeil, C.
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Chlamydia -- Identification and classification ,Polymerase chain reaction -- Usage ,Chlamydia infections -- Diagnosis ,Bacterial eye infections -- Diagnosis ,Health - Published
- 2006
14. Elimination Delayed is Not Elimination Denied: Progress Toward GET2020
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Renneker, Kristen K., primary, Abdala, Mariamo, additional, Addy, James, additional, Al-Khatib, Tawfik, additional, Amer, Khaled, additional, Badiane, Mouctar Dieng, additional, Batcho, Wilfred, additional, Bella, Lucienne, additional, Bougouma, Clarisse, additional, Bucumi, Victor, additional, Chisenga, Tina, additional, Dat, Tran Minh, additional, Dézoumbe, Djore, additional, Elshafie, Balgesa Elkheir, additional, Garae, Mackline, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Hammou, Jaouad, additional, Kabona, George, additional, Kadri, Boubacar, additional, kalua, khumbo, additional, Kanyi, Sarjo, additional, Khan, Asad Aslam, additional, Marfo, Benjamin, additional, Matendechero, Sultani, additional, Meite, Aboulaye, additional, Minnih, Abdellahi, additional, Mugume, Francis, additional, Olobio, Nicholas, additional, Omar, Fatma Juma, additional, Phiri, Issac, additional, Salah, Salimata, additional, Sharma, Shekhar, additional, Seife, Fikre, additional, Sokana, Oliver, additional, Taoaba, Raebwebwe, additional, Tesfazion, Andeberhan, additional, Traoré, Lamine, additional, Uvon, Naomi, additional, Yaya, Georges, additional, Yibi Lagora, Makoy, additional, Hooper, PJ, additional, Emerson, Paul M., additional, and Ngondi, Jeremiah M., additional
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- 2021
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15. Gender and neglected tropical disease front-line workers: Data from 16 countries
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Shoemaker, Erica A., primary, Dale, Kelly, additional, Cohn, Daniel A., additional, Kelly, Maureen P., additional, Zoerhoff, Kathryn L., additional, Batcho, Wilfrid E., additional, Bougouma, Clarisse, additional, Nko’Ayissi, Georges B., additional, Meite, Aboulaye, additional, Marfo, Benjamin, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Telfort, Marc-Aurele, additional, Sianipar, Lita Renata, additional, Traore, Mahamadou, additional, Rimal, Pradip, additional, Alfari, Djibo Aichatou, additional, Anyaike, Chukwuma, additional, Badiane, Fatou N., additional, Kargbo-Labour, Ibrahim, additional, Mwingira, Upendo J., additional, Awoussi, Marcel S., additional, Stelmach, Rachel D., additional, Smith, Carly L., additional, Arney, Jennifer, additional, Faramand, Taroub Harb, additional, Stukel, Diana M., additional, Pou, Bolivar, additional, Rotondo, Lisa A., additional, Kraemer, John D., additional, and Baker, Margaret C., additional
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- 2019
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16. Gender and neglected tropical disease front-line workers: Data from 16 countries
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Chukwuma Anyaike, Kathryn L. Zoerhoff, Margaret Baker, Aboulaye Meite, Maureen Kelly, Georges Barthelemy Nko'Ayissi, Kelly Dale, Benjamin Marfo, Bolivar Pou, André Goepogui, Fatou N. Badiane, Mahamadou Traore, Daniel Cohn, Pradip Rimal, Jennifer Arney, Lita Renata Sianipar, Marc-Aurele Telfort, Taroub Harb Faramand, Clarisse Bougouma, Marcel S. Awoussi, Djibo Aichatou Alfari, Erica A. Shoemaker, Diana Maria Stukel, Ibrahim J. Kargbo-Labour, Rachel Dee Stelmach, Upendo Mwingira, Lisa Rotondo, John D. Kraemer, Carly L. Smith, and Wilfrid Batcho
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Male ,Economics ,Social Sciences ,Global Health ,Fiscal year ,Geographical Locations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sociology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Multidisciplinary ,Neglected Diseases ,Senegal ,Professions ,Workforce ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Social Systems ,Medicine ,Mass Drug Administration ,Educational Status ,Female ,Research Article ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,Employment ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Asia ,Demographics ,Science ,030231 tropical medicine ,Sexism ,Jobs ,Chemoprevention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,Nepal ,Tropical Medicine ,Supervisors ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass drug administration ,Health Care Policy ,business.industry ,Tropical disease ,Front line ,Drug Policy ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Trainees ,Health Care ,Labor Economics ,People and Places ,Africa ,Population Groupings ,Norm (social) ,business ,Demography - Abstract
BackgroundDelivery of preventive chemotherapy (PC) through mass drug administration (MDA) is used to control or eliminate five of the most common neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). The success of an MDA campaign relies on the ability of drug distributors and their supervisors-the NTD front-line workers-to reach populations at risk of NTDs. In the past, our understanding of the demographics of these workers has been limited, but with increased access to sex-disaggregated data, we begin to explore the implications of gender and sex for the success of NTD front-line workers.Methodology/principal findingsWe reviewed data collected by USAID-supported NTD projects from national NTD programs from fiscal years (FY) 2012-2017 to assess availability of sex-disaggregated data on the workforce. What we found was sex-disaggregated data on 2,984,908 trainees trained with financial support from the project. We then analyzed the percentage of males and females trained by job category, country, and fiscal year. During FY12, 59% of these data were disaggregated by sex, which increased to nearly 100% by FY15 and was sustained through FY17. In FY17, 43% of trainees were female, with just four countries reporting more females than males trained as drug distributors and three countries reporting more females than males trained as trainers/supervisors. Except for two countries, there were no clear trends over time in changes to the percent of females trained.Conclusions/significanceThere has been a rapid increase in availability of sex-disaggregated data, but little increase in recruitment of female workers in countries included in this study. Women continue to be under-represented in the NTD workforce, and while there are often valid reasons for this distribution, we need to test this norm and better understand gender dynamics within NTD programs to increase equity.
