1,054 results on '"low and middle-income countries"'
Search Results
52. Neurosurgery-centred multidisciplinary team-based decisions
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Zainab A. Alaraji, Teeba A. Al-Ageely, Zinah A. Alaraji, Huda Abdulrazaq, Oday Atallah, Mustafa Ismail, and Samer S. Hoz
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LMICs ,low and middle-income countries ,MDM ,multi-disciplinary meeting ,MDT ,multi-disciplinary team ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
A multidisciplinary team (MDT) brings together a group of healthcare professionals from different fields at a specific time to discuss a case. People in an MDT can contribute to the decisions and plans for diagnosing and managing the patient. [1]. MDT in healthcare settings is essential; the main aim is to bring together a group of healthcare professionals from different fields and combine their inputs—this assistance in discussing patients’ presentations and findings, determining comprehensive treatment plans, and treatment side effects. The physical and psychological effects of impaired of these functions can significantly impact patients' quality of life and social well-being. [1]. In war-torn countries with limited resources and complex specialities like neurosurgery, MDT-based decisions may significantly impact the treatment process and outcome. In this paper, we try to highlight the differences in MDT-based work environments compared to the paucity of such organized decisions in war-torn regions of Iraq.
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- 2023
53. A narrative review of strategies to improve childhood vaccination coverage in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
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Idemudia Otaigbe
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Childhood vaccination ,Strategies ,Low and Middle-Income Countries ,Vaccination Coverage ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Childhood vaccination is a fundamental human right and a core component of successful primary care. It has positive benefits on population health as it reduces the burden and costs associated with infectious diseases. Main Body: Despite the immense benefits of childhood vaccination, vaccine coverage remains poor in many Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) due to several barriers. Examples of these barriers include parental misperceptions about vaccine safety, poor vaccine distribution networks and insufficient funding for childhood vaccination programs. It is therefore necessary to design suitable and effective strategies to overcome these barriers. Conclusion: This narrative review article discusses effective strategies to improve vaccine coverage in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs).
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- 2023
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54. Prevalence and factors associated with pre-hospital delay among acute stroke patients at Mulago and Kiruddu national referral hospitals, Kampala: a cross-sectional study.
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Kakame, Keith Twirire, Nakibuuka, Jane, Mukiza, Nelson, Andia-Biraro, Irene, Kaddumukasa, Mark, Burant, Chris, Katabira, Elly, and Sajatovic, Martha
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STROKE patients ,PUBLIC hospitals ,STROKE units ,STROKE ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Despite advancements in acute stroke care, acute stroke patients present late for care resulting in high mortality and poor functional outcomes. This study determined the prevalence of pre-hospital delay and associated factors among adult acute stroke patients in Uganda. Methods: In a hospital based, cross-sectional study, one hundred and forty-three study participants with confirmed acute stroke presenting to the emergency units of Mulago and Kiruddu national referral hospitals were enrolled. Using an interviewer-administered questionnaire, details on sociodemographics, onset of stroke, arrival at the tertiary facility, health system and clinical factors were collected. Descriptive statistics and modified Poisson regression analyses were performed to determine factors associated with prehospital delay. Results: Among the 143 study participants, nearly two-thirds (79/146) had ischemic stroke while a third (59/143) had haemorrhagic stroke. The mean age was 59 years (SD 16) and 51.7% of acute stroke patients were males. Ninety one percent (130/143) presented to the emergency unit after 3 hours. The majority (124/143) reported visiting lower-level facilities prior to referral to the tertiary facility. Staying outside Kampala district (PR: 1.28 (1.22–1.34), p < 0.001), and using hired or government ambulance for transport to tertiary facility (PR: 1.17 (1.13–1.20), p < 0.001) were associated with pre-hospital delay. Conclusions: Prevalence of pre-hospital delay among acute stroke patients presenting to public tertiary hospitals in Uganda is very high. The causes of pre hospital delay should be further explored qualitatively. Efforts to reduce prehospital delay should include improving pre-hospital transport systems for stroke patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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55. Insights to COVID-19 vaccine delivery: Results from a survey of 27 countries.
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Mathur, Ishani, Church, Rachael, Ruisch, Anika, Noyes, Karina, McCaffrey, Anna, Griffiths, Ulla, Oyatoye, Ibironke, Brenzel, Logan, Walker, Damian, and Suharlim, Christian
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COVID-19 vaccines , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COST estimates , *BUDGET , *OPPORTUNITY costs - Abstract
Most countries rolled out COVID-19 vaccination during 2021–2022. However, COVID-19 vaccine delivery cost estimates are still needed to support planning and budgeting to integrate COVID-19 vaccines into routine programs and to target high risk populations, specifically within resource-scarce contexts. Management Sciences for Health and the COVID-19 Vaccine Delivery Partnership Working Group collected country-level data through two surveys exploring global experiences with vaccine roll-out. 40 respondents from 27 countries responded to the surveys in November 2021 and May 2022. Respondents described their country's human resources needs, vaccine delivery modalities, demand generation strategies, booster uptake, cold chain capacity, supplies, and sub-population targets. The surveys highlighted unexpected trends in hiring, reliance on newer and costlier delivery and demand generation methods and significant gaps regarding HR, supplies, boosters, cold chain and reaching sub-populations. These types of opportunity assessments are useful ways of rapidly filling gaps in information needed to adequately cost alternative delivery strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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56. Addressing antimicrobial resistance in low and middle-income countries: overcoming challenges and implementing effective strategies.
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Rony, Moustaq Karim Khan, Sharmi, Priyanka Das, and Alamgir, Hasnat M.
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DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,MIDDLE-income countries ,INFECTION prevention ,HEALTH services accessibility ,QUALITY of service ,QUALITY control - Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become a critical worldwide health crisis. It poses major challenges for healthcare systems across the globe, demanding immediate attention and action. Low and middle-income countries (LMICs), in particular, encounter unique obstacles in addressing AMR due to various factors. This article aims to examine specific challenges and propose effective strategies to combat this issue. Through a comprehensive review of existing literature, this article identifies common barriers and successful interventions in tackling AMR. The research highlights several challenges faced by LMICs in addressing AMR, including limited access to quality healthcare services, socioeconomic disparities, limited awareness, inadequate surveillance systems and data collection, limited regulatory frameworks and quality control, as well as weak healthcare infrastructure and infection prevention practices. The research suggests strategies like improving healthcare access, promoting responsible antimicrobial use, enhancing surveillance, ensuring quality antimicrobial drugs, and fostering global collaboration to address these challenges. By understanding the challenges encountered by LMICs, it is possible to mitigate the impact of AMR and contribute to global efforts in combating this growing threat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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57. Access to palliative care in patients with advanced cancer of the uterine cervix in the low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review.
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Ooko, Francis, Mothiba, Tebogo, Van Bogaert, Peter, and Wens, Johan
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CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ONLINE information services ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HEALTH services accessibility ,UTERINE tumors ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,CANCER patients ,LOW-income countries ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,CERVIX uteri tumors ,ENDOWMENTS ,MEDLINE ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Women with advanced uterine cervical cancer suffer from a combination of moderate to severe physical, psychological, social, and spiritual distress due to their disease and are in need of palliative care to improve their quality of life. Approximately 85% of the women live in the low- and middle-income countries. Whether these women and their families access palliative care is not known. Objectives: To understand the geographic accessibility, availability, financial accessibility, and acceptability of palliative care by patients with advanced cervical cancer and their families. Methods: We conducted a Systematic review following PRISMA guidelines in CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, PsychINFO, PubMed and Scopus for the core concepts: palliative care, access, advanced uterine cervical cancer. Eligible articles were published in English, contained original data on experiences of patients and/or caregivers including symptoms management, and discussed available resources, communication, satisfaction, and healthcare utilization. Results: Overall there was limited access to palliative care with the few available facilities located in cities, far from the rural areas where most women lived. Pervasive poverty was common with poor affordability of healthcare, travelling, accommodation, and subsistence expenses. Misconceptions and poor knowledge of the disease, cultural beliefs and attitudes, and other health system insufficiencies also presented challenges for access. Conclusion: Concerted effort should be made to improve availability of palliative care facilities. Health education to address misconceptions and other cognitive barriers that limit access among cervical cancer patients and their families should be urgently undertaken in the LMICs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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58. Identifying critical gaps in research to advance global surgery by 2030: a systematic mapping review.
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Kebede, Meskerem Aleka, Tor, Deng Simon Garang, Aklilu, Tesfamariam, Petros, Adane, Ifeanyichi, Martilord, Aderaw, Ezekiel, Bognini, Maeve Sophia, Singh, Darshita, Emodi, Rosemary, Hargest, Rachel, and Friebel, Rocco
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EVIDENCE gaps ,BUSINESS partnerships ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HIGH-income countries ,SOCIAL network analysis - Abstract
Progress on surgical system strengthening has been slow due to a disconnect between evidence generation and the information required for effective policymaking. This systematic mapping review sought to assess critical research gaps in the field of global surgery guided by the World Health Organisation Health Systems building block framework, analysis of authorship and funding patterns, and an exploration of emerging research partnership networks. Literature was systematically mapped to identify, screen, and synthesize results of publications in the global surgery field between 2015 and March 2022. We searched four databases and included literature published in seven languages. A social network analysis determined the network attributes of research institutions and their transient relationships in shaping the global surgery research agenda. We identified 2,298 relevant studies out of 92,720 unique articles searched. Research output increased from 453 in 2015-16 to 552 in 2021-22, largely due to literature on Covid-19 impacts on surgery. Sub-Saharan Africa (792/2298) and South Asia (331/2298) were the most studied regions, although high-income countries represented a disproportionate number of first (42%) and last (43%) authors. Service delivery received the most attention, including the surgical burden and quality and safety of services, followed by capacity-building efforts in low- and middle-income countries. Critical research in economics and financing, essential infrastructure and supplies, and surgical leadership necessary to guide policy decisions at the country level were lacking. Global surgical systems remain largely under-researched. Knowledge diffusion requires an emphasis on developing sustainable research partnerships and capacity across low- and middle-income countries. A renewed focus must be given to equipping countries with tools for effective decision-making to enhance investments in high-quality surgical services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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59. Pay for performance in Brazilian primary health care: quality of work processes, actions and services.
