128 results on '"Worrall E"'
Search Results
2. Crystalline Nephropathy Due to Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole in the Setting of HIV-1 and Pneumocystis Pneumonia
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Worrall, E., primary, Shi, X., additional, Mwangi, J.K., additional, and Lee, T., additional
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- 2022
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3. Cost and effectiveness comparison of two methods for screening potential blood donors for anaemia in Vietnam
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Tyrrell, A., Worrall, E., Que, T. N., and Bates, I.
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- 2011
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4. A model to simulate the impact of timing, coverage and transmission intensity on the effectiveness of indoor residual spraying (IRS) for malaria control
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Worrall, E., Connor, S. J., and Thomson, M. C.
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- 2007
5. malERA: An updated research agenda for health systems and policy research in malaria elimination and eradication
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Tanner, M, Whittaker, M, Abdallah, OK, Alilio, M, Bosman, A, Conteh, L, Doumbia, S, Evans, D, Fan, V, Glassman, A, Gosling, R, Lawal, Y, Meremikwu, MM, Mouzin, E, Plasencia, A, Pagnoni, F, Premaratne, R, Rolfe, B, Rankin, K, Schapira, A, Schellenberg, D, Sintasath, D, De Savigny, D, Tediosi, F, Whitfield, K, and Worrall, E
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Biomedical Research ,Process management ,Economics ,Science Policy ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030231 tropical medicine ,Psychological intervention ,lcsh:Medicine ,Social Sciences ,Context (language use) ,Global Health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Medicine, General & Internal ,RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine ,General & Internal Medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Parasitic Diseases ,medicine ,Global health ,Animals ,Humans ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Disease Eradication ,Health Systems Strengthening ,media_common ,Collection Review ,Health Care Policy ,Science & Technology ,Health Policy ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Tropical Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Malaria ,Health Care ,Portfolio ,Health Services Research ,Business ,Behavioral and Social Aspects of Health ,Delivery of Health Care ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Finance ,Healthcare system - Abstract
Health systems underpin disease elimination and eradication programmes. In an elimination and eradication context, innovative research approaches are needed across health systems to assess readiness for programme reorientation, mitigate any decreases in effectiveness of interventions (‘effectiveness decay’), and respond to dynamic and changing needs. The malaria eradication research agenda (malERA) Refresh consultative process for the Panel on Health Systems and Policy Research identifies opportunities to build health systems evidence and the tools needed to eliminate malaria from different zones, countries, and regions and to eradicate it globally. The research questions are organised as a portfolio that global health practitioners, researchers, and funders can identify with and support. This supports the promotion of an actionable and more cohesive approach to building the evidence base for scaled-up implementation of findings. Gaps and opportunities discussed in the paper include delivery strategies to meet the changing dynamics of needs of individuals, environments, and malaria programme successes; mechanisms and approaches to best support accelerated policy and financial responsiveness at national and global level to ensure timely response to evidence and needs, including in crisis situations; and systems’ readiness tools and decision-support systems., Marcel Tanner and colleagues examine progress in health systems and policy research for malaria elimination and eradication.
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- 2017
6. Case Of Ptomaine Poisoning From Eating Turkey
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Worrall, E. S.
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- 1897
7. Plasma Total and Free Tryptophan Concentration in �Neurotic� and �Psychotic� Depressive Patients1
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Peet, M., primary, Moody, J. P., additional, Worrall, E. P., additional, Walker, P., additional, and Naylor, G., additional
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8. Cost and effectiveness comparison of two methods for screening potential blood donors for anaemia in Vietnam
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Tyrrell, A., primary, Worrall, E., additional, Que, T. N., additional, and Bates, I., additional
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- 2010
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9. A model to simulate the impact of timing, coverage and transmission intensity on the effectiveness of indoor residual spraying (IRS) for malaria control
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Worrall, E., primary, Connor, S. J., additional, and Thomson, M. C., additional
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- 2006
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10. Controlled studies of the acute antidepressant effects of lithium.
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Worrall, E. P., Moody, J. P., Peet, M., Dick, P., Smith, A., Chambers, C., Adams, M., and Naylor, G. J.
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PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,MENTAL depression ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOSES ,BIPOLAR disorder ,ANTIDEPRESSANTS ,PSYCHIATRIC research ,TRYPTOPHAN ,IMIPRAMINE ,THERAPEUTIC use of lithium ,COMBINATION drug therapy ,CLINICAL trials ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LITHIUM ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BLIND experiment ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
In two randomized double-blind controlled trials on 63 depressed female in-patients subject to recurrent affective disorder (bipolar and unipolar manic-depressive psychosis) lithium was shown to have major acute antidepressant effects. At the end of three weeks lithium produced more uniform improvement than did imipramine; lithium in combination with tryptophan (in the form of Optimax) was superior to tryptophan alone--the latter drug having no discernible antidepressant activity in this group of patients. Lithium did not produce an antidepressant effect until the second and third week of both trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1979
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11. Cognitive functions in manic-depressives: effects of lithium and physostigmine.
