16 results on '"Ringwald, B"'
Search Results
2. Finding the missing men with tuberculosis: a participatory approach to identify priority interventions in Uganda.
- Author
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Nidoi J, Pulford J, Wingfield T, Rachael T, Ringwald B, Katagira W, Muttamba W, Nattimba M, Namuli Z, and Kirenga B
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- Humans, Male, Uganda epidemiology, Health Personnel, Mass Screening methods, Adult, Tuberculosis diagnosis, Tuberculosis therapy, Patient Acceptance of Health Care
- Abstract
Gender impacts exposure and vulnerability to tuberculosis (TB) evidenced by a higher prevalence of both TB disease and missed TB diagnoses among men, who significantly contribute to new TB infections. We present the formative research phase of a study, which used participatory methods to identify gender-specific interventions for systematic screening of TB among men in Uganda. Health facility-level data were collected at four Ugandan general hospitals (Kawolo, Gombe, Mityana and Nakaseke) among 70 TB stakeholders, including healthcare workers, TB survivors, policymakers and researchers. Using health-seeking pathways, they delineated and compared men's ideal and actual step-by-step TB health-seeking processes to identify barriers to TB care. The stepping stones method, depicting barriers as a 'river' and each 'steppingstone' as a solution, was employed to identify interventions which would help link men with TB symptoms to care. These insights were then synthesized in a co-analysis meeting with 17 participants, including representatives from each health facility to develop a consensus on proposed interventions. Data across locations revealed the actual TB care pathway diverted from the ideal pathway due to health system, community, health worker and individual-level barriers such as delayed health seeking, unfavourable facility operating hours and long waiting times that conflicted with men's work schedules. Stakeholders proposed to address these barriers through the introduction of male-specific services; integrated TB services that prioritize X-ray screening for men with cough; healthcare worker training modules on integrated male-friendly services; training and supporting TB champions to deliver health education to people seeking care; and engagement of private practitioners to screen for TB. In conclusion, our participatory co-design approach facilitated dialogue, learning and consensus between different health actors on context-specific, person-centred TB interventions for men in Uganda. The acceptability, effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the package will now be evaluated in a pilot study., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.)
- Published
- 2025
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3. Putting Trainees at the Center of the Family Medicine Research Workforce of Tomorrow.
- Author
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Ringwald B, Gilfoyle M, Bosworth T, Chisholm A, Locher I, and Ohioma M
- Abstract
The Family Medicine Research Summit culminated in a strategic action plan to enhance research in family medicine and expand the primary care research workforce. The strategic plan focuses on infrastructure, mentorship, and funding objectives needed for robust family medicine research. Trainees play a central role in the success of the strategic plan. This commentary outlines how the strategic plan impacts trainees from undergraduate students to postdoctoral research fellows through funding initiatives for research and trainees, fostering curiosity among family medicine clinician trainees, transdisciplinary collaboration, enhancing primary care research knowledge, and mentoring the next generation of researchers., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: The author team reports no financial conflicts of interests., (© Copyright by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
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4. Treatment of Allergic Rhinitis During Breastfeeding.
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Ringwald B
- Published
- 2024
5. Chestfeeding for Lactating People Living with HIV.
- Author
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White B, Ringwald B, and Gorman E
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- Humans, Female, Breast Feeding, HIV Infections, Lactation
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- 2024
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6. Support, not blame: safe partner disclosure among women diagnosed with HIV late in pregnancy in South Africa and Uganda.