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dos Anjos, Davllyn Santos Oliveira, Scherer, Magda Duarte dos Anjos, Cantalino, Juliana Leal Ribeiro, and da Silva, Everton Nunes
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MEDICAL care ,FAMILY health ,LOW-income countries ,EVALUATION ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Purpose: In 2011, Brazil introduced a national pay-for-performance (P4P) scheme called the National Program for Improving Primary Health Care Access and Quality (PMAQ), rolled out over three cycles and reaching more than 5,000 municipalities and 40,000 family health teams (FHTs). There is little evidence on how the PMAQ was implemented locally and whether this variation in implementation affects performance, particularly, in terms of work process indicators. This study compared different cases of municipal-level PMAQ implementation (bonuses paid or not to FHTs) over the last two program cycles to analyze the quality of the work processes, actions and services of FHTs. Design/methodology/approach: This was a cross-sectional analytical study using secondary data from an external evaluation of the Brazilian PMAQ. In total, 27,500 FHTs participated in the evaluation. They were divided into four clusters based on whether or not municipalities paid bonuses to workers during cycles 2 and 3 of the program (2013–2019). Variables regarding work processes, actions and services were classified as "Quality Assurance – QA" or "Continued Quality Improvement – CQI", and an individual score was assigned based on the average score of each variable. Findings: The four clusters displayed an increase in overall QA and CQI scores between the two program cycles; though this increase was small between the set of primary health care teams that received bonuses and those that did not. Originality/value: This paper contributes to bridging the gap in the scientific literature for evaluative studies on the relationship between direct payment for performance to health professionals and better quality actions and services in low and middle-income countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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60. The state of art of awake craniotomy in Latin American countries: a scoping review.
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Figueredo, Luisa F., Shelton, William J., Tagle-Vega, Uriel, Sanchez, Emiliano, de Macedo Filho, Leonardo, Salazar, Andres F., Murguiondo-Pérez, Renata, Fuentes, Santiago, Marenco-Hillembrand, Lina, Suarez-Meade, Paola, Ordoñez-Rubiano, Edgar, Gomez Amarillo, Diego, Albuquerque, Lucas Alverne F., de Amorim, Robson Luis Oliveira, Vasquez, Carlos M., Baldoncini, Matias, Mejia, Juan Armando, Niño, Claudia, Ramon, Juan Fernando, and Hakim, Fernando
- Abstract
Background and objective: Awake craniotomy (AC) is a valuable technique for surgical interventions in eloquent areas, but its adoption in low- and middle-income countries faces challenges like limited infrastructure, trained personnel shortage, and inadequate funding. This scoping review explores AC techniques in Latin American countries, focusing on patient characteristics, tumor location, symptomatology, and outcomes. Methods: A scoping review followed PRISMA guidelines, searching five databases in English, Spanish, and Portuguese. We included 28 studies with 258 patients (mean age: 43, range: 11–92). Patterns in AC use in Latin America were analyzed. Results: Most studies were from Brazil and Mexico (53.6%) and public institutions (70%). Low-grade gliomas were the most common lesions (55%), most of them located in the left hemisphere (52.3%) and frontal lobe (52.3%). Gross-total resection was achieved in 34.3% of cases. 62.9% used an Asleep-Awake-Asleep protocol, and 14.8% used Awake-Awake-Awake. The main complication was seizures (14.6%). Mean post-surgery discharge time was 68 h. Challenges included limited training, infrastructure, and instrumentation availability. Strategies discussed involve training in specialized centers, seeking sponsorships, applying for awards, and multidisciplinary collaborations with neuropsychology. Conclusion: Improved accessibility to resources, infrastructure, and adequate instrumentation is crucial for wider AC availability in Latin America. Despite disparities, AC implementation with proper training and teamwork yields favorable outcomes in resource-limited centers. Efforts should focus on addressing challenges and promoting equitable access to this valuable surgical technique in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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61. Gene-environment interactions and the effect on obesity risk in low and middle-income countries: a scoping review.
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Pledger, Sophia L. and Ahmadizar, Fariba
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GENOTYPE-environment interaction ,MIDDLE-income countries ,DISEASE risk factors ,EPIDEMICS ,GENOME-wide association studies ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,OBESITY - Abstract
Background: Obesity represents a major and preventable global health challenge as a complex disease and a modifiable risk factor for developing other non-communicable diseases. In recent years, obesity prevalence has risen more rapidly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) compared to highincome countries (HICs). Obesity traits are shown to be modulated by an interplay of genetic and environmental factors such as unhealthy diet and physical inactivity in studies from HICs focused on populations of European descent; however, genetic heterogeneity and environmental differences prevent the generalisation of study results to LMICs. Primary research investigating geneenvironment interactions (GxE) on obesity in LMICs is limited but expanding. Synthesis of current research would provide an overview of the interactions between genetic variants and environmental factors that underlie the obesity epidemic and identify knowledge gaps for future studies. Methods: Three databases were searched systematically using a combination of keywords such as “genes”, “obesity”, “LMIC”, “diet”, and “physical activity” to find all relevant observational studies published before November 2022. Results: Eighteen of the 1,373 articles met the inclusion criteria, of which one was a genome-wide association study (GWAS), thirteen used a candidate gene approach, and five were assigned as genetic risk score studies. Statistically significant findings were reported for 12 individual SNPs; however, most studies were small-scale and without replication. Conclusion: Although the results suggest significant GxE interactions on obesity in LMICs, updated robust statistical techniques with more precise and standardised exposure and outcome measurements are necessary for translatable results. Future research should focus on improved quality replication efforts, emphasising large-scale and long-term longitudinal study designs using multi-ethnic GWAS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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62. Proceedings from the CIHLMU 2022 Symposium: "Availability of and Access to Quality Data in Health".
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Tuladhar, Sabita, Mwamelo, Kimothy, Manyama, Christina, Obuobi, Dorothy, Antunes, Mario, Gashaw, Mulatu, Vogel, Monica, Shrinivasan, Harinee, Mugambwa, Kashung Annie, Korley, Isabella, Froeschl, Guenter, Hoffaeller, Lisa, and Scholze, Sarah
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COVID-19 pandemic ,MIDDLE-income countries ,DATA quality ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,HIGH-income countries - Abstract
Data is an essential tool for valid and reliable healthcare management. Access to high-quality data is critical to ensuring the early identification of problems, the design of appropriate interventions, and the effective implementation and evaluation of health intervention outcomes. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the need for strong information systems and the value of producing high-quality data for timely response and tracking resources and progress have been very evident across countries. The availability of and access to high-quality data at all levels of the health systems of low and middle-income countries is a challenge, which is exacerbated by multiple parallels and poorly integrated data sources, a lack of data-sharing standards and policy frameworks, their weak enforcement, and inadequate skills among those handling data. Completeness, accuracy, integrity, validity, and timeliness are challenges to data availability and use. "Big Data" is a necessity and a challenge in the current complexities of health systems. In transitioning to digital systems with proper data standards and policy frameworks for privacy protection, data literacy, ownership, and data use at all levels of the health system, skill enhancement of the staff is critical. Adequate funding for strengthening routine information systems and periodic surveys and research, and reciprocal partnerships between high-income countries and low- and middle-income countries in data generation and use, should be prioritized by the low- and middle-income countries to foster evidence-based healthcare practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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63. Influence of health-insurance on treatment outcome of childhood cancer in Western Kenya.