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Telford, Rosemary, Worrall, Ernest P., Telford, R, and Worrall, E P
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PEOPLE with bipolar disorder ,LITHIUM ,BIPOLAR disorder ,COGNITIVE ability ,WECHSLER Adult Intelligence Scale ,INTELLIGENCE tests - Abstract
Cognitive functions were investigated in seven manic depressive patients while on lithium, after two weeks off lithium, and after a subcutaneous injection of physostigmine while on lithium. Test performance was unaffected by lithium, but after physostigmine the I.Q. score of a shortened version of the WAIS was significantly increased. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1978
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12. Plasma tryptophan concentration in depressive illness and mania.
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Peet, M., Moody, J. P., Worrall, E. P., Walker, P., and Naylor, G. J.
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TRYPTOPHAN ,PEOPLE with bipolar disorder ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,BLOOD plasma ,BIPOLAR disorder ,PSYCHIATRY ,BENZODIAZEPINES ,TRANQUILIZING drugs ,MENTAL depression ,DIETARY proteins ,DISEASE remission - Abstract
Total and free plasma trytophan levels were measured in depressive and manic patients before and after recovery. No change was found in total or free plasma trytophan concentration on recovery from depressive illness. Free plasma tryptophan levels were higher in recovered manics than in active manics, and a group of four manic patients tested before and after recovery showed a significant increase in free plasma tryptophan concentration on recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1976
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13. Lithium in non-manic-depressives: antiaggressive effect and red blood cell lithium values.
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Worrall, Ernest P., Moody, J. P., Naylor, Graham J., Worrall, E P, and Naylor, G J
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ERYTHROCYTES ,PLACEBOS ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,MENTAL depression ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOSES ,LITHIUM ,PATIENTS ,PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY ,THERAPEUTIC use of lithium ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,CLINICAL trials ,COMPARATIVE studies ,BIPOLAR disorder ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,RESEARCH ,TIME ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Lithium was given to eight aggressive, non-manic-depressive female defectives in a doubleblind placebo-controlled study. The group as a whole showed a reduction in aggression scores while on lithium (p greater than 0.01): three patients became less aggressive,one became worse and two were unchanged. Both affective and predatory aggression seemed to be reduced. Two patients had to be withdrawn from the trial at an early stage because of the development of neurotoxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1975
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14. Erythrocyte membrane cation carrier in mania.
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Naylor, G. J., Dick, D. A. T., Dick, E. G., Worrall, E. P., Peet, M., Dick, P., and Boardman, L. J.
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- 1977
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15. A STUDY OF THE DEGENERATIONS OBSERVED IN THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM IN A CASE OF FRACTURE DISLOCATION OF THE SPINE.
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THIELE, F. H., HORSLEY, VICTOR, and Worrall, E. J.
- Published
- 1901
16. Hepatic carbon flux after re-feeding in the glycogen-storage-disease (gsd/gsd) rat
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Holness, M J, Palmer, T N, Worrall, E B, and Sugden, M C
- Abstract
In this study we utilized the phosphorylase b kinase-deficient (gsd/gsd) rat as a model of hepatic substrate utilization where there is a constraint on glycogenesis imposed by the maintenance of high glycogen concentrations. Glucose re-feeding of 48 h-starved gsd/gsd rats led to suppression of hepatic glucose output. In contrast with the situation in normal rats, activation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and lipogenesis was observed. It is suggested that impeding glycogenic flux may divert substrate into lipogenesis, possibly via activation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.
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- 1987
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17. 3-Hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase, an impurity in commercial 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase
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Worrall, E B, Gassain, S, Cox, D J, Sugden, M C, and Palmer, T N
- Abstract
The enzymic determination of D-3-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate normally involves the use of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBDH, EC 1.1.1.30) of bacterial origin. We show that HBDH from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides (BCL, grade II) contains a 3-hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase (HIBDH) activity: activity with 3-hydroxyisobutyrate as substrate was greater than 10% of that with 3-hydroxybutyrate. However, HBDH could be prepared essentially free of HIBDH activity by incubation at 37 degrees C in the presence of 1 mM-CaCl2, to produce an enzyme preparation that may be used for the specific determination of 3-hydroxybutyrate. Use of the purified enzyme preparations indicated that a major product of valine metabolism in hemidiaphragms from 40 h-starved rats was 3-hydroxyisobutyrate rather than 3-hydroxybutyrate.
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- 1987
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18. Therapy-resistant depression.
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Worrall, Ernest P. and Worrall, E P
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LETTERS to the editor ,MENTAL depression ,THERAPEUTIC use of lithium ,DRUG resistance - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article about therapy-resistant depression in the April 1988 issue.
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- 1988
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19. Whole blood adenosine triphosphate in manic-depressive illness.
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Naylor, G. J., Worrall, E. P., Peet, M., and Dick, P.
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BLOOD cells ,MANIA ,DEPRESSED persons ,MENTAL depression ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,BLOOD ,ADENOSINE triphosphate ,AGE distribution ,DIET therapy ,BIPOLAR disorder ,DISEASE remission - Abstract
Whole blood cell ATP concentration was estimated in a group of manic and depressed patients and in a group of normal subjects. There were no significant differences between patient and control groups, nor in the patient groups were there any significant changes with recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1976
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20. A Case of Phthisis With Complete Cavitation of the Left Lung
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Jones, D. W. Carmalt and Worrall, E. S.