- Author
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Twimukye A, Alhassan Y, Ringwald B, Malaba T, Myer L, Waitt C, Lamorde M, Reynolds H, Khoo S, and Taegtmeyer M
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- Female, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Lactation, Sexual Partners psychology, South Africa, Uganda, Disclosure, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections psychology
- Abstract
Background: HIV partner disclosure rates remain low among pregnant women living with HIV in many African countries despite potential benefits for women and their families. Partner disclosure can trigger negative responses like blame, violence, and separation. Women diagnosed with HIV late in pregnancy have limited time to prepare for partner disclosure. We sought to understand challenges around partner disclosure and non-disclosure faced by women diagnosed with HIV late in pregnancy in South Africa and Uganda and to explore pathways to safe partner disclosure., Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with pregnant women and lactating mothers living with HIV (n = 109), disaggregated by antenatal care (ANC) initiation before and after 20 weeks of gestation, male partners (n = 87), and health workers (n = 53). All participants were recruited from DolPHIN2 trial sites in Kampala (Uganda) and Gugulethu (South Africa). Topic guides explored barriers to partner disclosure, effects of non-disclosure, strategies for safe disclosure. Using the framework analysis approach, we coded and summarised data based on a socio-ecological model, topic guides, and emerging issues from the data. Data was analysed in NVivo software., Results: Our findings illustrate pregnant women who initiate ANC late experience many difficulties which are compounded by the late HIV diagnosis. Various individual, interpersonal, community, and health system factors complicate partner disclosure among these women. They postpone or decide against partner disclosure mainly for own and baby's safety. Women experience stress and poor mental health because of non-disclosure while demonstrating agency and resilience. We found many similarities and some differences around preferred approaches to safe partner disclosure among female and male participants across countries. Women and male partners preferred healthcare workers to assist with disclosure by identifying the 'right' time to disclose, mentoring women to enhance their confidence and communication skills, and providing professional mediation for partner disclosure and couple testing. Increasing the number of counsellors and training them on safe partner disclosure was deemed necessary for strengthening local health services to improve safe partner disclosure., Conclusion: HIV diagnosis late in pregnancy amplifies existing difficulties among pregnant women. Late ANC initiation is an indicator for the likelihood that a pregnant woman is highly vulnerable and needs safeguarding. Respective health programmes should be prepared to offer women initiating ANC late in pregnancy additional support and referral to complementary programmes to achieve safe partner disclosure and good health., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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7. Exploring Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Primary Care.
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Gilfoyle M, Bosworth KT, Adesanya TMA, Chisholm A, Ohioma M, Ringwald B, Warpinski CL, Kueper JK, and Liaw W
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- Humans, Forecasting, Artificial Intelligence, Primary Health Care
- Published
- 2024
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8. Ending TB means responding to socially produced vulnerabilities of all genders.
- Author
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Ringwald B, Mwiine AA, Chikovore J, Makanda G, Amoah-Larbi J, Millington KA, and Horton KC
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2023
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9. Postpartum Breast Mass.
- Author
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Vengal S and Ringwald B
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Breast diagnostic imaging, Postpartum Period, Breast Feeding
- Published
- 2023
10. Power and poverty: A participatory study on the complexities of HIV and intimate partner violence in an informal urban settlement in Nairobi, Kenya.
- Author
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Ringwald B, Taegtmeyer M, Mwania V, Muthoki M, Munyao F, Digolo L, Otiso L, Wangui Ngunjiri AS, Karuga RN, and Tolhurst R
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- Male, Humans, Female, Kenya epidemiology, Poverty, Gender Identity, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
People in informal urban settlements in Kenya face multiple inequalities, yet researchers investigate issues such as HIV or intimate partner violence (IPV) in isolation, targeting single populations and focusing on individual behaviour, without involving informal settlement dwellers. We formed a study team of researchers (n = 4) and lay investigators (n = 11) from an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya to understand the power dynamics in the informal urban settlement that influence vulnerability to IPV and HIV among women and men from key populations in this context. We facilitated participatory workshops with 56 women and 32 men from different marginalised groups and interviewed 10 key informants. We used a participatory data analysis approach. Our findings suggest the IPV and HIV nexus is rooted in the daily struggle for cash and survival in the informal urban settlement where lucrative livelihoods are scarce and a few gatekeepers regulate access to opportunities. Power is gendered and used to exercise control over people and resources. Common coping strategies applied to mitigate against the effects of poverty and powerlessness amplify vulnerabilities to HIV and IPV. These complex power relations create and sustain an environment conducive to IPV and HIV. Prevention interventions thus need to address underlying structural drivers, uphold human rights, create safe environments, and promote participation to maximise and sustain the positive effects of biomedical, behavioural, and empowerment strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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11. Accuracy of upper respiratory tract samples to diagnose Mycobacterium tuberculosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Savage HR, Rickman HM, Burke RM, Odland ML, Savio M, Ringwald B, Cuevas LE, and MacPherson P