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Langat, Sandra, Njuguna, Festus, Olbara, Gilbert, Martijn, Hugo, Sieben, Cenne, Haverkort, Moniek, Njenga, Dennis, Vik, Terry A., Kaspers, Gertjan, and Mostert, Saskia
- Abstract
Background: Few governments in low and middle-income countries (LMIC) have responded favourably to the international plea for Universal Health Coverage. Childhood cancer survival in LMIC is often below 20%. Limited health-insurance coverage may contribute to this poor survival. Our study explores the influence of health-insurance status on childhood cancer treatment outcomes in a Kenyan academic hospital. Methods: This was a retrospective medical records review of all children diagnosed with cancer at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital between 2010 and 2016. Socio-demographic and clinical data was collected using a structured data collection form. Fisher’s exact test, chi-squared test, Kaplan–Meier method, log-rank test and Cox proportional hazard model were used to evaluate relationships between treatment outcomes and patient characteristics. Study was approved by Institutional Research Ethics Committee. Findings: From 2010–2016, 879 children were newly diagnosed with cancer. Among 763 patients whose records were available, 28% abandoned treatment, 23% died and 17% had progressive/relapsed disease resulting in 32% event-free survival. In total 280 patients (37%) had health-insurance at diagnosis. After active enrolment during treatment, total health-insurance registration level reached 579 patients (76%). Treatment outcomes differed by health-insurance status (P < 0.001). The most likely treatment outcome in uninsured patients was death (49%), whereas in those with health-insurance at diagnosis and those who enrolled during treatment it was event-free survival (36% and 41% respectively). Overall survival (P < 0.001) and event-free survival (P < 0.001) were higher for insured versus uninsured patients. The hazard-ratio for treatment failure was 0.30 (95% CI:0.22–0.39; P < 0.001) for patients insured at diagnosis and 0.32 (95% CI:0.24–0.41; P < 0.001) for patients insured during treatment in relation to those without insurance. Interpretation: Our study highlights the need for Universal Health Coverage in LMIC. Children without health-insurance had significantly lower survival. Childhood cancer treatment outcomes can be ameliorated by strategies that improve health-insurance access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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64. Risk factors for pre-eclampsia in low and middle-income countries : a case study of Tanzania
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Mruma, Henry Abraham, Norrie, John, and McQuillan, Ruth
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618.3 ,pre-eclampsia ,low and middle-income countries ,LMIC ,hypertension ,statistics ,risk factors ,Tanzania ,systematic review ,malaria infection ,gestational hypertension ,sociodemographic characteristics - Abstract
This PhD research focuses on understanding a maternal pregnancy condition known as pre-eclampsia. This condition contributes to around 14 % of the global burden of maternal mortality and fivefold of perinatal mortality in developing countries. Genetic, environmental, nutritional and socioeconomic factors are thought to disproportionately affect the burden of pre-eclampsia in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). The first chapter gives an overview; it introduces pre-eclampsia and outlines its contribution to the burden of maternal and infant mortality and morbidity. It summarises all chapters in this thesis. The second chapter gives the background of the literature review. This chapter describes pre-eclampsia in the context of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. It then explains some of the risk factors of pre-eclampsia, the natural history of the disease and the health system response: current modalities in screening, the evolution of the definition pre-eclampsia, diagnosis, prevention and management. The third chapter describes the scoping study, which aims at summarising explored risk factors in Africa, to identify potential gaps and the feasibility of conducting a systematic review. Its results showed that there were twenty studies done in Africa that had explored relatively few risk factors. These studies had methodological limitations of size and rigour, hence produced conflicting and inconclusive associations between pre-eclampsia outcome and most explored risk factors, including malaria infection. They also showed a gap in the literature regarding models built by risk factors that attempted to classify pre-eclampsia outcome in African populations. The fourth chapter describes the systematic review that explores the relationship between malaria infection and gestational hypertension (GH) with proteinuria (pre-eclampsia) or without. It considers two pathways that malaria possibly exert its effect on causing gestational hypertension. One pathway being through a dysfunctional placenta and the other pathway is by endothelial inflammation of blood vessels from malaria toxins. The result of the meta-analysis was a pooled odds ratio (OR) of 2.6, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 1.5 to 4.5. The odds of pre-eclampsia among pregnant women with malaria infection were 2.6 times than pregnant women without malaria infection. The fifth chapter describes the analysis of secondary data from Tanzania. This data analysis has four objectives. The sixth chapter describes the results of the four objectives, while chapter Seven presents the discussions of the four objectives. This data analysis used data from two sources: a hospital maternity register from northern Tanzania and a clinical trial in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The data analysis had four objectives; objective one determined the incidence pre-eclampsia to be 1.9 %, 95 % CI 1.3 % to 2.2 % in Dar es Salaam city, Tanzania. Objective two describes the sociodemographic characteristics of women with pre-eclampsia compared with those without pre-eclampsia in northern Tanzania population. Preeclampsia was more frequent among women with age above 35 years, single and tertiary level education. Objective three aimed to identify biomedical risk factors for pre-eclampsia among women in northern Tanzania. Then, I used these identified risk factors to build prediction models for pre-eclampsia. I later assessed the ability of these models to classify women with and without pre-eclampsia. Maternal age, weight before pregnancy, contraceptive intrauterine device (IUD) use, a diagnosis of malaria, diagnosis of infections, history of hypertension and HIV treatment were statistically significant predictors in some of my models. My final models in predicting pre-eclampsia in all deliveries, term and preterm delivery subgroups produced an area under the curve of 69.4 %, 71.2 % and 66.9 % respectively. The points of maximum sensitivity and specificity produced sensitivity values of 65 %, 65 % and 59 % respectively, while also producing specificity values of 63 %, 65 % and 66 % respectively. The risk factors and the prediction models were developed on a hospital-based register where the incidence of pre-eclampsia was 3.5%. Since hospital estimates tend to overestimate the incidence compared to population survey, the results of my prediction models will differ in women populations with a high risk of pre-eclampsia. The fourth objective describes the pregnancy outcome of women with preeclampsia compared to women without pre-eclampsia. The results showed there were more stillbirths among women with pre-eclampsia. The odds of stillbirth were 4.8 (95 % CI 3.7 – 6.3) times among women with preeclampsia than women without pre-eclampsia in all deliveries. Upon stratifying by term and preterm deliveries the odds were 2.6 (95 % CI 1.6 – 4.3) and 2.9 (95 % CI 2.0 – 4.1) respectively. The surviving offspring have worse developmental indicators compared to their counterparts in terms of low a Apgar score at 1-minute, low birth weight, small head circumference and short birth length. The odds of a low Apgar score (0 – 3) baby was 4.3 times (95 % CI 3.4 - 5.4) among pre-eclampsia women in all deliveries compared to normal Apgar score (4 – 10) babies. The association was maintained in the subgroups of term and preterm delivery (OR = 2.3, 95 % CI 1.5 – 3.5 and 2.8, 95 % CI 2.0 - 3.9 respectively). Chapter Eight covers the conclusion and recommendations of this thesis, which are: (i) Few studies that explored risk factors in Africa, more studies are needed to resolve conflicting and inconclusive findings from these studies. (ii) Malaria infection is associated with pre-eclampsia and gestational hypertension in malaria endemic regions. Malaria control should be intensified among pregnant women and further studies should explore the causal mechanisms. (iii) The incidence of pre-eclampsia should be tracked to observe changes in its trends in the evolving urban populations of LMIC. (iv) Affordable and feasible prediction models for pre-eclampsia should be developed and assessed for performance to enable identification and provision of prevention services on women with a high risk of developing preeclampsia. (v) Women with pre-eclampsia should receive appropriate treatment to mitigate the negative impact on their pregnancy outcome.
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- 2020
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65. Redefining HIV care: a path toward sustainability post-UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets
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Godfrey Musuka, Enos Moyo, Diego Cuadros, Helena Herrera, and Tafadzwa Dzinamarira
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HIV programmes ,UNAIDS 95-95-95 ,low and middle-income countries ,transition ,considerations ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2023
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66. Magnitude of unintended pregnancy and its determinants among childbearing age women in low and middle-income countries: evidence from 61 low and middle income countries.
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Aragaw, Fantu Mamo, Amare, Tsegaw, Teklu, Rediet Eristu, Tegegne, Biresaw Ayen, and Alem, Adugnaw Zeleke
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MIDDLE-income countries ,UNPLANNED pregnancy ,LOW-income countries ,CHILDBEARING age ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,MEDIA exposure ,MARRIED women - Abstract
Background: Unintended pregnancy is one of the most serious health issues in low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), posing significant health, economic, and psychosocial costs to individuals and communities. However, there is limited evidence on the prevalence of unintended pregnancies and their determinants in LMICs. Hence, this study aimed to assess the prevalence of unintended pregnancy and its associated factors among childbearing-age women in LMICs. Method: Data for the study were drawn from a recent 61 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) conducted in LMICs. A total sample of 187,347 mothers who gave birth in the five years preceding the survey was included. STATA version 16 was used to clean and analyze the data. Multilevel multivariable logistic regression was employed to identify individual and community-level factors of unintended pregnancy in LMICs. In the multivariable analysis, an adjusted odds ratio with a 95% confidence level was reported to indicate statistical association. Results: The pooled magnitude of unintended pregnancy in LMICs was 26.46%% (95% CI: 25.30%, 27.62%), ranging from 19.25%% in Egypt to 61.71% in Bolivia. Working status (AOR = 1.03; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.06), having a husband with no education (AOR = 1.07; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.15), and primary education (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.11), women from male-headed households (AOR = 1.04; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.08), media exposure (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.08), unmet need for contraception (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.08), distance from a health facility (AOR = 1.03; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.06) were significantly associated with unintended pregnancy. Conclusion: Unintended pregnancy rates remain high in LMICs. Women whose husband has no education and primary education, women with media exposure, working status, women who live in a household headed by male, women with unmet need for contraception, and women with a big problem of distance to health facilities were variables that were significant predictors of unintended pregnancy. When attempting to minimize unintended pregnancy in LMICs, these factors need to be considered. Furthermore, most of these attempts should be driven by government entities in low and middle-income countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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67. Exploring the perioperative infection control practices & incidence of surgical site infections in rural India.
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Nayan, Anveshi, Sarang, Bhakti, Khajanchi, Monty, Roy, Nobhojit, Jesudian, Gnanaraj, Menon, Nandakumar, Patil, Mulki, Kataria, Raman, Manoharan, Ravikumar, Tongaonkar, Rajesh, Dev, Ya, and Gadgil, Anita
- Subjects
SURGICAL site infections ,INFECTION control ,RURAL hospitals ,SURGICAL site ,MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Background: Surgical site infections (SSIs) affect around a third of patients undergoing surgeries worldwide, annually. It is heterogeneously distributed with a higher burden in low and middle-income countries. Although rural and semi-urban hospitals cater to 60–70% of the Indian population, scarce data regarding SSI rates are available from such hospitals. The study aimed to determine the prevalent SSI prevention practices and existing SSI rates in the smaller rural and semi-urban hospitals in India. Methods: This is a prospective study performed in two phases involving surgeons and their hospitals from Indian rural and semi-urban regions. In the first phase, a questionnaire was administered to surgeons enquiring into the perioperative SSI prevention practices and five interested hospitals were recruited for phase two which documented the rate of SSIs and factors affecting them. Results: There was full compliance towards appropriate perioperative sterilisation practices and postoperative mop count practice at the represented hospitals. But prophylactic antimicrobials were continued in the postoperative period in more than 80% of the hospitals. The second phase of our study documented an overall SSI rate of 7.0%. The SSI rates were influenced by the surgical wound class with dirty wounds recording six times higher rate of infection than clean cases. Conclusions: SSI prevention practices and protocols were in place in all the less-resourced hospitals surveyed. The SSI rates are comparable or lower than other LMIC settings. However, this is accompanied by poor implementation of the antimicrobial stewardship guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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68. Barriers and Facilitators Factors to Uptake of Cervical Cancer Screening Among Women in Low- and Middle-income Countries: A Narrative Review.