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n/a
- Published
- 1913
21. Psychiatric Examination in Clinical Practice
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Worrall, E. P., primary
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- 1978
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22. Bluetongue in western Turkey
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Yonguc, A., primary, Taylor, W., additional, Csontos, L., additional, and Worrall, E., additional
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- 1982
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23. Lithium-induced constructional dyspraxia.
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Worrall, E P, primary and Gillham, R A, additional
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- 1983
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24. Skull radiology in patients with psychiatric illness
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Worrall, E. P, primary
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- 1983
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25. Lithium in Medical Practice
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Worrall, E. P., primary
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- 1979
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26. Points: Lithium induced constructional dyspraxia
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Worrall, E. P, primary
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- 1983
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27. Association of psychiatrists in training
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Bird, I., primary, Campbell, P., additional, Clare, A., additional, Hamilton, J., additional, Maiden, W., additional, McDowall, A., additional, O’Farrell, P., additional, Owens, E., additional, Storer, D., additional, Symonds, R., additional, and Worrall, E., additional
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- 1971
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28. Clostridium oedematiens in the livers of healthy sheep
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Roberts, R., primary, Guven, S., additional, and Worrall, E., additional
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- 1970
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29. Rapid Radiography
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Worrall, E. S., primary
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- 1911
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30. Forcible Examination
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Worrall, E. P., primary
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- 1973
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31. Plate V
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Worrall, E. S., primary
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- 1911
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32. Description of Plate
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Worrall, E. S., primary
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- 1907
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33. The Treatment of Sciatica by High-Frequency Currents
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Worrall, E. S., primary
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- 1908
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34. Large-scale use of mosquito larval source management for malaria control in Africa: a cost analysis
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Worrall Eve and Fillinger Ulrike
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Malaria ,cost analyses ,vector control ,larval control ,source management ,Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis ,Anopheles gambiae ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background At present, large-scale use of two malaria vector control methods, long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) is being scaled up in Africa with substantial funding from donors. A third vector control method, larval source management (LSM), has been historically very successful and is today widely used for mosquito control globally, except in Africa. With increasing risk of insecticide resistance and a shift to more exophilic vectors, LSM is now under re-evaluation for use against afro-tropical vector species. Here the costs of this intervention were evaluated. Methods The 'ingredients approach' was used to estimate the economic and financial costs per person protected per year (pppy) for large-scale LSM using microbial larvicides in three ecologically diverse settings: (1) the coastal metropolitan area of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, (2) a highly populated Kenyan highland area (Vihiga District), and (3) a lakeside setting in rural western Kenya (Mbita Division). Two scenarios were examined to investigate the cost implications of using alternative product formulations. Sensitivity analyses on product prices were carried out. Results The results show that for programmes using the same granular formulation larviciding costs the least pppy in Dar es Salaam (US$0.94), approximately 60% more in Vihiga District (US$1.50) and the most in Mbita Division (US$2.50). However, these costs are reduced substantially if an alternative water-dispensable formulation is used; in Vihiga, this would reduce costs to US$0.79 and, in Mbita Division, to US$1.94. Larvicide and staff salary costs each accounted for approximately a third of the total economic costs per year. The cost pppy depends mainly on: (1) the type of formulation required for treating different aquatic habitats, (2) the human population density relative to the density of aquatic habitats and (3) the potential to target the intervention in space and/or time. Conclusion Costs for LSM compare favourably with costs for IRS and LLINs, especially in areas with moderate and focal malaria transmission where mosquito larval habitats are accessible and well defined. LSM presents an attractive tool to be integrated in ongoing malaria control effort in such settings. Further data on the epidemiological health impact of larviciding is required to establish cost effectiveness.
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- 2011
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35. Improving the cost-effectiveness of IRS with climate informed health surveillance systems
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Thomson Madeleine C, Connor Stephen J, and Worrall Eve
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background This paper examines how the cost-effectiveness of IRS varies depending on the severity of transmission and level of programme coverage and how efficiency could be improved by incorporating climate information into decision making for malaria control programmes as part of an integrated Malaria Early Warning and Response System (MEWS). Methods A climate driven model of malaria transmission was used to simulate cost-effectiveness of alternative IRS coverage levels over six epidemic and non-epidemic years. Decision rules for a potential MEWS system that triggers different IRS coverage are described. The average and marginal cost per case averted with baseline IRS coverage (24%) and under varying IRS coverage levels (50%, 75% and 100%) were calculated. Results Average cost-effectiveness of 24% coverage varies dramatically between years, from US$108 per case prevented in low transmission to US$0.42 in epidemic years. Similarly for higher coverage (24–100%) cost per case prevented is far higher in low than high transmission years ($108–$267 to $0.88–$2.26). Discussion Efficiency and health benefit gains could be achieved by implementing MEWS that provides timely, accurate information. Evidence from southern Africa, (especially Botswana) supports this. Conclusion Advance knowledge of transmission severity can help managers make coverage decisions which optimise resource use and exploit efficiency gains if a fully integrated MEWS is in place alongside a health system with sufficient flexibility to modify control plans in response to information. More countries and programmes should be supported to use the best available evidence and science to integrate climate informed MEWS into decision making within malaria control programmes.
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- 2008
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36. Lithium augmentation of tricyclics.