- Published
- 2019
17. Corrigendum to: 'Gender equity in mass drug administration for neglected tropical diseases: data from 16 countries'
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André Goepogui, Daniel Cohn, Lisa Rotondo, Issa Gnandou, Bolivar Pou, Marcel S. Awoussi, Mamadou Ndiaye, Wilfrid Batcho, Edridah M. Tukahebwa, Kathryn L. Zoerhoff, Marilia Massangaie, Pia Mingkwan, Jean-Frantz Lemoine, Francois Drabo, Benjamin Marfo, Nebiyu Negussu, Kalpana Bhandari, John D. Kraemer, Upendo J. Mwingira, Rachel Dee Stelmach, Pradip Rimal, Joseph B. Koroma, Maureen Kelly, Sitti Ganefa, Yakuba Madina Bah, Margaret Baker, and Ifeoma Anagbogu
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Gender equity ,mass drug administration ,Health (social science) ,public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Sustainable Development Goals ,General Medicine ,equity ,Political science ,Development economics ,Neglected tropical diseases ,gender ,Original Article ,Mass drug administration ,neglected tropical diseases - Abstract
Background Gender equity in global health is a target of the Sustainable Development Goals and a requirement of just societies. Substantial progress has been made towards control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) via mass drug administration (MDA). However, little is known about whether MDA coverage is equitable. This study assesses the availability of gender-disaggregated data and whether systematic gender differences in MDA coverage exist. Methods Coverage data were analyzed for 4784 district-years in 16 countries from 2012 through 2016. The percentage of districts reporting gender-disaggregated data was calculated and male–female coverage compared. Results Reporting of gender-disaggregated coverage data improved from 32% of districts in 2012 to 90% in 2016. In 2016, median female coverage was 85.5% compared with 79.3% for males. Female coverage was higher than male coverage for all diseases. However, within-country differences exist, with 64 (3.3%) districts reporting male coverage >10 percentage points higher than female coverage. Conclusions Reporting of gender-disaggregated data is feasible. And NTD programs consistently achieve at least equal levels of coverage for women. Understanding gendered barriers to MDA for men and women remains a priority.
- Published
- 2019
18. The global burden of trichiasis in 2016
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Balgesa Elkheir Elshafie, Missamou François, Boubacar Sarr, Boubacar Kadri, Caleb Mpyet, Georges Yaya, Nicholas Olobio, Gretchen A Stevens, Lamine Traoré, Portia Manangazira, Babar Qureshi, Khaled Amer, Kaba Keita, Marilia Massangaie, Colin MacLeod, Rachel L. Pullan, Alex Pavluck, Taka Fira Mduluza, Assumpta Lucienne Bella, Nabicassa Meno, Tawfik Al-Khatib, M.L. Kamugisha, Mariamo Abdala, Ana Bakhtiari, Garae Mackline, Nicholas Midzi, Do Seiha, Jeremiah Ngondi, Jialiang Zhao, Aba Ange Elvis, Olga Nelson Amiel, Nicholas Muraguri, Djore Dezoumbe, Shekhar Sharma, Martin Kabore, Biruck Kebede, Cece Nieba, Michael Masika, Souleymane Yeo, Genet Kiflu, Upendo Mwingira, Siphetthavong Sisaleumsak, Brian Chu, George Kabona, Andeberhan Tesfazion Woldendrias, Asad Aslam Khan, Michael Gichangi, Sossinou Awoussi, Patrick Turyaguma, Drabo Francois, Simon Brooker, Zaid Abdulnafea, André Goepogui, Djouma Nembot Fabrice, Anthony W. Solomon, Khumbo Kalua, Fatma Juma Omar, Wilfried Batcho, Michael Dejene, Paul Courtright, Rebecca Willis, Jaouad Hammou, Rebecca M. Flueckiger, Abdallahi Ould Minnih, Jambi Garap, Gloria Marina Serrano Chavez, Sailesh Mishra, Jean Ndjemba, Beido Nassirou, Isaac K. Phiri, Francisco Zambroni, Amza Abdou, Kamal Hashim Bennawi, and Khamphoua Southisombath
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Geography ,Trachoma ,Blindness ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,medicine ,Age and sex ,Raw data ,medicine.disease ,Trichiasis ,Confidence interval ,Demography ,District level - Abstract
BackgroundTrichiasis is present when one or more eyelashes touches the eye. Uncorrected, it can cause blindness. Accurate estimates of numbers affected, and their geographical distribution, help guide resource allocation.MethodsWe obtained district-level trichiasis prevalence estimates for 44 endemic and previously-endemic countries. We used (1) the most recent data for a district, if more than one estimate was available; (2) age- and sex-standardized corrections of historic estimates, where raw data were available; (3) historic estimates adjusted using a mean adjustment factor for districts where raw data were unavailable; and (4) expert assessment of available data for districts for which no prevalence estimates were available.FindingsInternally age- and sex-standardized data represented 1,355 districts and contributed 662 thousand cases (95% confidence interval [CI] 324 thousand-1.1 million) to the global total. age- and sex-standardized district-level prevalence estimates differed from raw estimates by a mean factor of 0.45 (range 0.03-2.28). Previously non-standardized estimates for 398 districts, adjusted by ×0.45, contributed a further 411 thousand cases (95% CI 283-557 thousand). Eight countries retained previous estimates, contributing 848 thousand cases (95% CI 225 thousand-1.7 million). New expert assessments in 14 countries contributed 862 thousand cases (95% CI 228 thousand-1.7 million). The global trichiasis burden in 2016 was 2.8 million cases (95% CI 1.1-5.2 million).InterpretationThe 2016 estimate is lower than previous estimates, probably due to more and better data; scale-up of trichiasis management services; and reductions in incidence due to lower active trachoma prevalence.Author SummaryAs an individual with trichiasis blinks, the eyelashes abrade the cornea, which can lead to corneal opacity and blindness. Through high quality surgery, which involves correcting the position of the in-turned eyelid, it is possible to reduce the number of people with trichiasis. An accurate estimate of the number of persons with trichiasis and their geographical distribution are needed in order to effectively align resources for surgery and other necessary services. We obtained district-level trichiasis prevalence estimates for 44 endemic and previously-endemic countries. We used the most recently available data and expert assessments to estimate the global burden of trichiasis. We estimated that in 2016 the global burden was 2.8 million cases (95% CI 1.1-5.2 million).The 2016 estimate is lower than previous estimates, probably due to more and better data; scale-up of trichiasis management services; and reductions in incidence due to lower active trachoma prevalence.