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Al-Oseely, Sarah Ahmed, Manaf, Rosliza Abdul, and Ismail, Suriani
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MIDDLE-income countries , *EARLY detection of cancer , *CERVICAL cancer , *MEDICAL screening , *HEALTH education - Abstract
Cervical cancer is a worldwide health issue. Each year, it kills hundreds of thousands of women worldwide. Despite the availability of screening tests, the incidence of cervical cancer remains high in low and middle-income countries. In this review, we survey the current literature on factors affecting cervical cancer screening uptake among women in low and middle-income countries. It also highlights potential strategies for improving screening uptake and suggests directions for future research. Knowledge about cervical cancer and its screening, socio-demographic factors, personal and behavioural factors, cultural factors and beliefs, and health service factors are considered the main barriers and facilitators to cervical cancer screening uptake among women in low and middle-income countries. Understanding the facilitators and barriers to cervical cancer screening encountered by women in low and middle-income countries can improve screening uptake by overcoming inequalities in resource and information access. Culturally sensitive screening programs, improvement of the health system, and health education interventions to raise awareness of screening and its benefits can be effective strategies to improve screening uptake among women in low and middle-income countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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69. Eculizumab for paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria: catastrophic health expenditure in Nepalese patients.
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Adhikari, Sugat, Sapkota, Surendra, Shrestha, Suraj, Karki, Kshitiz, and Shrestha, Anjan
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PAROXYSMAL hemoglobinuria ,ECULIZUMAB ,NEPALI people ,COMPLEMENT activation ,COMPLEMENT inhibition - Abstract
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) results from a mutation in the phosphatidylinositol glycan class-A gene which causes uncontrolled complement activation with resultant intravascular hemolysis and its sequelae. Eculizumab is a terminal complement inhibitor that blocks this complement activation and has revolutionized the treatment of PNH but comes with an enormous price which can have catastrophic health expenditure in low-middle income countries (LMIC) like Nepal. Here, we discuss the potential way forwards in the treatment of PNH in Nepal and other LMICs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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70. Gender differences in HIV knowledge among adolescents and young people in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review.
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Chory, Ashley, Gillette, Emma, Callen, Grant, Wachira, Juddy, Sam-Agudu, Nadia A., Bond, Keosha, and Vreeman, Rachel
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YOUNG adults ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HIV ,HIV infections ,AGE groups ,TEENAGE boys ,RISK perception - Abstract
Objectives: This review seeks to critically analyze studies assessing gender differences in HIV-related knowledge among adolescents and young people in low- and middle-income countries. Methods: Using PRISMA guidelines and searching Pubmed and Scopus online databases, the search strategy combined search keywords with Boolean operators: (HIV OR AIDS) AND (knowledge) AND (gender) AND (adolescents). AC and EG conducted the search and independently reviewed all articles in Covidence software; conflicts were resolved by GC. Articles were included if they evaluated differences in HIV knowledge in at least two groups ages 10-24 and were implemented in a low or middle-income country. Results: The search resulted in 4,901 articles, of which fifteen studies, implemented in 15 countries, met selection criteria. Twelve evaluated differences in HIV knowledge in school settings; three evaluated participants in clinic settings. Adolescent males consistently scored higher in composite knowledge scores, as well as knowledge of HIV transmission, prevention, attitudes and sexual decision-making. Conclusion: We found gender-based discrepancies between knowledge, perception of risk and HIV prevalence among youth globally, with boys consistently scoring higher in HIV knowledge. However, there is significant evidence that social and cultural contexts render girls at high risk of HIV infection, and the gaps in girls' knowledge and boys' roles in HIV risk must be addressed urgently. Future research should consider interventions that facilitate discussion and HIV knowledge building across genders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
71. Hazardous Child Labour, Psychosocial Functioning, and School Dropouts among Children in Bangladesh: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of UNICEF's Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS).
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Thi, Aye Myat, Zimmerman, Cathy, and Ranganathan, Meghna
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CHILD labor ,CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SURVEYS ,CHILDREN'S health ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Child labour is a common financial coping strategy in poor households, especially in low-and middle-income countries with many children working under hazardous conditions. Little is known about the linkages between hazardous work conditions and psycho-social and educational outcomes. We analysed the Bangladesh Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (BMICS) round 6 to assess the association between the exposure variables, including child labour, hazardous child labour (HZCL) and hazardous work, and outcome variables, including psychosocial functioning difficulty and school dropout, in children aged 5 to 17 years. We conducted bivariable and multivariable analyses to examine the association. In the adjusted analyses, children engaged in HZCL had increased odds of psychosocial functioning difficulty (aOR: 1.41; 95% CI: 1.16–1.72) and school dropout (aOR: 5.65; 95% CI: 4.83–6.61) among 5–14-year-olds compared to children who did not engage in child labour and hazardous work. Other independent factors associated with psychosocial functioning difficulty and school dropout included being male, living in a deprived neighbourhood, being exposed to violent punishment, the caregiver's attitude towards physical punishment, the mother's functional difficulty and lower maternal education. The linkages between hazardous work and psychosocial functioning difficulty appear more prominent among children not in school. Further, the evidence on the relationship between hazardous work and school dropout is stronger among children with psychosocial functioning difficulty. Policies and programmes that target the most hazardous forms of work are likely to have the greatest benefits for children's mental health, social well-being and educational attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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72. Addressing the needs of Ethiopia's street homeless women of reproductive age in the health and social protection policy: a qualitative study.
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Yohannes, Kalkidan, Målqvist, Mats, Bradby, Hannah, Berhane, Yemane, and Herzig van Wees, Sibylle
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HEALTH policy , *WELL-being , *INTERVIEWING , *PUBLIC administration , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESEARCH funding , *HOMELESS persons , *NEEDS assessment , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Introduction: Globally, homelessness is a growing concern, and homeless women of reproductive age are particularly vulnerable to adverse physical, mental, and reproductive health conditions, including violence. Although Ethiopia has many homeless individuals, the topic has received little attention in the policy arena. Therefore, we aimed to understand the reason for the lack of attention, with particular emphasis on women of reproductive age. Methods: This is a qualitative study; 34 participants from governmental and non-governmental organisations responsible for addressing homeless individuals' needs participated in in-depth interviews. A deductive analysis of the interview materials was applied using Shiffman and Smith's political prioritisation framework. Results: Several factors contributed to the underrepresentation of homeless women's health and well-being needs in the policy context. Although many governmental and non-governmental organisations contributed to the homeless-focused programme, there was little collaboration and no unifying leadership. Moreover, there was insufficient advocacy and mobilisation to pressure national leaders. Concerning ideas, there was no consensus regarding the definition of and solution to homeless women's health and social protection issues. Regarding political contexts and issue characteristics, a lack of a well-established structure, a paucity of information on the number of homeless women and the severity of their health situations relative to other problems, and the lack of clear indicators prevented this issue from gaining political priority. Conclusions: To prioritise the health and well-being of homeless women, the government should form a unifying collaboration and a governance structure that addresses the unmet needs of these women. It is imperative to divide responsibilities and explicitly include homeless people and services targeted for them in the national health and social protection implementation documents. Further, generating consensus on framing the problems and solutions and establishing indicators for assessing the situation is vital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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73. Gene-environment interactions and the effect on obesity risk in low and middle-income countries: a scoping review
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Sophia L. Pledger and Fariba Ahmadizar
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genes ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,gene-environment interaction ,obesity ,low and middle-income countries ,review ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
BackgroundObesity represents a major and preventable global health challenge as a complex disease and a modifiable risk factor for developing other non-communicable diseases. In recent years, obesity prevalence has risen more rapidly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) compared to high-income countries (HICs). Obesity traits are shown to be modulated by an interplay of genetic and environmental factors such as unhealthy diet and physical inactivity in studies from HICs focused on populations of European descent; however, genetic heterogeneity and environmental differences prevent the generalisation of study results to LMICs. Primary research investigating gene-environment interactions (GxE) on obesity in LMICs is limited but expanding. Synthesis of current research would provide an overview of the interactions between genetic variants and environmental factors that underlie the obesity epidemic and identify knowledge gaps for future studies.MethodsThree databases were searched systematically using a combination of keywords such as “genes”, “obesity”, “LMIC”, “diet”, and “physical activity” to find all relevant observational studies published before November 2022.ResultsEighteen of the 1,373 articles met the inclusion criteria, of which one was a genome-wide association study (GWAS), thirteen used a candidate gene approach, and five were assigned as genetic risk score studies. Statistically significant findings were reported for 12 individual SNPs; however, most studies were small-scale and without replication.ConclusionAlthough the results suggest significant GxE interactions on obesity in LMICs, updated robust statistical techniques with more precise and standardised exposure and outcome measurements are necessary for translatable results. Future research should focus on improved quality replication efforts, emphasising large-scale and long-term longitudinal study designs using multi-ethnic GWAS.