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Worrall, Ernest P. and Worrall, E P
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LETTERS to the editor ,ANTIDEPRESSANTS ,THERAPEUTIC use of lithium ,COMBINATION drug therapy ,MENTAL depression ,DRUG synergism - Abstract
A letter to the editor in response to the article about lithium augmentation of tricyclics in the June 1986 issue is presented.
- Published
- 1986
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37. Consent to treatment and clinical decision analysis: A solution to medical uncertainty and public doubt?
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Worrall, E. P.
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- 1989
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38. Accelerating access to new malaria vector control tools : a national and global health policy analysis
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Tesfazghi, Oluwakemi, Worrall, E., Ranson, H., and Hill, J.
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362.1969 - Abstract
Background: New malaria vector control tools hold the promise of sustaining gains in malaria control achieved to date and achieving the goal of elimination set for 2030. However, insecticide resistance has the potential to derail these malaria control achievements. Access to innovative vector control tools is key to surmounting the threat of insecticide resistance and will play a major role if malaria elimination is to be achieved. The aim of this thesis is to gather new evidence and provide insight into strategies for accelerating access to new malaria vector control tools. This is done by examining access to new malaria vector control tools in two national settings (Nigeria and Burkina Faso) as well as at the global level. Methods: Three retrospective policy analyses were carried out using an analytical framework to guide the selection of key informants (KI), data collection and analysis. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with KIs in Nigeria (2013), Burkina Faso (2014) and at the global level (2014). Interviews were conducted in English (French in Burkina Faso) audio recorded, transcribed and entered into NVivo10 for data management and analysis. Data were coded according to the framework themes and then analysed to provide a description of the key points and explain patterns in the data. Results: A total of 40 interviews were conducted with policymakers, researchers, donors, multilaterals, Non-governmental organizations and private sector. The synthesized findings of the three case studies show that, in the context of insecticide resistance, the evidence required to facilitate policy change is nuanced and context specific; national policymaking may be well defined and appear to be evidence based, but can be open to being circumvented and hindered by inefficiencies in global policymaking and lack of donor funding; price rather than cost-effectiveness is the key financial variable at the national level; and no readily identifiable policy champions exist to facilitate global and national adoption of new vector control tools. Conclusions: This thesis has identified five areas that need to be strengthened in order to facilitate access to new malaria vector control tools by fostering their global and national adoption. The thesis demonstrates that, without a well-coordinated architecture to: facilitate the development of robust and appropriate evidence; support a transparent and timely global policymaking process; diversify the available funding base, and facilitate price reductions without stifling innovation, accelerating access to new vector control tools and achieving malaria elimination goals is unlikely.
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- 2016
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39. El Niño and health.
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Kovats RS, Bouma MJ, Hajat S, Worrall E, and Haines A
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- 2003
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40. Accelerating Access to New Malaria Vector Control Tools: A National and Global Health Policy Analysis
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Tesfazghi, O, Worrall, E, Ranson, H, and Hill, J
41. Rethinking Tuberculosis Morbidity Quantification: A Systematic Review and Critical Appraisal of TB Disability Weights in Cost-Effectiveness Analyses.
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Tomeny EM, Hampton T, Tran PB, Rosu L, Phiri MD, Haigh KA, Nidoi J, Wingfield T, and Worrall E
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- Humans, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Persons with Disabilities, Global Burden of Disease, Antitubercular Agents economics, Antitubercular Agents therapeutic use, Antitubercular Agents administration & dosage, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Tuberculosis drug therapy, Tuberculosis economics, Disability-Adjusted Life Years
- Abstract
Background: The disability-adjusted life year (DALY), a key metric for health resource allocation, encompasses morbidity through disability weights. Widely used in tuberculosis cost-effectiveness analysis (CEAs), DALYs play a significant role in informing intervention adopt/reject decisions. This study reviews the values and consistency of disability weights applied in tuberculosis-related CEAs., Methods: We conducted a systematic review using the Tufts CEA database, updated to July 2023 with searches in Embase, Scopus and PubMed. Eligible studies needed to have included a cost-per-DALY ratio, and additionally either evaluated a tuberculosis (TB) intervention or included tuberculosis-related weights. We considered all tuberculosis health states: with/without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coinfection, TB treatments and treatment side effects. Data were screened and extracted independently by combinations of two authors., Findings: A total of 105 studies spanning 2002-2023 across 50 countries (mainly low- and middle-income countries) were extracted. Disability weights were sourced primarily from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD; 100/165; 61%), with 17 non-GBD studies additionally referenced, along with primary derivation. Inconsistencies in the utilisation of weights were evident: of the 100 usages of GBD-sourced weights, only in 47 instances (47%) had the weight value been explicitly specified with an appropriate up-to-date reference cited (constituting 28% of all weight usages, 47/165). Sensitivity analyses on weight values had been conducted in 30% of studies (31/105). Twelve studies did not clearly specify weights or their sources; nine further calculated DALYs without morbidity. The review suggests methodological gaps in current approaches for representing important aspects of TB, including TB-HIV coinfection, treatment, drug-resistance, extrapulmonary TB and psychological impacts. We propose a set of best practice recommendations., Interpretation: There is a need for increased rigour in the application, sensitivity testing and reporting of TB disability weights. Furthermore, there appears a desire among researchers to reflect elements of the tuberculosis experience beyond those allowed for by GBD disability weights., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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42. Community-based strategies to increase coverage of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review, meta-analysis, meta-ethnography, and economic assessment.