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- 2018
19. Perceptions, knowledge, attitudes and practices for the prevention and control of lymphatic filariasis in Conakry, Republic of Guinea
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Benjamin G. Koudou, Kathrin Heitz-Tokpa, Moses J. Bockarie, Oumar Barry, Marie L. Niamey, Andre Goepogui, Mamadou S. Baldé, Stefanie J. Krauth, Aboulaye Barry, Jürg Utzinger, and Bernard L. Kouassi
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Adult ,Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,wc_880 ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,030231 tropical medicine ,wa_395 ,Elephantiasis ,Disease ,26bc6fb8 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mass drug administration ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Lymphatic filariasis ,Qualitative Research ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,wa_30 ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,w_20.5 ,Infectious Diseases ,Lymphatic system ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Insect Science ,Parasitology ,Health education ,Female ,Guinea ,Perception ,business - Abstract
Little is known about the perceptions, attitudes and practices of lymphatic filariasis in Conakry, Republic of Guinea. Yet, such knowledge is important for an optimal design and implementation of setting-specific prevention and control measures. We conducted a cross-sectional study using a mixed methods approach. Qualitative data related to people's general experience with lymphatic filariasis, their perception of the causes of the disease, the onset of elephantiasis, care-seeking behaviour and the socioeconomic impact of lymphatic filariasis were collected by in-depth interviews with 85 respondents. Quantitative data related to strategies for prevention and the knowledge of the causes of the disease were collected by interviewing 429 people. A total of 514 individuals (313 females and 201 males), aged 10-84 years, participated. Most participants were well aware of lymphatic filariasis and they recognized the disease mainly by its disfiguring manifestation, collectively termed "elephantiasis" or "leg-swelling disease". Morbidity patterns due to filarial infection showed an increase with age (from 30 to 50 years) independent of sex. Most patients with lymphatic filariasis abandoned their jobs (73.9%) or sought other work (21.7%). The main perceived causes of acquiring lymphatic filariasis were of supernatural origin (as stated by 8.7% of patients and 5.7% of healthy subjects), while mosquito bites were mentioned by fewer participants (4.3% of patients and 4.2% of healthy subjects). A number of other causes were reported that relate to both medical and non-medical conceptions. The study also identified socioeconomic impairments and stigmatization due to elephantiasis. Taken together, community perception of lymphatic filariasis in Conakry is influenced by sociocultural conceptions. Appropriate health education campaigns aimed at enhancing community understanding of the transmission of lymphatic filariasis are required to increase the success of mass drug administration implemented for the elimination of this disease. There is a need for a morbidity management programme to alleviate lymphatic filariasis-related physical and emotional burden in Conakry. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier B.V.]
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- 2018
20. Sanitation and water supply coverage thresholds associated with active trachoma: Modeling cross-sectional data from 13 countries
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Tawfik Al-Khatib, Alexandre L. Pavluck, Fasihah Taleo, Jean Ndjemba, Ana Bakhtiari, Khamphoua Southisombath, Wilfrid Batcho, Khaled Amer, André Goepogui, Paul Courtright, Matthew C. Freeman, Khumbo Kalua, Sophie Boisson, Mariamo Mbofana, Biruck Kebede, Oliver Sokana, Joshua V. Garn, Caleb Mpyet, Michael Dejene, Nicholas Olobio, Colin K Macleod, Rebecca Willis, Anthony W. Solomon, and Kouakou IIunga Marie Madeleine
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Bacterial Diseases ,Sanitation ,Eye Diseases ,Water supply ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Global Health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hygiene ,Natural Resources ,Global health ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Prevalence ,Public and Occupational Health ,Child ,Immune Response ,media_common ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,1. No poverty ,6. Clean water ,3. Good health ,Geography ,Infectious Diseases ,Trachoma ,Child, Preschool ,Water Resources ,Anatomy ,Environmental Health ,Research Article ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030231 tropical medicine ,Immunology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signs and Symptoms ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Ocular System ,Water Supply ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Humans ,Improved sanitation ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Ecology and Environmental Sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Infant ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Water resources ,Health Care ,Ophthalmology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Face ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Latrine ,Eyes ,business ,Head - Abstract
Background Facial cleanliness and sanitation are postulated to reduce trachoma transmission, but there are no previous data on community-level herd protection thresholds. We characterize associations between active trachoma, access to improved sanitation facilities, and access to improved water sources for the purpose of face washing, with the aim of estimating community-level or herd protection thresholds. Methods and findings We used cluster-sampled Global Trachoma Mapping Project data on 884,850 children aged 1–9 years from 354,990 households in 13 countries. We employed multivariable mixed-effects modified Poisson regression models to assess the relationships between water and sanitation coverage and trachomatous inflammation—follicular (TF). We observed lower TF prevalence among those with household-level access to improved sanitation (prevalence ratio, PR = 0.87; 95%CI: 0.83–0.91), and household-level access to an improved washing water source in the residence/yard (PR = 0.81; 95%CI: 0.75–0.88). Controlling for household-level water and latrine access, we found evidence of community-level protection against TF for children living in communities with high sanitation coverage (PR80–90% = 0.87; 95%CI: 0.73–1.02; PR90–100% = 0.76; 95%CI: 0.67–0.85). Community sanitation coverage levels greater than 80% were associated with herd protection against TF (PR = 0.77; 95%CI: 0.62–0.97)—that is, lower TF in individuals whose households lacked individual sanitation but who lived in communities with high sanitation coverage. For community-level water coverage, there was no apparent threshold, although we observed lower TF among several of the higher deciles of community-level water coverage. Conclusions Our study provides insights into the community water and sanitation coverage levels that might be required to best control trachoma. Our results suggest access to adequate water and sanitation can be important components in working towards the 2020 target of eliminating trachoma as a public health problem., Author summary Trachoma is the leading infectious cause of blindness. Previous association studies have primarily assessed household-level exposures, ignoring potential community-level protection from water and sanitation coverage in neighboring houses. There is biological plausibility that increased community-level coverage of facial cleanliness and/or sanitation could reduce trachoma transmission, even to non-face washers or to those without access to sanitation. Our study investigates relationships between active trachoma and community-level coverage of sanitation and water, is novel in concept and unprecedented in scale, including data from trachoma-endemic areas of 13 countries. Our findings support the plausibility of community-level or herd protection from trachoma with increasing water and sanitation coverage. We also observed lower TF prevalence among those with household-level access to sanitation and water. Our results suggest access to adequate water and sanitation can be important components in working towards the 2020 target of eliminating trachoma as a public health problem.