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- Humans, Respiratory System microbiology, Child, Specimen Handling methods, Specimen Handling standards, Adult, Female, Male, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary microbiology, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sputum microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Pulmonary tuberculosis due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis can be challenging to diagnose when sputum samples cannot be obtained, which is especially problematic in children and older people. We systematically appraised the performance characteristics and diagnostic accuracy of upper respiratory tract sampling for diagnosing active pulmonary tuberculosis., Methods: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched MEDLINE, Cinahl, Web of Science, Global Health, and Global Health Archive databases for studies published between database inception and Dec 6, 2022 that reported on the accuracy of upper respiratory tract sampling for tuberculosis diagnosis compared with microbiological testing of sputum or gastric aspirate reference standard. We included studies that evaluated the accuracy of upper respiratory tract sampling (laryngeal swabs, nasopharyngeal aspirate, oral swabs, saliva, mouth wash, nasal swabs, plaque samples, and nasopharyngeal swabs) to be tested for microbiological diagnosis of tuberculous (by culture and nucleic acid amplification tests) compared with a reference standard using either sputum or gastric lavage for a microbiological test. We included cohort, case-control, cross-sectional, and randomised controlled studies that recruited participants from any community or clinical setting. We excluded post-mortem studies. We used a random-effects meta-analysis with a bivariate hierarchical model to estimate pooled sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostics odds ratio (DOR; odds of a positive test with disease relative to without), stratified by sampling method. We assessed bias using QUADAS-2 criteria. This study is registered with PROSPERO (CRD42021262392)., Findings: We screened 10 159 titles for inclusion, reviewed 274 full texts, and included 71, comprising 119 test comparisons published between May 13, 1933, and Dec 19, 2022, in the systematic review (53 in the meta-analysis). For laryngeal swabs, pooled sensitivity was 57·8% (95% CI 50·5-65·0), specificity was 93·8% (88·4-96·8), and DOR was 20·7 (11·1-38·8). Nasopharyngeal aspirate sensitivity was 65·2% (52·0-76·4), specificity was 97·9% (96·0-99·0), and DOR was 91·0 (37·8-218·8). Oral swabs sensitivity was 56·7% (44·3-68·2), specificity was 91·3% (CI 81·0-96·3), and DOR was 13·8 (5·6-34·0). Substantial heterogeneity in diagnostic accuracy was found, probably due to differences in reference and index standards., Interpretation: Upper respiratory tract sampling holds promise to expand access to tuberculosis diagnosis. Exploring historical methods using modern microbiological techniques might further increase options for alternative sample types. Prospective studies are needed to optimise accuracy and utility of sampling methods in clinical practice., Funding: UK Medical Research Council, Wellcome, and UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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12. Intra-Urban Variation of Intimate Partner Violence Against Women and Men in Kenya: Evidence from the 2014 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey.
- Author
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Ringwald B, Tolhurst R, Taegtmeyer M, Digolo L, Gichuna G, Gaitho MM, Phillips-Howard PA, Otiso L, and Giorgi E
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- Female, Humans, Male, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Kenya epidemiology, Sexual Partners, Violence, Marital Status, Risk Factors, Prevalence, Intimate Partner Violence
- Abstract
Although urban areas are diverse and urban inequities are well documented, surveys commonly differentiate intimate partner violence (IPV) rates only by urban versus rural residence. This study compared rates of current IPV victimization among women and men by urban residence (informal and formal settlements). Data from the 2014 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey, consisting of an ever-married sample of 1,613 women (age 15-49 years) and 1,321 men (age 15-54 years), were analyzed. Multilevel logistic regression was applied to female and male data separately to quantify the associations between residence and any current IPV while controlling for regional variation and other factors. Results show gendered patterns of intra-urban variation in IPV occurrence, with the greatest burden of IPV identified among women in informal settlements (across all types of violence). Unadjusted analyses suggest residing in informal settlements is associated with any current IPV against women, but not men, compared with their counterparts in formal urban settlements. This correlation is not statistically significant when adjusting for women's education level in multivariate analysis. In addition, reporting father beat mother, use of current physical violence against partner, partner's alcohol use, and marital status are associated with any current IPV against women and men. IPV gets marginal attention in urban violence and urban health research, and our results highlight the importance of spatially disaggregate IPV data-beyond the rural-urban divide-to inform policy and programming. Future research may utilize intersectional and syndemic approaches to investigate the complexity of IPV and clustering with other forms of violence and other health issues in different urban settings, especially among marginalized residents in informal urban settings.
- Published
- 2023
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13. Electronic Health Record-based COVID-19 Interprofessional Case Collaboration.