- Author
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Koita K, Kayentao K, Worrall E, Van Eijk AM, and Hill J
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Africa South of the Sahara, Anthropology, Cultural, Community Health Services economics, Community Health Services organization & administration, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Prenatal Care economics, Antimalarials administration & dosage, Antimalarials economics, Drug Combinations, Malaria prevention & control, Malaria drug therapy, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic prevention & control, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic drug therapy, Pyrimethamine administration & dosage, Pyrimethamine economics, Sulfadoxine administration & dosage, Sulfadoxine economics
- Abstract
Background: Community-based approaches might increase uptake of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP). We assessed the effects of community-based approaches on IPTp-SP and antenatal care coverage, and barriers and facilitators to implementation in sub-Saharan Africa., Methods: We did a systematic review, meta-analysis, meta-ethnography, and economic assessment. We searched the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, PubMed, the Malaria in Pregnancy Library database, Medline, Global Health and Global Health Archives, and the Cochrane Library for trials, mixed-methods, qualitative, and cost-effectiveness studies of community health worker promotion of antenatal care, IPTp-SP delivery, or both, with no language restrictions, published before March 21, 2024. Information on interventions, number of IPTp-SP doses, antenatal care visits, and barriers and facilitators were extracted. We did a meta-analysis (random effects) comparing effects on two or more or three or more IPTp-SP doses and one or more or four or more antenatal care visits. We followed Noblit and Hare's method of meta-ethnography to synthesise qualitative findings, using reciprocal translation and line-of-argument synthesis. We developed a theory for increased community IPTp-SP uptake. We also summarised cost and cost-effectiveness studies. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42022364114., Findings: Of 4753 records screened, we included 23 (0·5%) reporting on 15 studies. Community health worker involvement was associated with an increase in two or more IPTp-SP doses (pooled risk ratio 1·48, [95% CI 1·24-1·75]; 12 sub-studies; I
2 94·7%) and three or more IPTp-SP doses (1·73 [1·19-2·50]; ten sub-studies, I2 97·5%), with no decrease in four or more antenatal care visits (1·17 [1·00-1·36]; 13 sub-studies; I2 90·3%). Cluster-randomised controlled trials showed a lower increase in coverage of three or more IPTp-SP doses (1·08 [1·00-1·16]; I2 0·0%; six studies) compared with before-and-after studies (2·86 [1·29-6·33]; I2 98·9%; four studies; subgroup analysis p=0·019). Barriers to community health worker delivery of IPTp-SP included women's fear of side-effects, lack of knowledge, lack of trust in community health workers, and sociocultural factors. Community sensitisation, engagement of husbands, pre-established community health worker networks, and trained and supported community health workers facilitated IPTp-SP delivery by community health workers. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios ranged from $1·1 to $543 per disability-adjusted life-year averted., Interpretation: Community-based approaches increased IPTp-SP coverage and might have a positive effect on the number of antenatal care visits in addition to being cost-effective, although we found high heterogeneity among studies. Community sensitisation and engagement in addition to established, trained, and supported community health workers can facilitate acceptability, delivery, and uptake of IPTp-SP delivered by community health workers., Funding: EDCTP-2 supported by the European Union., Translation: For the French translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 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
- 2024
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43. Interdisciplinary perspectives on multimorbidity in Africa: Developing an expanded conceptual model.
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Dixon J, Morton B, Nkhata MJ, Silman A, Simiyu IG, Spencer SA, Van Pinxteren M, Bunn C, Calderwood C, Chandler CIR, Chikumbu E, Crampin AC, Hurst JR, Jobe M, Kengne AP, Levitt NS, Moshabela M, Owolabi M, Peer N, Phiri N, Singh SJ, Tamuhla T, Tembo M, Tiffin N, Worrall E, Yongolo NM, Banda GT, Bickton F, Bilungula AM, Bosire E, Chawani MS, Chinoko B, Chisala M, Chiwanda J, Drew S, Farrant L, Ferrand RA, Gondwe M, Gregson CL, Harding R, Kajungu D, Kasenda S, Katagira W, Kwaitana D, Mendenhall E, Mensah ABB, Mnenula M, Mupaza L, Mwakasungula M, Nakanga W, Ndhlovu C, Nkhoma K, Nkoka O, Opare-Lokko EA, Phulusa J, Price A, Rylance J, Salima C, Salimu S, Sturmberg J, Vale E, and Limbani F
- Abstract
Multimorbidity is an emerging challenge for health systems globally. It is commonly defined as the co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions in one person, but its meaning remains a lively area of academic debate, and the utility of the concept beyond high-income settings is uncertain. This article presents the findings from an interdisciplinary research initiative that drew together 60 academic and applied partners working in 10 African countries to answer the questions: how useful is the concept of multimorbidity within Africa? Can the concept be adapted to context to optimise its transformative potentials? During a three-day concept-building workshop, we investigated how the definition of multimorbidity was understood across diverse disciplinary and regional perspectives, evaluated the utility and limitations of existing concepts and definitions, and considered how to build a more context-sensitive, cross-cutting description of multimorbidity. This iterative process was guided by the principles of grounded theory and involved focus- and whole-group discussions during the workshop, thematic coding of workshop discussions, and further post-workshop development and refinement. Three thematic domains emerged from workshop discussions: the current focus of multimorbidity on constituent diseases; the potential for revised concepts to centre the priorities, needs, and social context of people living with multimorbidity (PLWMM); and the need for revised concepts to respond to varied conceptual priorities amongst stakeholders. These themes fed into the development of an expanded conceptual model that centres the catastrophic impacts multimorbidity can have for PLWMM, families and support structures, service providers, and health systems., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Dixon et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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44. Causes, outcomes and diagnosis of acute breathlessness hospital admissions in Malawi: protocol for a multicentre prospective cohort study.