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- 2023
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74. Prevalence and clustering of cardiovascular disease risk factors among adults along the Lancang-Mekong River: a cross-sectional study from low- and middle-income countries
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Min Ma, Liping He, Huadan Wang, Mingjing Tang, Da Zhu, Labee Sikanha, Sokha Darapiseth, Jiang Lu, Yu Xia, Zhongjie Wang, Xia Wu, Qiuyan Zhu, Lin Duo, Xiangbin Pan, and Linhong Pang
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cardiovascular disease risk factors ,prevention ,low and middle-income countries ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Progress in cardiovascular health is increasingly concentrated in high-income countries, while the burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is high in low - and middle-income countries, a clear health inequity that must be urgently addressed. Objective: This study aims to evaluate the prevalence and clustering of CVD risk factors in the three Lancang-Mekong regions. Methods: We conducted a population-based cross-sectional survey from January 2021 to March 2023 in China, Laos, and Cambodia. We compared the prevalence and clustering of CVD risk factors including hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, overweight / obesity, current smoker, current drinker, inadequate vegetable and fruit intake, and insufficient physical activity across the three regions, and were further stratified by gender and age. Multivariate logistic regression models were performed to explore factors influencing the aggregation of CVD risk factors (≥2, ≥3, ≥4). Results: A total of 11005 adults were included. Hypertension emerged as the primary metabolic risk factors in Laos (36.8%) and Cambodia (23.5%), whereas overweight / obesity was 37.6% in China. In terms of behavioral risk factors, all three regions showed insufficient vegetable and fruit intake. The prevalence of individuals without CVD risk factors was 10% in China, 1.9% in Laos, and 5.2% in Cambodia. Meanwhile, the prevalence of two or more risk factors was 64.6% in China, 79.2% in Laos, and 76.0% in Cambodia. Multivariate logistic regression models revealed that the propensity for CVD risk factors clustering was higher in men and increased with age in all three countries. Conclusions: CVD risk factors and multiple clustering are pressing health threats among adults in low- and middle-income areas along the Lancang-Mekong River Basin. This study highlights the urgent need for proactive tailored strategies to control CVD risk factors.
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- 2024
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75. Concluding Thoughts on Life Skills Education for Youth
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Schmidt, Dana, Sorbring, Emma, Series Editor, Johansson, Thomas, Series Editor, Al-Hassan, Suha, Editorial Board Member, Archer, Louise, Editorial Board Member, Di Giunta, Laura, Editorial Board Member, Haywood, Chris, Editorial Board Member, Peña Alampay, Liane, Editorial Board Member, Russell, Lisa, Editorial Board Member, Smahel, David, Editorial Board Member, Sofkova Hashemi, Sylvana, Editorial Board Member, DeJaeghere, Joan, editor, and Murphy-Graham, Erin, editor
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- 2022
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76. Introduction
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DeJaeghere, Joan, Murphy-Graham, Erin, Sorbring, Emma, Series Editor, Johansson, Thomas, Series Editor, Al-Hassan, Suha, Editorial Board Member, Archer, Louise, Editorial Board Member, Di Giunta, Laura, Editorial Board Member, Haywood, Chris, Editorial Board Member, Peña Alampay, Liane, Editorial Board Member, Russell, Lisa, Editorial Board Member, Smahel, David, Editorial Board Member, Sofkova Hashemi, Sylvana, Editorial Board Member, DeJaeghere, Joan, editor, and Murphy-Graham, Erin, editor
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- 2022
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77. Neurosurgery-centred multidisciplinary team-based decisions. Experience from Iraq.
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Alaraji, Zainab A., Al-Ageely, Teeba A., Alaraji, Zinah A., Abdulrazaq, Huda, Atallah, Oday, Ismail, Mustafa, and Hoz, Samer S.
- Abstract
A multidisciplinary team (MDT) brings together a group of healthcare professionals from different fields at a specific time to discuss a case. People in an MDT can contribute to the decisions and plans for diagnosing and managing the patient. [1]. MDT in healthcare settings is essential; the main aim is to bring together a group of healthcare professionals from different fields and combine their inputs--this assistance in discussing patients' presentations and findings, determining comprehensive treatment plans, and treatment side effects. The physical and psychological effects of impaired of these functions can significantly impact patients' quality of life and social well-being. [1]. In war-torn countries with limited resources and complex specialities like neurosurgery, MDT-based decisions may significantly impact the treatment process and outcome. In this paper, we try to highlight the differences in MDT-based work environments compared to the paucity of such organized decisions in war-torn regions of Iraq. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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78. Changing Social Norms: the Importance of “Organized Diffusion” for Scaling Up Community Health Promotion and Women Empowerment Interventions
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Cislaghi, Beniamino, Denny, Elaine K, Cissé, Mady, Gueye, Penda, Shrestha, Binita, Shrestha, Prabin Nanicha, Ferguson, Gemma, Hughes, Claire, and Clark, Cari Jo
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Generic health relevance ,Gender Equality ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Communication ,Developing Countries ,Empowerment ,Female ,Health Promotion ,Humans ,Mali ,Nepal ,Nigeria ,Residence Characteristics ,Social Norms ,Young Adult ,Social norms ,Health promotion ,Gender equality ,Women empowerment ,Low and middle-income countries ,Organized diffusion ,Intervention effectiveness ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
Some harmful practices are sustained by social norms-collective beliefs about what people expect from each other. Practitioners and researchers alike have been investigating the potential of social norms theory to inform the design of effective interventions addressing these practices in low- and middle-income countries. One approach commonly used to facilitate social norms change is community-based dialogs and trainings. This approach has often been criticized for not being cost-effective, as it usually includes a relatively small number of direct participants and does not allow for scaling-up strategies. In spite of some evidence (as for instance, the SASA! Program) that community dialogs can achieve social norms change, little exists in the literature about how exactly participants in community dialogs engage others in their networks to achieve change. In this paper, we look at the potential of "organized diffusion" as a cost-effective strategy to expand the positive effects of community-based interventions to participants' networks, achieving sustainable normative shifts. We provide quantitative evidence from three case studies-Community Empowerment Program in Mali, Change Starts at Home in Nepal, and Voices for Change in Nigeria-showing that participants in community-based interventions can be effectively empowered to share their new knowledge and understandings systematically with others in their networks, eventually facilitating social norms change. Future community-based interventions intending to achieve social norms change would benefit from integrating ways to help participants engage others in their network in transformative conversations. Doing so has the potential to generate additional impact with little additional investment.
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- 2019
79. Global infection prevention gaps, needs, and utilization of educational resources: A cross-sectional assessment by the International Society for Infectious Diseases.
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Desai, Angel N, Ramatowski, John W, Lassmann, Britta, Holmes, Alison, Mehtar, Shaheen, and Bearman, Gonzalo
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Humans ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infection Control ,Drug Resistance ,Microbial ,Developing Countries ,Hospitals ,Health Resources ,Health Services Research ,Global Health ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Cell Phone ,Antimicrobial resistance ,Infection control ,Low and middle-income countries ,Mobile technology ,Prevention ,Technology ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
ObjectiveThe Guide to Infection Control in the Hospital (Guide) is an open access resource produced by the International Society for Infectious Diseases (ISID) to assist in the prevention of infection acquisition and transmission worldwide. A survey was distributed to 8055 current Guide users to understand their needs.MethodsThe survey consisted of 48-questions regarding infection prevention and control (IPC) availability and needs. Dichotomous questions, Likert scale-type questions, and open-and closed-ended questions were used.ResultsRespondents (n=1121) from 194 countries and six WHO regions participated in the survey. 43% (488) identified as physicians. Personal protective equipment (PPE) availability, training, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing varied between regions. Only 11% of respondents from low-income countries reported consistent access to respiratory equipment, 12% to isolation gowns, 4% to negative pressure rooms or personnel trained in IPC, and 20% to antimicrobial resistance testing. This differed significantly to high and upper middle-income resource settings (p
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- 2019
80. Knowledge of COVID-19 and the impact on indigents’ access to healthcare in Burkina Faso
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E. Bonnet, Y. Beaugé, M. F. Ba, S. Sidibé, M. De Allegri, and V. Ridde
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Knowledge of COVID-19 ,Indigent ,Access to healthcare ,Low and middle-income countries ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background COVID-19 constitutes a global health emergency of unprecedented proportions. Preventive measures, however, have run up against certain difficulties in low and middle-income countries. This is the case in socially and geographically marginalized communities, which are excluded from information about preventive measures. This study contains a dual objective, i) to assess knowledge of COVID-19 and the preventive measures associated with it concerning indigents in the villages of Diebougou’s district in Burkina Faso. The aim is to understand if determinants of this understanding exist, and ii) to describe how their pathways to healthcare changed from 2019 to 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods The study was conducted in the Diebougou healthcare district, in the south-west region of Burkina Faso. We relied on a cross-sectional design and used data from the fourth round of a panel survey conducted among a sample of ultra-poor people that had been monitored since 2015. Data were collected in August 2020 and included a total of 259 ultra-poor people. A multivariate logistic regression to determine the factors associated with the respondents' knowledge of COVID-19 was used. Results Half of indigents in the district said they had heard about COVID-19. Only 29% knew what the symptoms of the disease were. The majority claimed that they protected themselves from the virus by using preventive measures. This level of knowledge of the disease can be observed with no differences between the villages. Half of the indigents who expressed themselves agreed with government measures except for the closure of markets. An increase of over 11% can be seen in indigents without the opportunity for getting healthcare compared with before the pandemic. Conclusions This research indicates that COVID-19 is partially known and that prevention measures are not universally understood. The study contributes to reducing the fragmentation of knowledge, in particular on vulnerable and marginalized populations. Results should be useful for future interventions for the control of epidemics that aim to leave no one behind.