- Author
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Ringwald B, Shawar S, Curren C, McCallister J, Bazan J, Mead C, and Kman NE
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- Cooperative Behavior, Humans, Interprofessional Relations, Patient Care Team, COVID-19, Electronic Health Records
- Published
- 2022
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14. Grand rounds for medical students by medical students.
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Ringwald B, Mital R, Yan A, and McCallister J
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- Education, Medical, Continuing, Education, Medical, Graduate, Humans, Internship and Residency, Students, Medical, Teaching Rounds
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- 2022
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15. Experiences and Perpetration of Recent Intimate Partner Violence Among Women and Men Living in an Informal Settlement in Nairobi, Kenya: A Secondary Data Analysis.
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Ringwald B, Kababu M, Ochieng CB, Taegtmeyer M, Zulaika G, Phillips-Howard PA, and Digolo L
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- Female, Humans, Kenya epidemiology, Male, Men, Risk Factors, Data Analysis, Intimate Partner Violence
- Abstract
Evidence suggests an overlap between intimate partner violence (IPV) experience and perpetration. However, few studies in sub-Saharan Africa have investigated experience and perpetration of IPV among women and men within the same community. This study reports prevalence of past-year IPV experience and perpetration among women and men living in an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya, and factors associated with IPV. Data analyzed for this study involved a geographically distributed random sample of 273 women and 429 men who participated in a community survey. We approximated prevalence of IPV experience and perpetration and used logistic regression for estimating associations between individual-level factors and IPV. Women and men experienced similar levels of IPV, but a significantly higher proportion of men reported physical and sexual IPV perpetration. Witnessing violence between parents in childhood was associated with women's physical and sexual, and men's sexual IPV experience; and with women perpetrating emotional, and men perpetrating sexual IPV. Less equitable gender attitudes were associated with men's perpetration of physical IPV. More equitable gender knowledge was associated with women's experience of sexual IPV, and with men perpetrating IPV. Perceived skills to challenge gender inequitable practices were negatively associated with men perpetrating sexual IPV. In conclusion, we found IPV experience and perpetration were highly correlated, and that, contrary to commonly reported gender gaps, men and women experienced similar rates of IPV. We make suggestions for future research, including on IPV prevention interventions in areas with such IPV prevalence that would be beneficial for women and men and future generations.
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- 2022
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16. 'I will choose when to test, where I want to test': investigating young people's preferences for HIV self-testing in Malawi and Zimbabwe.
- Author
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Indravudh PP, Sibanda EL, d'Elbée M, Kumwenda MK, Ringwald B, Maringwa G, Simwinga M, Nyirenda LJ, Johnson CC, Hatzold K, Terris-Prestholt F, and Taegtmeyer M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Diagnostic Services, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Malawi, Male, Young Adult, Zimbabwe, Diagnostic Tests, Routine methods, HIV Infections diagnosis, Patient Acceptance of Health Care
- Abstract
Objectives: The current study identifies young people's preferences for HIV self-testing (HIVST) delivery, determines the relative strength of preferences and explores underlying behaviors and perceptions to inform youth-friendly services in southern Africa., Design: A mixed methods design was adopted in Malawi and Zimbabwe and includes focus group discussions, in-depth interviews and discrete choice experiments., Methods: The current study was conducted during the formative phase of cluster-randomized trials of oral-fluid HIVST distribution. Young people aged 16-25 years were purposively selected for in-depth interviews (n = 15) in Malawi and 12 focus group discussions (n = 107) across countries. Representative samples of young people in both countries (n = 341) were administered discrete choice experiments on HIVST delivery, with data analyzed to estimate relative preferences. The qualitative results provided additional depth and were triangulated with the quantitative findings., Results: There was strong concordance across methods and countries based on the three triangulation parameters: product, provider and service characteristics. HIVST was highly accepted by young people, if provided at no or very low cost. Young people expressed mixed views on oral-fluid tests, weighing perceived benefits with accuracy concerns. There was an expressed lack of trust in health providers and preference for lay community distributors. HIVST addressed youth-specific barriers to standard HIV testing, with home-based distribution considered convenient. Issues of autonomy, control, respect and confidentiality emerged as key qualitative themes., Conclusion: HIVST services can be optimized to reach young people if products are provided through home-based distribution and at low prices, with respect for them as autonomous individuals.
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- 2017
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