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- 2018
21. The global burden of trichiasis in 2016
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Flueckiger, Rebecca M., primary, Courtright, Paul, additional, Abdala, Mariamo, additional, Abdou, Amza, additional, Abdulnafea, Zaid, additional, Al-Khatib, Tawfik K., additional, Amer, Khaled, additional, Amiel, Olga Nelson, additional, Awoussi, Sossinou, additional, Bakhtiari, Ana, additional, Batcho, Wilfried, additional, Bella, Assumpta Lucienne, additional, Bennawi, Kamal Hashim, additional, Brooker, Simon J., additional, Chu, Brian K., additional, Dejene, Michael, additional, Dezoumbe, Djore, additional, Elshafie, Balgesa Elkheir, additional, Elvis, Aba Ange, additional, Fabrice, Djouma Nembot, additional, Omar, Fatma Juma, additional, François, Missamou, additional, François, Drabo, additional, Garap, Jambi, additional, Gichangi, Michael, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Hammou, Jaouad, additional, Kadri, Boubacar, additional, Kabona, George, additional, Kabore, Martin, additional, Kalua, Khumbo, additional, Kamugisha, Mathias, additional, Kebede, Biruck, additional, Keita, Kaba, additional, Khan, Asad Aslam, additional, Kiflu, Genet, additional, Yibi, Makoy, additional, Mackline, Garae, additional, Macleod, Colin, additional, Manangazira, Portia, additional, Masika, Michael P., additional, Massangaie, Marilia, additional, Mduluza, Takafira, additional, Meno, Nabicassa, additional, Midzi, Nicholas, additional, Minnih, Abdallahi Ould, additional, Mishra, Sailesh, additional, Mpyet, Caleb, additional, Muraguri, Nicholas, additional, Mwingira, Upendo, additional, Nassirou, Beido, additional, Ndjemba, Jean, additional, Nieba, Cece, additional, Ngondi, Jeremiah, additional, Olobio, Nicholas, additional, Pavluck, Alex, additional, Phiri, Isaac, additional, Pullan, Rachel, additional, Qureshi, Babar, additional, Sarr, Boubacar, additional, Seiha, Do, additional, Chávez, Gloria Marina Serrano, additional, Sharma, Shekhar, additional, Sisaleumsak, Siphetthavong, additional, Southisombath, Khamphoua, additional, Stevens, Gretchen, additional, Woldendrias, Andeberhan Tesfazion, additional, Traoré, Lamine, additional, Turyaguma, Patrick, additional, Willis, Rebecca, additional, Yaya, Georges, additional, Yeo, Souleymane, additional, Zambroni, Francisco, additional, Zhao, Jialiang, additional, and Solomon, Anthony W., additional
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- 2019
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22. Gender equity in mass drug administration for neglected tropical diseases: data from 16 countries
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Cohn, Daniel A, primary, Kelly, Maureen P, additional, Bhandari, Kalpana, additional, Zoerhoff, Kathryn L, additional, Batcho, Wilfrid E, additional, Drabo, François, additional, Negussu, Nebiyu, additional, Marfo, Benjamin, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Lemoine, Jean-Frantz, additional, Ganefa, Sitti, additional, Massangaie, Marilia, additional, Rimal, Pradip, additional, Gnandou, Issa, additional, Anagbogu, Ifeoma N, additional, Ndiaye, Mamadou, additional, Bah, Yakuba Madina, additional, Mwingira, Upendo J, additional, Awoussi, Marcel S, additional, Tukahebwa, Edridah M, additional, Stelmach, Rachel D, additional, Mingkwan, Pia C, additional, Pou, Bolivar, additional, Koroma, Joseph B, additional, Rotondo, Lisa A, additional, Kraemer, John D, additional, and Baker, Margaret C, additional
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- 2019
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23. Epidemiology of Trachoma in Health District of Fria in 2014
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Sylla, Aly, primary, Bakayoko, Seydou, additional, Louis Lamah, Pierre, additional, Ouendouno, Alexis, additional, Sylla, Amadou, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Romuald Elien Gagnan Yan-Zaou-Tou, Rodrigue, additional, Cheikh Nagnan Diabate, Rahim, additional, and Pobanou Thera, Japhet, additional
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- 2019
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24. The global burden of trichiasis in 2016
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Alex Pavluck, Nicholas Midzi, Brian Chu, Rebecca Willis, Boubacar Kadri, M.L. Kamugisha, Simon Brooker, Djouma Nembot Fabrice, Aba Ange Elvis, Zaid Abdulnafea, Colin MacLeod, Khumbo Kalua, Andeberhan Tesfazion Woldendrias, Upendo Mwingira, Jeremiah Ngondi, Caleb Mpyet, Gretchen A Stevens, Assumpta Lucienne Bella, Garae Mackline, Kamal Hashim Bennawi, Do Seiha, Ana Bakhtiari, Rebecca M. Flueckiger, Wilfried Batcho, Abdallahi Ould Minnih, Georges Yaya, Khamphoua Southisombath, Isaac K. Phiri, Olga Nelson Amiel, Mariamo Abdala, Fatma Juma Omar, Anthony W. Solomon, Francisco Zambroni, Michael Dejene, Jaouad Hammou, Khaled Amer, Genet Kiflu, Portia Manangazira, Tawfik Al-Khatib, Jambi Garap, Marilia Massangaie, Gloria Marina Serrano Chavez, Biruck Kebede, Amza Abdou, Asad Aslam Khan, Paul Courtright, Nicholas Muraguri, Beido Nassirou, Martin Kabore, Djore Dezoumbe, Michael Gichangi, Jialiang Zhao, Drabo Francois, Rachel L. Pullan, Balgesa Elkheir Elshafie, Missamou François, Kaba Keita, Babar Qureshi, Nicholas Olobio, Taka Fira Mduluza, Cece Nieba, Michael Masika, Souleymane Yeo, Siphetthavong Sisaleumsak, Shekhar Sharma, Makoy S. Yibi, Sailesh Mishra, Jean Ndjemba, Lamine Traoré, André Goepogui, George Kabona, Sossinou Awoussi, Nabicassa Meno, Patrick Turyaguma, and Boubacar Sarr