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Spencer SA, Malowa F, McCarty D, Joekes E, Phulusa J, Chinoko B, Kaimba S, Keyala L, Mandala P, Mkandawire M, Mlongoti M, Mnesa B, Mukatipa A, Mijumbi R, Nyirenda M, Sawe HR, Henrion M, Augustine DX, Oxborough D, Worrall E, Limbani F, Dark P, Gordon SB, Rylance J, and Morton B
- Abstract
Background: Hospital admission due to breathlessness carries a significant burden to patients and healthcare systems, particularly impacting people in low-income countries. Prompt appropriate treatment is vital to improve outcomes, but this relies on accurate diagnostic tests which are of limited availability in resource-constrained settings. We will provide an accurate description of acute breathlessness presentations in a multicentre prospective cohort study in Malawi, a low resource setting in Southern Africa, and explore approaches to strengthen diagnostic capacity., Objectives: Primary objective: Delineate between causes of breathlessness among adults admitted to hospital in Malawi and report disease prevalence. Secondary objectives : Determine patient outcomes, including mortality and hospital readmission 90 days after admission; determine the diagnostic accuracy of biomarkers to differentiate between heart failure and respiratory infections (such as pneumonia) including brain natriuretic peptides, procalcitonin and C-reactive protein., Methods: This is a prospective longitudinal cohort study of adults (≥18 years) admitted to hospital with breathlessness across two hospitals: 1) Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi; 2) Chiradzulu District Hospital, Chiradzulu, Malawi. Patients will be consecutively recruited within 24 hours of emergency presentation and followed-up until 90 days from hospital admission. We will conduct enhanced diagnostic tests with robust quality assurance and quality control to determine estimates of disease pathology. Diagnostic case definitions were selected following a systematic literature search., Discussion: This study will provide detailed epidemiological description of adult hospital admissions due to breathlessness in low-income settings, which is currently poorly understood. We will delineate between causes using established case definitions and conduct nested diagnostic evaluation. The results have the potential to facilitate development of interventions targeted to strengthen diagnostic capacity, enable prompt and appropriate treatment, and ultimately improve both patient care and outcomes., Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed., (Copyright: © 2024 Spencer SA et al.)
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- 2024
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45. Multimorbidity-associated emergency hospital admissions: a "screen and link" strategy to improve outcomes for high-risk patients in sub-Saharan Africa: a prospective multicentre cohort study protocol.
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Spencer SA, Rutta A, Hyuha G, Banda GT, Choko A, Dark P, Hertz JT, Mmbaga BT, Mfinanga J, Mijumbi R, Muula A, Nyirenda M, Rosu L, Rubach M, Salimu S, Sakita F, Salima C, Sawe H, Simiyu I, Taegtmeyer M, Urasa S, White S, Yongolo NM, Rylance J, Morton B, Worrall E, and Limbani F
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence of multimorbidity (the presence of two or more chronic health conditions) is rapidly increasing in sub-Saharan Africa. Hospital care pathways that focus on single presenting complaints do not address this pressing problem. This has the potential to precipitate frequent hospital readmissions, increase health system and out-of-pocket expenses, and may lead to premature disability and death. We aim to present a description of inpatient multimorbidity in a multicentre prospective cohort study in Malawi and Tanzania., Primary Objectives: Clinical: Determine prevalence of multimorbid disease among adult medical admissions and measure patient outcomes. Health Economic: Measure economic costs incurred and changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) at 90 days post-admission. Situation analysis: Qualitatively describe pathways of patients with multimorbidity through the health system., Secondary Objectives: Clinical: Determine hospital readmission free survival and markers of disease control 90 days after admission. Health Economic: Present economic costs from patient and health system perspective, sub-analyse costs and HRQoL according to presence of different diseases. Situation analysis: Understand health literacy related to their own diseases and experience of care for patients with multimorbidity and their caregivers., Methods: This is a prospective longitudinal cohort study of adult (≥18 years) acute medical hospital admissions with nested health economic and situation analysis in four hospitals: 1) Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi; 2) Chiradzulu District Hospital, Malawi; 3) Hai District Hospital, Boma Ng'ombe, Tanzania; 4) Muhimbili National Hospital, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. Follow-up duration will be 90 days from hospital admission. We will use consecutive recruitment within 24 hours of emergency presentation and stratified recruitment across four sites. We will use point-of-care tests to refine estimates of disease pathology. We will conduct qualitative interviews with patients, caregivers, healthcare providers and policymakers; focus group discussions with patients and caregivers, and observations of hospital care pathways., Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed., (Copyright: © 2024 Spencer SA et al.)