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- 2022
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81. Magnitude of unintended pregnancy and its determinants among childbearing age women in low and middle-income countries: evidence from 61 low and middle income countries
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Fantu Mamo Aragaw, Tsegaw Amare, Rediet Eristu Teklu, Biresaw Ayen Tegegne, and Adugnaw Zeleke Alem
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unintended pregnancy ,multilevel analysis ,low and middle-income countries ,child bearing age ,women ,Reproduction ,QH471-489 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
BackgroundUnintended pregnancy is one of the most serious health issues in low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), posing significant health, economic, and psychosocial costs to individuals and communities. However, there is limited evidence on the prevalence of unintended pregnancies and their determinants in LMICs. Hence, this study aimed to assess the prevalence of unintended pregnancy and its associated factors among childbearing-age women in LMICs.MethodData for the study were drawn from a recent 61 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) conducted in LMICs. A total sample of 187,347 mothers who gave birth in the five years preceding the survey was included. STATA version 16 was used to clean and analyze the data. Multilevel multivariable logistic regression was employed to identify individual and community-level factors of unintended pregnancy in LMICs. In the multivariable analysis, an adjusted odds ratio with a 95% confidence level was reported to indicate statistical association.ResultsThe pooled magnitude of unintended pregnancy in LMICs was 26.46%% (95% CI: 25.30%, 27.62%), ranging from 19.25%% in Egypt to 61.71% in Bolivia. Working status (AOR = 1.03; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.06), having a husband with no education (AOR = 1.07; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.15), and primary education (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.11), women from male-headed households (AOR = 1.04; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.08), media exposure (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.08), unmet need for contraception (AOR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.08), distance from a health facility (AOR = 1.03; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.06) were significantly associated with unintended pregnancy.ConclusionUnintended pregnancy rates remain high in LMICs. Women whose husband has no education and primary education, women with media exposure, working status, women who live in a household headed by male, women with unmet need for contraception, and women with a big problem of distance to health facilities were variables that were significant predictors of unintended pregnancy. When attempting to minimize unintended pregnancy in LMICs, these factors need to be considered. Furthermore, most of these attempts should be driven by government entities in low and middle-income countries.
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- 2023
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82. The Aga Khan Development Network’s (AKDN) approach to supply chain carbon foot printing for healthcare providers
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Jerome Baddley and Fawzia N. Rasheed
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Carbon footprint ,Supply chain ,Low and middle-income countries ,Net zero ,Healthcare ,Greenhouse gases ,Systems engineering ,TA168 ,Marketing. Distribution of products ,HF5410-5417.5 - Abstract
Very few examples of footprints exist for lower-middle-income countries and none for low-income countries. Where footprints do exist, they suggest that healthcare in LMICs is more carbon intensive per unit of expenditure than in high-income or upper-middle-income countries. At the same time, delivery of global commitments on Universal Health Coverage implies that healthcare provision in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) must grow more rapidly than anywhere else in the word.There has been little or no access to appropriate, comprehensive but affordable support to enable operations in LMICs to calculate full Scope 1,2 and 3 footprints. Without this it has been challenging for operations in LMICs to effectively target actions to reduce their emissions.With this in mind this paper sets out to demonstrate an approach to carbon foot printing healthcare in LMICs that is sufficiently robust to support targeted action, while using tools, resources and data that are freely accessible in all countries.This paper describes and discusses a 4-tiered ‘hybrid’ approach, developed using the international Greenhouse Gas Protocol. The approach was used successfully by staff to generate carbon footprints for healthcare organisations in 8 LMICs in South and Central Asia and East Africa. The organisations covered all fall within the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN); specifically, the Aga Khan Health Services (AKHS) and the Aga Khan Universities (AKU)The principles discussed in this paper, have been used to build a comprehensive carbon management tool in Microsoft Excel. The use of the approach and the tool has enabled AKDN healthcare providers to effectively, baseline, target and structure their carbon reduction activity.This work has had to pragmatically balance accuracy with deliverability in an LMIC context. While footprinting for Scope 1 and 2 has followed standard protocols, proxy data has been used to generate high level supply chain footprints, this has then been refined with data from suppliers.The tool and its accompanying guide are published and available, free to use, from AKDN to support other healthcare organisations in footprinting and reducing their own carbon emissions.
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- 2023
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83. In-silico analysis of TCGA data showing multiple POLE-like favourable subgroups overlapping with TP53 mutated endometrial cancer: Implications for clinical practice in low and middle-income countries
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Damayanti Das Ghosh, Rahul Roy Chowdhury, Rajeswari Dutta, Indranil Mukhopadhyay, Asima Mukhopadhyay, and Susanta Roychoudhury
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Endometrial cancer ,TCGA ,TP53 ,POLE-like ,Prognosis ,Low and middle-income countries ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Introduction: The Cancer Genome Atlas cohort of endometrial carcinoma (TCGA-UCEC) includes almost 40% TP53-mutants encompassing missense and truncated variants. TCGA revealed ‘POLE’, characterized by POLE gene bearing exonuclease domain mutation (EDM), as the prognostically best molecular profile. The worst profile was characterized by TP53-mutated Type 2 cancer requiring adjuvant therapy having cost implications in low-resource settings. We aimed to find more ‘POLE-like’ favourable subgroups by searching TCGA cohort, especially within TP53 mutated risk group, that could eventually avoid adjuvant treatment in resource-poor settings. Method: Our study was an in-silico survival analysis performed on the TCGA-UCEC dataset using SPSS statistical package. TP53 and POLE mutations, microsatellite instability (MSI), time-to-event and clinicopathological parameters were compared among 512 endometrial cancer cases. Deleterious POLE-mutations were identified by Polyphen2. Progression free survival was studied using Kaplan-Meier plots keeping original ‘POLE’ as comparator. Result: In presence of wild type (WT)-TP53, other deleterious POLE-mutations behaved like POLE-EDM. Only truncated and not missense TP53 benefitted from POLE/MSI overlap. However, TP53 missense mutation, Y220C, was found to be as favourable as ‘POLE’. Overlapping POLE, MSI and WT-TP53 also performed favourably. Truncated TP53 overlapped with POLE and/or MSI, TP53 Y220C alone and, WT-TP53 overlapped with POLE and MSI both, were named ‘POLE-like’ for prognostically behaving like the comparator ‘POLE’. Conclusion: Obesity being a lesser frequent event in low and middle-income countries (LMICs), relative proportion of women with lower BMI and Type 2 endometrial cancers may be high. Identification of ‘POLE-like’ groups may facilitate therapeutic de-escalation in some TP53-mutated cases - a novel option. Instead of 5% (POLE-EDM), potential beneficiary would then comprise 10% (POLE-like) of TCGA-UCEC.
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- 2023
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84. Gender differences in HIV knowledge among adolescents and young people in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review
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Ashley Chory, Emma Gillette, Grant Callen, Juddy Wachira, Nadia A. Sam-Agudu, Keosha Bond, and Rachel Vreeman
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HIV ,gender ,knowledge ,low and middle-income countries ,adolescent ,Reproduction ,QH471-489 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
ObjectivesThis review seeks to critically analyze studies assessing gender differences in HIV-related knowledge among adolescents and young people in low- and middle-income countries.MethodsUsing PRISMA guidelines and searching Pubmed and Scopus online databases, the search strategy combined search keywords with Boolean operators: (HIV OR AIDS) AND (knowledge) AND (gender) AND (adolescents). AC and EG conducted the search and independently reviewed all articles in Covidence software; conflicts were resolved by GC. Articles were included if they evaluated differences in HIV knowledge in at least two groups ages 10–24 and were implemented in a low or middle-income country.ResultsThe search resulted in 4,901 articles, of which fifteen studies, implemented in 15 countries, met selection criteria. Twelve evaluated differences in HIV knowledge in school settings; three evaluated participants in clinic settings. Adolescent males consistently scored higher in composite knowledge scores, as well as knowledge of HIV transmission, prevention, attitudes and sexual decision-making.ConclusionWe found gender-based discrepancies between knowledge, perception of risk and HIV prevalence among youth globally, with boys consistently scoring higher in HIV knowledge. However, there is significant evidence that social and cultural contexts render girls at high risk of HIV infection, and the gaps in girls' knowledge and boys' roles in HIV risk must be addressed urgently. Future research should consider interventions that facilitate discussion and HIV knowledge building across genders.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Suicidality and homelessness: prevalence and associated factors of suicidal behaviour among homeless young adults in Southern Ethiopia.
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Yohannes, Kalkidan, Gezahegn, Melkamu, Birhanie, Mekonnen, Simachew, Yilkal, Moges, Awoke, Ayano, Getinet, Toitole, Kusse Koirita, Mokona, Hirbaye, and Abebe, Lulu
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HOMELESSNESS ,HOMELESS persons ,YOUNG adults ,SUICIDAL behavior in youth ,CITIES & towns ,SUICIDE risk factors ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
Background: Research indicates that homelessness is associated with an increased risk of suicide. While street homelessness is a global problem, it is a disproportionately serious concern in low- and middle-income countries such as Ethiopia. Despite their high risk of suicidal thoughts and attempts, there has been limited research on this subject among homeless young people in Ethiopia. Therefore, we assessed the prevalence and factors contributing to suicidal behaviour among homeless young people in the southern region of this country. Methods: We conducted a community-based cross-sectional study from 15 June to 15 August 2020 involving 798 homeless young adults in four southern Ethiopian towns and cities. The Suicide Behaviour Questionnaire-Revised (SBQ-R) was used to assess suicidal behaviour. Data were coded and entered into Epi-Data version 7 and analysed using SPSS version 20. We conducted a multivariable logistic regression analysis to identify factors associated with suicidal behaviour. Variables with a p-value of < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. An adjusted odds ratio with a 95% confidence interval was determined to indicate the association's strength. Results: The overall prevalence of suicidal behaviour among young homeless individuals was 38.2% (95% CI: 34.8%, 41.5%). The lifetime prevalence of suicidal ideation, planning and attempt was 10.7% (95% CI: 8.6–12.9%), 5.1% (95% CI: 3.6–6.6%) and 3% (95% CI: 1.9–4.3%), respectively. A longer duration of homelessness (1–2 years) (AOR = 2.244, 95% CI: 1.447–3.481), stressful life events (AOR = 1.655, 95% CI: 1.132–2.418) and the stigma associated with homelessness (AOR = 1.629, 95% CI: 1.149–1.505) were significantly associated with suicidal behaviour. Conclusion: The results of our study indicate that suicide is a serious public health problem among homeless young people in southern Ethiopia. We have found associations between suicidal behaviour and stressful events, homelessness lasting for one to two years and stigma. Our study suggests that policymakers and programme planners need to develop a strategy for preventing, detecting and managing suicidal behaviour among street-dwelling homeless young adults, a vulnerable and understudied population. A community-based suicide prevention campaign is also essential for street-dwelling homeless young people in Ethiopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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86. Building a case for incorporating sport as an indicator in human development index.