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Male ,Bacterial Diseases ,Eye Diseases ,Stratigraphy ,RC955-962 ,Population Dynamics ,Prevalence ,Social Sciences ,Surveys ,Global Health ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Global health ,Public and Occupational Health ,National Security ,Data Management ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Geology ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Trachoma ,Research Design ,Female ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Raw data ,Risk assessment ,Research Article ,Neglected Tropical Diseases ,Adult ,Trichiasis ,Computer and Information Sciences ,Adolescent ,Political Science ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Young Adult ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Survey Research ,Population Biology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Tropical Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Geographic Distribution ,Confidence interval ,Ophthalmology ,Earth Sciences ,Demography - Abstract
Background Trichiasis is present when one or more eyelashes touches the eye. Uncorrected, it can cause blindness. Accurate estimates of numbers affected, and their geographical distribution, help guide resource allocation. Methods We obtained district-level trichiasis prevalence estimates in adults for 44 endemic and previously-endemic countries. We used (1) the most recent data for a district, if more than one estimate was available; (2) age- and sex-standardized corrections of historic estimates, where raw data were available; (3) historic estimates adjusted using a mean adjustment factor for districts where raw data were unavailable; and (4) expert assessment of available data for districts for which no prevalence estimates were available. Findings Internally age- and sex-standardized data represented 1,355 districts and contributed 662 thousand cases (95% confidence interval [CI] 324 thousand–1.1 million) to the global total. Age- and sex-standardized district-level prevalence estimates differed from raw estimates by a mean factor of 0.45 (range 0.03–2.28). Previously non- stratified estimates for 398 districts, adjusted by ×0.45, contributed a further 411 thousand cases (95% CI 283–557 thousand). Eight countries retained previous estimates, contributing 848 thousand cases (95% CI 225 thousand-1.7 million). New expert assessments in 14 countries contributed 862 thousand cases (95% CI 228 thousand–1.7 million). The global trichiasis burden in 2016 was 2.8 million cases (95% CI 1.1–5.2 million). Interpretation The 2016 estimate is lower than previous estimates, probably due to more and better data; scale-up of trichiasis management services; and reductions in incidence due to lower active trachoma prevalence., Author summary As an individual with trichiasis blinks, the eyelashes abrade the cornea, which can lead to corneal opacity and blindness. Through high quality surgery, which involves altering the position of the eyelid margin, it is possible to reduce the number of people with trichiasis. Accurate estimates of the number of persons with trichiasis and their geographical distribution are needed in order to effectively align resources for surgery and other necessary services. We obtained district-level trichiasis prevalence estimates for 44 endemic and previously-endemic countries. We used the most recently available data and expert assessments to estimate the global burden of trichiasis. We estimated that in 2016 the global burden was 2.8 million cases (95% CI 1.1–5.2 million). The 2016 estimate is lower than previous estimates, probably due to more and better data; scale-up of trichiasis management services; and reductions in incidence due to lower active trachoma prevalence.
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- 2019
25. Epidemiology of Trachoma in Health District of Fria in 2014
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Rahim Cheikh Nagnan Diabate, Seydou Bakayoko, André Goepogui, Amadou Sylla, Japhet Pobanou Thera, Aly Sylla, Pierre Louis Lamah, Rodrigue Romuald Elien Gagnan Yan-zaou-tou, and Alexis Ouendouno
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education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Population ,Endemic area ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,eye diseases ,World health ,Trachoma ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Risk factor ,education ,business ,Chlamydia trachomatis - Abstract
Introduction: Trachoma is a chronic keratoconjunctivitis caused by Chlamydia trachomatis bacteria. An epidemiological study was conducted in 2014 in the Health District of Fria (Northern Guinea province) to assess the prevalence of active and scar trachoma in a suspected endemic area of approximately 120-135 inhabitants. This is a transversal, descriptive, clustered survey of a representative sample of the population according to the standard protocol recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). The clinical review of target populations was conducted according to WHO codification. Of the 3173 subjects recorded, 3159 subjects consented to be examined or an examination rate of 99,55%. The prevalence of active trachoma was 8.67% (CI at 95% = 7.2 – 10.4). The prevalence of scar trachoma was 0.21%. The principal sources of water for households are surface water (41%) and drilling water (41%). The prevalence of active and scar trachoma, risk factors are discussed. In our study, trachoma appeared as a public health problem in the health district of Fria. The prevalence of active and scar trachoma is approaching WHO limit. Poor hygiene was the main risk factor. The implementation of the different components of the strategy SAFE in this locality is a necessity.