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- 2024
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46. Increasing the uptake of Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy using Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) through seasonal malaria chemoprevention channel delivery: protocol of a multicenter cluster randomized implementation trial in Mali and Burkina Faso.
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Koita K, Bognini JD, Agboraw E, Dembélé M, Yabré S, Bihoun B, Coulibaly O, Niangaly H, N'Takpé JB, Lesosky M, Scaramuzzi D, Worrall E, Hill J, Briand V, Tinto H, and Kayentao K
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- Child, Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Child, Preschool, Seasons, Burkina Faso, Mali, Sulfadoxine therapeutic use, Pyrimethamine therapeutic use, Drug Combinations, Chemoprevention, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Antimalarials therapeutic use, Malaria prevention & control, Malaria drug therapy, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic prevention & control
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Background: The uptake of Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy using Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) remains unacceptably low, with more than two-thirds of pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa still not accessing the three or more doses recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO). In contrast, the coverage of Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC), a more recent strategy recommended by the WHO for malaria prevention in children under five years living in Sahelian countries with seasonal transmission, including Mali and Burkina-Faso, is high (up to 90%). We hypothesized that IPTp-SP delivery to pregnant women through SMC alongside antenatal care (ANC) will increase IPTp-SP coverage, boost ANC attendance, and increase public health impact. This protocol describes the approach to assess acceptability, feasibility, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of the integrated strategy., Methods and Analysis: This is a multicentre, cluster-randomized, implementation trial of IPTp-SP delivery through ANC + SMC vs ANC alone in 40 health facilities and their catchment populations (20 clusters per arm). The intervention will consist of monthly administration of IPTp-SP through four monthly rounds of SMC during the malaria transmission season (July to October), for two consecutive years. Effectiveness of the strategy to increase coverage of three or more doses of IPTp-SP (IPTp3 +) will be assessed using household surveys and ANC exit interviews. Statistical analysis of IPT3 + and four or more ANC uptake will use a generalized linear mixed model. Feasibility and acceptability will be assessed through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with health workers, pregnant women, and women with a child < 12 months., Discussion: This multicentre cluster randomized implementation trial powered to detect a 45% and 22% increase in IPTp-SP3 + uptake in Mali and Burkina-Faso, respectively, will generate evidence on the feasibility, acceptability, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of IPTp-SP delivered through the ANC + SMC channel. The intervention is designed to facilitate scalability and translation into policy by leveraging existing resources, while strengthening local capacities in research, health, and community institutions. Findings will inform the local national malaria control policies., Trial Registration: Retrospectively registered on August 11th, 2022; registration # PACTR202208844472053. Protocol v4.0 dated September 04, 2023. Trail sponsor: University of Sciences Techniques and Technologies of Bamako (USTTB), Mali., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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47. Cost of digital technologies and family-observed DOT for a shorter MDR-TB regimen: a modelling study in Ethiopia, India and Uganda.
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Rosu L, Madan J, Bronson G, Nidoi J, Tefera MG, Malaisamy M, Squire BS, and Worrall E
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- Humans, Ethiopia, Digital Technology, Uganda, Directly Observed Therapy, India, Antitubercular Agents therapeutic use, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: In 2017, the WHO recommended the use of digital technologies, such as medication monitors and video observed treatment (VOT), for directly observed treatment (DOT) of drug-susceptible TB. The WHO's 2020 guidelines extended these recommendations to multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), based on low evidence. The impact of COVID on health systems and patients underscored the need to use digital technologies in the management of MDR-TB., Methods: A decision-tree model was developed to explore the costs of several potential DOT alternatives: VOT, 99DOTS (Directly-observed Treatment, Short-course) and family-observed DOT. Assuming a 9-month, all-oral regimen (as evaluated within the STREAM trial), we constructed base-case cost models for the standard-of-care DOTs in Ethiopia, India, and Uganda, as well as for the three alternative DOT approaches. The models were populated with STREAM Stage 2 clinical trial outcome and cost data, supplemented with market prices data for the digital DOT strategies. Sensitivity analyses were conducted on key parameters., Results: Modelling suggested that the standard-of-care DOT approach is the most expensive DOT strategy from a societal perspective in all three countries evaluated (Ethiopia, India, Uganda), with considerable direct- and indirect-costs incurred by patients. The second most expensive DOT approach is VOT, with high health-system costs, largely caused by up-front technology expenditure. Each of VOT, 99DOTS and family-observed DOT would reduce by more than 90% patients' direct and indirect costs compared to standard of care DOT. Results were robust to the sensitivity analyses., Conclusions: While data on the costs and efficacy of alternative DOT approaches in the context of shorter MDR-TB treatment is limited, our modelling suggests alternative DOT approaches can significantly reduce patient costs in all three countries. Health system costs are higher for VOT and lower for 99DOTS and family-observed therapy when compared to standard of care DOT, as low smartphone penetration and internet availability requires the VOT health system to fund the cost of making them available to patients., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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48. Cost and quality of operational larviciding using drones and smartphone technology.