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Som, Chandra Vanu
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HUMAN Development Index , *OLYMPIC Games , *SPORTS injuries , *OLYMPIC medals , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Purpose: United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution 73/24 on 3rd December 2018, to recognize sport as an enabler of sustainable development. To examine whether sport really plays an enabling role, the medals ranking of countries on the basis of medals obtained (per million population) in Summer Olympics during the five Olympics games over the first two decades of 21st century has been chosen as an indicator of sports achievement of a country and has been compared with their Human Development Index (HDI) ranking during that particular year of Olympics. The aim of this research was to examine the correlation between sports achievement and HDI. Methods: This research uses the Summer Olympic Rank as per medals obtained per million population (for the years 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016) of various countries as the Indicator of their sports achievement and compares them with their HDI Rank during these specific years. Results: The researchers tested the hypothesis that the higher the sports achievement, the higher the HDI of a country and vice-versa. The analysis shows a very high positive correlation between the Olympic medal ranking and the HDI ranking, revealing that the countries with higher sports achievement have higher HDI. Conclusions: Hence, the conclusion is, if a sport is include in HDI as an indicator of the Human Development Index, sport could become an important vehicle for the improvement of HDI, especially in low and middle-income countries where the sports achievement is low and the HDI is also low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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87. Evaluating the Feasibility and Potential Impacts of a Recovery-Oriented Psychosocial Rehabilitation Toolkit in a Health Care Setting in Kenya: A Mixed-Methods Study.
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Casey, Regina, Wiener, Joshua C., Krupa, Terry, Lysaght, Rosemary, Le Ber, Marlene Janzen, Ruhara, Ruth, Price, Elizabeth, Pervez, Romaisa, Kidd, Sean, Mutiso, Victoria, Ndetei, David M., and MacDougall, Arlene G.
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MENTAL illness treatment , *PILOT projects , *SOCIAL support , *CONVALESCENCE , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *REHABILITATION of people with mental illness , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Objectives: This pilot study evaluated the feasibility and potential impacts of delivering the Psychosocial Rehabilitation (PSR) Toolkit for people with serious mental illness within a health care setting in Kenya. Method: This study used a convergent mixed-methods design. Participants were people with serious mental illness (n = 23), each with an accompanying family member, who were outpatients of a hospital or satellite clinic in semirural Kenya. The intervention consisted of 14 weekly group sessions of PSR cofacilitated by health care professionals and peers with mental illness. Quantitative data were collected from patients and family members using validated outcome measures before and after the intervention. Qualitative data were collected from focus groups with patients and family members, and individual interviews with facilitators, after the intervention. Results: Quantitative findings indicated that patients experienced moderate improvement in illness management and, in contrast to qualitative findings, family members experienced moderate worsening in attitudes toward recovery. Qualitative findings revealed positive outcomes for both patients and family members, as reflected in greater feelings of hope and mobilization to reduce stigma. Factors that facilitated participation included: helpful and accessible learning materials; committed and involved stakeholders; and flexible solutions to promote continued involvement. Conclusions and Implications for Practice: This pilot study found that delivery of the Psychosocial Rehabilitation Toolkit was feasible within a health care setting in Kenya and associated with overall positive outcomes among patients with serious mental illness. Further research on its effectiveness on a larger scale and using culturally validated measures is needed. Impact and Implications: This pilot study examined the feasibility and potential impacts of a psychosocial rehabilitation program for people with serious mental illness within a health care setting in Kenya. The program provided a more engaged and inclusive approach to mental health services, through which patients experienced a sense of possibility for their future lives and stakeholders became advocates for mental health recovery within their communities. Study findings also indicated improvements in recovery and increased connections with community among patients, and discussion of opportunities for improving mental health service delivery among stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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88. CML Outcomes and Care Delivery During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
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Matsuzaki, Mika, Annamalay, Alicia, Garcia-Gonzalez, Pat, and Radich, Jerald
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Purpose of Review: The study aims to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 on the delivery of health care and services to patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) accessing treatment through The Max Foundation. Recent Findings: An online survey was developed and sent via email to 527 partner physicians who had active patients under their care in July 2020, asking about the disruption of health services with multiple-choice answers or a five-point ordinal scale. Data from The Max Foundation's Patient Access Tracking System (PATS®) was analyzed to evaluate program performance in 2020 compared with 2019. PATS® is used to track key patient information and supply chain data to ensure robust reporting, quality assurance, and safety. Among the 111 physicians who responded (20% response rate), 48% reported that someone on their team had contracted COVID-19. A total of 95 (85%) physicians reported at least some disruption of services to patients due to COVID-19, with 29 (26%) reporting frequent or complete disruption. Almost all physicians in the South Asia and Asia Pacific regions reported disruption (96% and 95%, respectively), compared with three quarters of physicians in Latin America. Institutions overcame challenges using a variety of solutions including telemedicine (60%), electronic prescriptions (45%), home delivery via courier services (31%), government workers (9%), and dispensation coordination with regional hospitals (14%). Summary: The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted services for CML physicians and patients worldwide. Overall, these disruptions did not appear to significantly affect The Max Foundation's ability to provide patients with access to treatment, as novel approaches in telemedicine, supply chain, and dispensing, as well as provision of guidance and support for physicians were utilized to overcame disruption of services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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89. Maternal Height-standardized Prevalence of Stunting in 67 Low- and Middle-income Countries
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Omar Karlsson, Rockli Kim, Barry Bogin, and SV Subramanian
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prevalence of stunting ,maternal height ,low and middle-income countries ,undernutrition ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: Prevalence of stunting is frequently used as a marker of population-level child undernutrition. Parental height varies widely in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) and is also a major determinant of stunting. While stunting is a useful measure of child health, with multiple causal components, removing the component attributable to parental height may in some cases be helpful to identify shortcoming in current environments. Methods: We estimated maternal height-standardized prevalence of stunting (SPS) in 67 LMICs and parental height-SPS in 20 LMICs and compared with crude prevalence of stunting (CPS) using data on 575,767 children under-five from 67 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS). We supplemented the DHS with population-level measures of other child health outcomes from the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global Health Observatory and the United Nations’ Inter-Agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation. Prevalence of stunting was defined as percentage of children with height-for-age falling below −2 z-scores from the median of the 2006 WHO growth standard. Results: The average CPS across countries was 27.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 27.5–28.1%) and the average SPS was 23.3% (95% CI, 23.0–23.6%). The rank of countries according to SPS differed substantially from the rank according to CPS. Guatemala, Bangladesh, and Nepal had the biggest improvement in ranking according to SPS compared to CPS, while Gambia, Mali, and Senegal had the biggest decline in ranking. Guatemala had the largest difference between CPS and SPS with a CPS of 45.2 (95% CI, 43.7–46.9%) and SPS of 14.1 (95% CI, 12.6–15.8%). Senegal had the largest increase in the prevalence after standardizing maternal height, with a CPS of 28.0% (95% CI, 25.8–30.2%) and SPS of 31.6% (95% CI, 29.5–33.8%). SPS correlated better than CPS with other population-level measures of child health. Conclusion: Our study suggests that CPS is sensitive to adjustment for maternal height. Maternal height, while a strong predictor of child stunting, is not amenable to policy interventions. We showed the plausibility of SPS in capturing current exposures to undernutrition and infections in children.
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- 2022
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90. Validity of the computerized version of the pediatric triage system CLARIPED for emergency care
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Paula de Carmago Traldi, Maria Clara de Magalhães-Barbosa, Carlos Eduardo Raymundo, Antonio José Ledo Alves da Cunha, and Arnaldo Prata-Barbosa
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Emergency care ,Pediatric ,Triage ,Validity ,Low and middle-income countries ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the validity of the computerized version of the pediatric triage system CLARIPED. Methods: Prospective, observational study in a tertiary emergency department (ED) from Jan-2018 to Jan-2019. A convenience sample of patients aged 0-18 years who had computerized triage and outcome variables registered. Construct validity was assessed through the association between urgency levels and patient outcomes. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV), undertriage, and overtriage rates were assessed. Results: 19,122 of 38,321 visits were analyzed. The urgency levels were: RED (emergency) 0.02%, ORANGE (high urgency) 3.21%, YELLOW (urgency) 35.69%, GREEN (low urgency) 58.46%, and BLUE (no urgency) 2.62%. The following outcomes increased according to the increase in the level of urgency: hospital admission (0.4%, 0.6%, 3.1%, 11.9% and 25%), stay in the ED observation room (2.8%, 4.7%, 15.9%, 40.4%, 50%), ≥ 2 diagnostic or therapeutic resources (7.8%, 16.5%, 33.7%, 60.6%, 75%), and ED length of stay in minutes (18, 24, 67, 120, 260). The odds of using ≥ 2 resources or being hospitalized were significantly greater in the most urgent patients (Red, Orange, and Yellow) compared to the least urgent (Green and Blue): OR 7.88 (95%CI: 5.35-11.6) and OR 2.85 (95%CI: 2.63-3.09), respectively. The sensitivity to identify urgency was 0.82 (95%CI: 0.77-0.85); specificity, 0.62 (95%CI: 0.61-0.6; NPV, 0.99 (95%CI: 0.99-1.00); overtriage rate, 4.28% and undertriage, 18.41%. Conclusion: The computerized version of CLARIPED is a valid and safe pediatric triage system, with a significant correlation with clinical outcomes, good sensitivity, and low undertriage rate.