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- 2019
26. The global burden of trichiasis in 2016
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Flueckiger, Rebecca M, primary, Courtright, Paul, additional, Abdala, Mariamo, additional, Abdou, Amza, additional, Abdulnafea, Zaid, additional, Al-Khatib, Tawfik K, additional, Amer, Khaled, additional, Amiel, Olga Nelson, additional, Awoussi, Sossinou, additional, Bakhtiari, Ana, additional, Batcho, Wilfried, additional, Bella, Assumpta Lucienne, additional, Bennawi, Kamal Hashim, additional, Brooker, Simon J, additional, Chu, Brian K, additional, Dejene, Michael, additional, Dezoumbe, Djore, additional, Elshafie, Balgesa Elkheir, additional, Elvis, Aba Ange, additional, Fabrice, Djouma Nembot, additional, Omar, Fatma Juma, additional, François, Missamou, additional, François, Drabo, additional, Garap, Jambi, additional, Gichangi, Michael, additional, Goepogui, André, additional, Hammou, Jaouad, additional, Kadri, Boubacar, additional, Kabona, George, additional, Kabore, Martin, additional, Kalua, Khumbo, additional, Kamugisha, Mathias, additional, Kebede, Biruck, additional, Keita, Kaba, additional, Khan, Asad Aslam, additional, Kiflu, Genet, additional, Mackline, Garae, additional, Macleod, Colin, additional, Manangazira, Portia, additional, Masika, Michael P, additional, Massangaie, Marilia, additional, Mduluza, Taka Fira, additional, Meno, Nabicassa, additional, Midzi, Nicholas, additional, Minnih, Abdallahi Ould, additional, Mishra, Sailesh, additional, Mpyet, Caleb, additional, Muraguri, Nicholas, additional, Mwingira, Upendo, additional, Nassirou, Beido, additional, Ndjemba, Jean, additional, Nieba, Cece, additional, Ngondi, Jeremiah, additional, Olobio, Nicholas, additional, Pavluck, Alex, additional, Phiri, Isaac, additional, Pullan, Rachel, additional, Qureshi, Babar, additional, Sarr, Boubacar, additional, Seiha, Do, additional, Serrano Chávez, Gloria Marina, additional, Sharma, Shekhar, additional, Sisaleumsak, Siphetthavong, additional, Southisombath, Khamphoua, additional, Stevens, Gretchen, additional, Woldendrias, Andeberhan Tesfazion, additional, Traoré, Lamine, additional, Turyaguma, Patrick, additional, Willis, Rebecca, additional, Yaya, Georges, additional, Yeo, Souleymane, additional, Zambroni, Francisco, additional, Zhao, Jialiang, additional, and Solomon, Anthony W, additional
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- 2018
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27. Sanitation and water supply coverage thresholds associated with active trachoma: Modeling cross-sectional data from 13 countries
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Garn, Joshua V., primary, Boisson, Sophie, additional, Willis, Rebecca, additional, Bakhtiari, Ana, additional, al-Khatib, Tawfik, additional, Amer, Khaled, additional, Batcho, Wilfrid, additional, Courtright, Paul, additional, Dejene, Michael, additional, Goepogui, Andre, additional, Kalua, Khumbo, additional, Kebede, Biruck, additional, Macleod, Colin K., additional, Madeleine, Kouakou IIunga Marie, additional, Mbofana, Mariamo Saide Abdala, additional, Mpyet, Caleb, additional, Ndjemba, Jean, additional, Olobio, Nicholas, additional, Pavluck, Alexandre L., additional, Sokana, Oliver, additional, Southisombath, Khamphoua, additional, Taleo, Fasihah, additional, Solomon, Anthony W., additional, and Freeman, Matthew C., additional
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- 2018
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28. Assessing the presence of Wuchereria bancrofti in vector and human populations from urban communities in Conakry, Guinea
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Charles A. Narh, Lamia Diakité, Benjamin G. Koudou, Samuel Dadzie, Jürg Utzinger, Bernard L. Kouassi, Sandra A. King, Baldé S. Mamadou, Daniel A. Boakye, Moses J. Bockarie, Dziedzom K. de Souza, and Andre Goepogui
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wc_880 ,Veterinary medicine ,Urban Population ,Culex ,Population ,wa_395 ,medicine.disease_cause ,wa_110 ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Transmission ,Animals ,Humans ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,education ,Lymphatic filariasis ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Research ,Anopheles ,Nucleic acid amplification technique ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Culicidae ,Infectious Diseases ,qx_650 ,Mass drug administration ,Parasitology ,Antigens, Helminth ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Guinea ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques - Abstract
Background\ud \ud The Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis was launched in 2000 with the goal of interrupting transmission of lymphatic filariasis (LF) through multiple rounds of mass drug administration (MDA). In Guinea, there is evidence of ongoing LF transmission, but little is known about the most densely populated parts of the country, including the capital Conakry. In order to guide the LF control and elimination efforts, serological and entomological surveys were carried out to determine whether or not LF transmission occurs in Conakry.\ud \ud Methods\ud \ud The prevalence of circulating filarial antigen (CFA) of Wuchereria bancrofti was assessed by an immuno-chromatography test (ICT) in people recruited from all five districts of Conakry. Mosquitoes were collected over a 1-year period, in 195 households in 15 communities. A proportion of mosquitoes were analysed for W. bancrofti, using dissection, loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay and conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR).\ud \ud Results\ud \ud CFA test revealed no infection in the 611 individuals examined. A total of 14,334 mosquitoes were collected; 14,135 Culex (98.6 %), 161 Anopheles (1.1 %) and a few other species. Out of 1,312 Culex spp. (9.3 %) and 51 An. gambiae (31.7 %) dissected, none was infected with any stage of the W. bancrofti parasite. However, the LAMP assay revealed that 1.8 % of An. gambiae and 0.31 % of Culex spp. were positive, while PCR determined respective prevalences of 0 % and 0.19 %.\ud \ud Conclusions\ud \ud This study revealed the presence of W. bancrofti DNA in mosquitoes, despite the apparent absence of infection in the human population. Although MDA interventions are not recommended where the prevalence of ICT is below 1 %, the entomological results are suggestive of the circulation of the parasite in the population of Conakry. Therefore, rigorous surveillance is still warranted so that LF transmission in Conakry would be identified rapidly and adequate responses being implemented.