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Hardy A, Haji K, Abbas F, Hassan J, Ali A, Yussuf Y, Cook J, Rosu L, Houri-Yafin A, Vigodny A, Oakes G, Majambere S, and Worrall E
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- Animals, Humans, Mosquito Vectors, Smartphone, Unmanned Aerial Devices, Larva, Technology, Anopheles, Malaria prevention & control
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Background: Larval Source Management (LSM) is an important tool for malaria vector control and is recommended by WHO as a supplementary vector control measure. LSM has contributed in many successful attempts to eliminate the disease across the Globe. However, this approach is typically labour-intensive, largely due to the difficulties in locating and mapping potential malarial mosquito breeding sites. Previous studies have demonstrated the potential for drone imaging technology to map malaria vector breeding sites. However, key questions remain unanswered related to the use and cost of this technology within operational vector control., Methods: Using Zanzibar (United Republic of Tanzania) as a demonstration site, a protocol was collaboratively designed that employs drones and smartphones for supporting operational LSM, termed the Spatial Intelligence System (SIS). SIS was evaluated over a four-month LSM programme by comparing key mapping accuracy indicators and relative costs (both mapping costs and intervention costs) against conventional ground-based methods. Additionally, malaria case incidence was compared between the SIS and conventional study areas, including an estimation of the incremental cost-effectiveness of switching from conventional to SIS larviciding., Results: The results demonstrate that the SIS approach is significantly more accurate than a conventional approach for mapping potential breeding sites: mean % correct per site: SIS = 60% (95% CI 32-88%, p = 0.02), conventional = 18% (95% CI - 3-39%). Whilst SIS cost more in the start-up phase, overall annualized costs were similar to the conventional approach, with a simulated cost per person protected per year of $3.69 ($0.32 to $15.12) for conventional and $3.94 ($0.342 to $16.27) for SIS larviciding. The main economic benefits were reduced labour costs associated with SIS in the pre-intervention baseline mapping of habitats. There was no difference in malaria case incidence between the three arms. Cost effectiveness analysis showed that SIS is likely to provide similar health benefits at similar costs compared to the conventional arm., Conclusions: The use of drones and smartphones provides an improved means of mapping breeding sites for use in operational LSM. Furthermore, deploying this technology does not appear to be more costly than a conventional ground-based approach and, as such, may represent an important tool for Malaria Control Programmes that plan to implement LSM., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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49. A health systems approach to critical care delivery in low-resource settings: a narrative review.
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Spencer SA, Adipa FE, Baker T, Crawford AM, Dark P, Dula D, Gordon SB, Hamilton DO, Huluka DK, Khalid K, Lakoh S, Limbani F, Rylance J, Sawe HR, Simiyu I, Waweru-Siika W, Worrall E, and Morton B
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- Humans, Critical Care, Systems Analysis, Health Resources, Delivery of Health Care, Health Workforce
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There is a high burden of critical illness in low-income countries (LICs), adding pressure to already strained health systems. Over the next decade, the need for critical care is expected to grow due to ageing populations with increasing medical complexity; limited access to primary care; climate change; natural disasters; and conflict. In 2019, the 72nd World Health Assembly emphasised that an essential part of universal health coverage is improved access to effective emergency and critical care and to "ensure the timely and effective delivery of life-saving health care services to those in need". In this narrative review, we examine critical care capacity building in LICs from a health systems perspective. We conducted a systematic literature search, using the World Heath Organisation (WHO) health systems framework to structure findings within six core components or "building blocks": (1) service delivery; (2) health workforce; (3) health information systems; (4) access to essential medicines and equipment; (5) financing; and (6) leadership and governance. We provide recommendations using this framework, derived from the literature identified in our review. These recommendations are useful for policy makers, health service researchers and healthcare workers to inform critical care capacity building in low-resource settings., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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50. Job satisfaction among community drug distributors in the Mass Drug Administration programme in Nigeria: a cross-sectional study.
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Kevin DG, Lawong BD, Dixon R, Woode ME, Agboraw E, Ozano K, Dean L, Forrer A, Isiyaku S, Thomson R, and Worrall E
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Nigeria, Job Satisfaction, Mass Drug Administration, Tropical Medicine
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Background: Despite having one of the largest human resources for health in Africa, the delivery of neglected tropical disease (NTD) health interventions in Nigeria has been hampered by health worker shortages. This study assessed factors associated with job satisfaction among community drug distributors (CDDs) supporting the Nigerian NTD programme, with the goal of identifying opportunities to improve job satisfaction in support of NTD control and elimination efforts in Nigeria., Methods: A health facility-based cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2019 among CDDs in two states with sharply contrasting NTD programme support, Kaduna and Ogun. A multivariate logistic regression model was used to determine the association between respondent characteristics, programme delivery modalities and job satisfaction., Results: Overall, 75.3% and 74.0% of CDDs were categorised as being satisfied with their job in Kaduna and Ogun states, respectively. The component with the highest reported satisfaction was motivation, where 98.9% and 98.6% of CDDs were satisfied, in Kaduna and Ogun, respectively. Participants were least satisfied with remuneration, communication, supplies and materials, as well as workload. Location (rural/urban) and state, years of experience, who delivers training and reimbursement of transport fare during medicine distribution were significantly associated with job satisfaction., Conclusions: Including multiple health staff and NTD programme cadres in CDD training and providing remuneration to cover transport fares spent during MDA delivery may improve CDDs' job satisfaction both in Ogun and Kaduna states. Given these two states are at opposite ends of the programme support spectrum, such adaptative measures might help improve CDD job satisfaction in the wider Nigerian NTD programme context., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.)
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- 2023
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