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- 2015
29. Low prevalence of Plasmodium and absence of malaria transmission in Conakry, Guinea: prospects for elimination
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Kouassi, Bernard L., primary, de Souza, Dziedzom K., additional, Goepogui, Andre, additional, Balde, Siradiou M., additional, Diakité, Lamia, additional, Sagno, Arsène, additional, Djameh, Georgina I., additional, Chammartin, Frédérique, additional, Vounatsou, Penelope, additional, Bockarie, Moses J., additional, Utzinger, Jürg, additional, and Koudou, Benjamin G., additional
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- 2016
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30. Améliorer les pratiques professionnelles pharmaceutiques par du tutorat : effets sur la retention des personnes vivant avec le VIH (PVVIH) dans quatre sites de prise en charge du VIH en Guinée-Conakry
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K. Doumbouya, H. Yous, M. Kourouma, A. Lannuzel, C. Deze, S. Goepogui, M. Diallo, M.A. Diallo, and E. Guillard
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Pharmacology (medical) - Published
- 2014
31. Assessing the presence of Wuchereria bancrofti in vector and human populations from urban communities in Conakry, Guinea
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Kouassi, Bernard L., primary, de Souza, Dziedzom K., additional, Goepogui, Andre, additional, Narh, Charles A., additional, King, Sandra A., additional, Mamadou, Baldé S., additional, Diakité, Lamia, additional, Dadzie, Samuel K., additional, Boakye, Daniel A., additional, Utzinger, Jürg, additional, Bockarie, Moses J., additional, and Koudou, Benjamin G., additional
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- 2015
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32. Efficacy and safety of short duration azithromycin eye drops versus azithromycin single oral dose for the treatment of trachoma in children: a randomised, controlled, double-masked clinical trial
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André Goepogui, Tristan Bourcier, Pascale Pouliquen, Tayyab Afghani, L. Delval, Pablo Goldschmidt, P.-Y. Robert, and Isabelle Cochereau
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Eye disease ,Administration, Oral ,Azithromycin ,Drug Administration Schedule ,law.invention ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Laboratory Science - Extended Report ,Adverse effect ,Child ,Trachoma ,business.industry ,Eye drop ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Surgery ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Clinical trial ,Ophthalmology ,Treatment Outcome ,Editorial ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Ophthalmic Solutions ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aims: Efficacy and safety of a short-duration treatment of azithromycin 1.5% eye drops versus oral azithromycin to treat active trachoma. Methods: Randomised, controlled, double-masked, double-dummy, non-inferiority explanatory study including 670 children from Guinea Conakry and Pakistan if: 1–10 years old; active trachoma (TF+TI0 or TF+TI+ on simplified World Health Organisation (WHO) scale). Three groups received either: azithromycin 1.5% eye drops twice daily for 2 days, for 3 days or azithromycin single 20 mg/kg oral dose. Patients’ contacts were treated whenever possible. Clinical evaluation was performed using a binocular loupe. Primary efficacy variable was the cure (no active trachoma (TF0)) at day 60. Non-inferiority margin for difference between cure rates was 10%. Results: Cure rate in per protocol set was as follows: 93.0%, 96.3% and 96.6% in 2-day group 3-day group, and oral treatment group, respectively. Azithromycin 1.5% groups were non-inferior to oral azithromycin. The intend to treat (ITT) analysis supported the results. Clinical re-emergence rate was low: 4.2%. Ocular tolerance was similar for all groups. No treatment related adverse events were reported. Logistic regression analyses found prognostic factors such as: country (p Conclusions: In active trachoma, azithromycin eye drops twice daily for 2 or 3 days are as efficient as the WHO’s reference treatment and represent an innovative alternative to oral azithromycin.
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- 2006
33. Detection by broad‐range real‐time PCR assay of Chlamydia species infecting human and animals
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Hidayeth Rostane, Christine Chaumeil, Mamadou Sow, Pablo Goldschmidt, L. Batellier, and André Goepogui
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DNA, Bacterial ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,urologic and male genital diseases ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,law ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Chlamydiaceae ,Laboratory Science - Extended Report ,Chlamydia ,Polymerase chain reaction ,DNA Primers ,Chlamydia psittaci ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Chlamydia Infections ,Chlamydophila pneumoniae ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Trachoma ,Chlamydophila psittaci ,Chlamydiales - Abstract
Tests available for molecular diagnosis of chlamydial infections detect Chlamydiatrachomatis, but do not find other Chlamydia species associated with genital, ophthalmic, cardiovascular, respiratory or neurological diseases. The routine detection of all Chlamydia species would improve the prognosis of infected people and guide therapeutic choices.To design and validate a sensitive, specific, reproducible, inexpensive and easy-to-perform assay to quantify most Chlamydia species.Primers and probe were selected using the gene coding for the 16S rRNA. The detection limits were assessed for suspensions of Chlamydia trachomatis, Chlamydia psittaci and Chlamydia pneumoniae. The performance of this test was compared with that of two commercial kits (Amplicor-Roche and Artus) on 100 samples obtained from children with trachoma.The detection capacities for Chlamydia trachomatis of the broad-range real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were similar or slightly better than those obtained with commercial kits (0.2 copies of DNA/microl). Only the broad-range PCR identified specimens containing Chlamydia psittaci and Chlamydia pneumoniae. The commercial kits and the broad-range assay detected Chlamydia species in 5% and in 11%, respectively, of samples from children with trachoma.This new real-time PCR offers a sensitive, reproducible assay that produces results in3 h. With panels of quantified Chlamydia species, this real-time PCR can be run with all real-time PCR equipment. Larger trials are needed to confirm the utility of this test in diagnosis and for therapeutic follow-up.
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- 2006
34. Améliorer les pratiques professionnelles pharmaceutiques par du tutorat : effets sur la retention des personnes vivant avec le VIH (PVVIH) dans quatre sites de prise en charge du VIH en Guinée-Conakry
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Lannuzel, A., primary, Goepogui, S., additional, Doumbouya, K., additional, Diallo, M.A., additional, Kourouma, M., additional, Diallo, M., additional, Yous, H., additional, Deze, C., additional, and Guillard, E., additional
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- 2014
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35. 322 Azithromycine collyre : un nouveau concept du traitement du trachome
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Cochereau, I., primary, Goldschmidt, P., additional, Goepogui, A., additional, Denis, F., additional, Bebear, C., additional, Robert, P.Y., additional, and De Barbeyrac, B., additional
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- 2007
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36. Efficacy and safety of short duration azithromycin eye drops versus azithromycin single oral dose for the treatment of trachoma in children: a randomised, controlled, double-masked clinical trial
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Cochereau, I., primary, Goldschmidt, P., additional, Goepogui, A., additional, Afghani, T., additional, Delval, L., additional, Pouliquen, P., additional, Bourcier, T., additional, and Robert, P.-Y., additional
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- 2006
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37. 322 Azithromycine collyre : un nouveau concept du traitement du trachome
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André Goepogui, Isabelle Cochereau, B. De Barbeyrac, F. Denis, Christiane Bébéar, Pablo Goldschmidt, and P.-Y. Robert
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Ophthalmology - Abstract
Introduction L’azithromycine est le traitement de reference du trachome par voie orale. La mise au point d’une forme collyre, souhaitee par l’OMS, elargit l’arsenal therapeutique contre une des principales causes de cecite dans le monde. Le but de cette etude est d’evaluer l’efficacite du T1225, premier collyre a l’azithromycine 1.5 %, versus l’azithromycine orale dans le traitement du trachome. Materiels et Methodes Etude multicentrique randomisee, controlee, en double insu, double placebo (collyre + suspension pediatrique), realisee dans 21 villages de Guinee et 6 villages du Pakistan, incluant 670 enfants âges de 1 a 10 ans presentant un trachome inflammatoire actif. Trois groupes ont ete constitues : T1225 2 fois par jour pendant 2 jours (224 patients) ou pendant 3 jours (225 patients), azithromycine orale en une prise unique 20 mg/kg (221 patients). L’efficacite clinique, microbiologique par PCR et la tolerance etaient evaluees a J2, J30 et J60. La variable d’efficacite primaire etait le taux de guerison clinique a J60 dans l’œil le plus gravement atteint. Resultats A J60, le taux de guerison clinique dans la population Per Protocol etait de 93,0 % (T1225 2-jours), 96,3 % (T1225 3-jours) et 96,6 % (dose orale). Les deux schemas posologiques de T1225 etaient non inferieurs a la dose orale d’azithromycine. Les taux de guerison microbiologique etaient de 68,5 % (T1225 2-jours), 84,2 % (T1225 3-jours) et 82,1 % (dose orale). Il n’y avait pas de difference significative entre les groupes de traitement concernant l’evaluation de l’efficacite par l’investigateur. Aucun evenement indesirable n’a ete impute au traitement. Il n’y avait pas de difference significative entre les groupes de traitement concernant l’emergence d’evenements indesirables et la tolerance. Discussion T1225 administre deux fois par jour pendant 2 jours ou pendant 3 jours est aussi efficace que l’azithromycine orale, traitement de reference du trachome. Sa tolerance est bonne. Conclusion T1225 est un traitement efficace et bien tolere du trachome, simple et court, specifiquement ophtalmologique et peu detournable. Il constitue une alternative au traitement de reference oral, y compris chez les tres jeunes enfants chez qui l’azithromycine orale n’est pas autorisee.
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- 2007
38. Low prevalence of Plasmodium and absence of malaria transmission in Conakry, Guinea: prospects for elimination
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Frédérique Chammartin, Moses J. Bockarie, Siradiou M. Balde, Jürg Utzinger, Lamia Diakité, Bernard L. Kouassi, Penelope Vounatsou, Benjamin G. Koudou, Dziedzom K. de Souza, Andre Goepogui, Georgina I. Djameh, and Arsène Sagno
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Plasmodium ,Culex ,Anopheles gambiae ,030231 tropical medicine ,Plasmodium vivax ,Plasmodium falciparum ,wc_765 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anopheles ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Transmission ,Bio-ecology ,Animals ,Humans ,Cities ,biology ,Research ,fungi ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,wc_750 ,Malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,qx_650 ,qx_135 ,Child, Preschool ,Guinea ,Female - Abstract
Over the past 15 years, mortality and morbidity due to malaria have been reduced substantially in sub-Saharan Africa and local elimination has been achieved in some settings. This study addresses the bio-ecology of larval and adult stages of malaria vectors, Plasmodium infection in Anopheles gambiae s.l. in the city of Conakry, Guinea, and discusses the prospect for malaria elimination. Water bodies were prospected to identify potential mosquito breeding sites for 6 days each in the dry season (January 2013) and in the rainy season (August 2013), using the dipping method. Adult mosquitoes were collected in 15 communities in the five districts of Conakry using exit traps and indoor spraying catches over a 1-year period (November 2012 to October 2013). Molecular approaches were employed for identification of Anopheles species, including An. coluzzii and An. gambiae s.s. Individual An. gambiae mosquitoes were tested for Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax sporozoites using the VecTest™ malaria panel assay and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. A systematic research of Ministry of Health statistical yearbooks was performed to determine malaria prevalence in children below the age of 5 years. Culex larval breeding sites were observed in large numbers throughout Conakry in both seasons. While Anopheles larval breeding sites were less frequent than Culex breeding sites, there was a high odds of finding An. gambiae mosquito larvae in agricultural sites during the rainy season. Over the 1-year study period, a total of 14,334 adult mosquitoes were collected; 14,135 Culex (98.6 %) and 161 (1.1 %) from the An. gambiae complex. One-hundred and twelve Anopheles mosquitoes, mainly collected from rice fields and gardens, were subjected to molecular analysis. Most of the mosquitoes were An. gambiae s.s. (n = 102; 91.1 %) while the remaining 10 (8.9 %) were An. melas. The molecular M form of An. gambiae s.s. was predominant (n = 89; 79.5 %). The proportions of kdr genotype in the An. gambiae s.s. M and S form were 65.2 and 81.8 % (n = 9), respectively. No sporozoite infection were detected in any of the mosquitoes tested. The prevalence of Plasmodium recorded in children aged below 5 years was relatively low and varied between 2.2 and 7.6 % from 2009 to 2012. The low density of larval and adult stages of Anopheles mosquitoes, the absence of infected An. gambiae species and the low prevalence of Plasmodium in under 5-year-old children are important features that might facilitate malaria elimination in Conakry. The heterogeneity in species composition and resistance profiles call for vector control interventions that are tailored to the local bio-ecological setting.
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