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- 2022
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91. Choosing Wisely—Barriers and Solutions to Implementation in Low and Middle-Income Countries
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Fidel Rubagumya, Manju Sengar, Sidy Ka, Nazik Hammad, Christopher M. Booth, and Safiya Karim
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Choosing Wisely ,Africa ,value-based cancer care ,low and middle-income countries ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Globally, there is increasing emphasis on value-based cancer care. Rising healthcare costs and reduced health care spending and budgets, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), call for patients, providers, and healthcare systems to apply the Choose Wisely (CW) approach. This approach seeks to advance a dialogue on avoiding unnecessary medical tests, treatments, and procedures. Several factors have been described as barriers and facilitators to the implementation of the Choosing Wisely recommendations in high-income countries but none for LMICs. In this review, we attempt to classify potential barriers to the Choose Wisely implementation relative to the sources of behavior and potential intervention functions that can be implemented in order to reduce these barriers.
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- 2022
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92. Viral load monitoring for people living with HIV in the era of test and treat: progress made and challenges ahead – a systematic review
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Minh D. Pham, Huy V. Nguyen, David Anderson, Suzanne Crowe, and Stanley Luchters
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HIV ,Viral load monitoring ,Decentralisation ,Low and middle-income countries ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background In 2016, we conducted a systematic review to assess the feasibility of treatment monitoring for people living with HIV (PLHIV) receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in low and middle-income countries (LMICs), in line with the 90-90-90 treatment target. By 2020, global estimates suggest the 90-90-90 target, particularly the last 90, remains unattainable in many LMICs. This study aims to review the progress and identify needs for public health interventions to improve viral load monitoring and viral suppression for PLHIV in LMICs. Methods A literature search was conducted using an update of the initial search strategy developed for the 2016 review. Electronic databases (Medline and PubMed) were searched to identify relevant literature published in English between Dec 2015 and August 2021. The primary outcome was initial viral load (VL) monitoring (the proportion of PLHIV on ART and eligible for VL monitoring who received a VL test). Secondary outcomes included follow-up VL monitoring (the proportion of PLHIV who received a follow-up VL after an initial elevated VL test), confirmation of treatment failure (the proportion of PLHIV who had two consecutive elevated VL results) and switching treatment regimen rates (the proportion of PLHIV who switched treatment regimen after confirmation of treatment failure). Results The search strategy identified 1984 non-duplicate records, of which 34 studies were included in the review. Marked variations in initial VL monitoring coverage were reported across study settings/countries (range: 12–93% median: 74% IQR: 46–82%) and study populations (adults (range: 25–96%, median: 67% IQR: 50–84%), children, adolescents/young people (range: 2–94%, median: 72% IQR: 47–85%), and pregnant women (range: 32–82%, median: 57% IQR: 43–71%)). Community-based models reported higher VL monitoring (median: 85%, IQR: 82-88%) compared to decentralised care at primary health facility (median: 64%, IRQ: 48-82%). Suboptimal uptake of follow-up VL monitoring and low regimen switching rates were observed. Conclusions Substantial gaps in VL coverage across study settings and study populations were evident, with limited data availability outside of sub-Saharan Africa. Further research is needed to fill the data gaps. Development and implementation of innovative, community-based interventions are required to improve VL monitoring and address the “failure cascade” in PLHIV on ART who fail to achieve viral suppression.
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- 2022
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93. Trends in Identification, Etiology, and Resistance Profiles of Bacterial Isolates and Appropriate Therapy for Neonatal Sepsis in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: a Narrative Review
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Oladokun, Regina E., Alao, Michael A., Ogunbosi, Babatunde O., Bello, Oluwaseun E., Ude, Ifeoma, Obasi, Amarachi, Ayede, Adejumoke I., and Tongo, Olukemi O.
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- 2023
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94. Exploring the economic impact of inappropriate antibiotic use: the case of upper respiratory tract infections in Ghana
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Jip Janssen, Samuel Afari-Asiedu, Annelie Monnier, Martha Ali Abdulai, Theresa Tawiah, Heiman Wertheim, Rob Baltussen, and Kwaku Poku Asante
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Antibiotic resistance ,Inappropriate antibiotic use ,Economic impact analysis ,Upper respiratory tract infection ,Low and middle-income countries ,Ghana ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Antibiotic consumption is increasing worldwide, particularly in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Access to lifesaving antibiotics in LMICs is crucial while minimising inappropriate use. Studies assessing the economic impact of inappropriate antibiotic use in LMICs are lacking. We explored the economic impact of inappropriate antibiotic use using the example of upper respiratory tract infections (URIs) in Ghana, as part of the ABACUS (AntiBiotic ACcess and USe) project. Methods A top-down, retrospective economic impact analysis of inappropriate antibiotic use for URIs was conducted. Two inappropriate antibiotic use situations were considered: (1) URIs treated with antibiotics, against recommendations from clinical guidelines; and (2) URIs that should have been treated with antibiotics according to clinical guidelines, but were not. The analysis included data collected in Ghana during the ABACUS project (household surveys and exit-interviews among consumers buying antibiotics), scientific literature and stakeholder consultations. Included cost types related to health care seeking behaviour for URIs. Additionally, cost saving projections were computed based on potential effects of future interventions that improve antibiotic use. Results Health care costs related to inappropriate antibiotic use for URIs were estimated to be around 20 million (M) USD annually, including 18 M USD for situation 1 and 2 M USD for situation 2. Travel costs and lost income due to travel, together, were estimated to be around 44 M USD for situation 1 and 18 M USD for situation 2. Possible health care cost savings range from 2 to 12 M USD for situation 1 and from 0.2 to 1 M USD for situation 2. Conclusions This study indicates that inappropriate antibiotic use leads to substantial economic costs in a LMIC setting that could have been prevented. We recommend investment in novel strategies to counter these unnecessary expenditures. As the projections indicate, this may result in considerable cost reductions. By tackling inappropriate use, progress can be made in combatting antibiotic resistance.
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- 2022
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95. Effectiveness of a community health worker-led case management programme to improve outcomes for people with psychotic disorders in Thailand: a one-year prospective cohort study
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Tawanchai Jirapramukpitak, Kankamol Jaisin, Suttha Supanya, and Patcharapim Takizawa
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Community health services ,Early intervention ,Low and middle-income countries ,Observational studies ,Mental health ,Propensity score ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Intensive case management (ICM) programmes for psychotic patients are effective in improving outcomes, but often unfeasible in resource-poor settings, as they typically require extensive human resources and expertise. We developed and evaluated the effectiveness of a less intensive case management program (LICM), led by community health workers, on one-year social functioning and service use. Methods A prospective cohort study was conducted on patients aged 18 and above residing in a hospital catchment area. Outcomes were compared between LICM (n = 64) and non-LICM participants (n = 485). A counterfactual framework approach was applied to assess causal effects of the LICM on outcomes. The programme effectiveness was analyzed by augmented-inverse probability of treatment weighting (AIPW) to estimate potential outcome mean (POM) and average treatment effect (ATE). Outcomes were employment status and use of emergency, inpatient and outpatient services. Analyses were stratified by the number of previous psychotic relapse (≤ 1, > 1) to assess heterogeneity of treatment effect on those in an early and later stages of psychotic illness. Results In the early-stage cohort, the likelihood of being employed at one year post-baseline was significantly greater in LICM participants than non-LICM participants (ATE 0.10, 95%CI 0.05–0.14, p
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- 2022
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96. Under detection of depression in primary care settings in low and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Abebaw Fekadu, Mekdes Demissie, Rahel Birhane, Girmay Medhin, Tesera Bitew, Maji Hailemariam, Abebaw Minaye, Kassahun Habtamu, Barkot Milkias, Inge Petersen, Vikram Patel, Anthony J. Cleare, Rosie Mayston, Graham Thornicroft, Atalay Alem, Charlotte Hanlon, and Martin Prince
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Depression ,Detection ,Primary health care ,Review ,Low and middle-income countries ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Depression is one of the commonest mental disorders in primary care but is poorly identified. The objective of this review was to determine the level of detection of depression by primary care clinicians and its determinants in studies from low- to middle-income countries (LMICs). Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted using PubMed, PsycINFO, MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILAC, and AJOL with no restriction of year of publication. Risk of bias within studies was evaluated with the Effective Public Health Practice Project (EPHPP). “Gold standard” diagnosis for the purposes of this review was based on the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9; cutoff scores of 5 and 10), other standard questionnaires and interview scales or expert diagnosis. Meta-analysis was conducted excluding studies on special populations. Analyses of pooled data were stratified by diagnostic approaches. Results A total of 3159 non-duplicate publications were screened. Nine publications, 2 multi-country studies, and 7 single-country studies, making 12 country-level reports, were included. Overall methodological quality of the studies was good. Depression detection was 0.0% in four of the twelve reports and < 12% in another five. PHQ-9 was the main tool used: the pooled detection in two reports that used PHQ-9 at a cutoff point of 5 (combined sample size = 1426) was 3.9% (95% CI = 2.3%, 5.5%); in four reports that used PHQ-9 cutoff score of 10 (combined sample size = 5481), the pooled detection was 7.0% (95% CI = 3.9%, 10.2%). Severity of depression and suicidality were significantly associated with detection. Conclusions While the use of screening tools is an important limitation, the extremely low detection of depression by primary care clinicians poses a serious threat to scaling up mental healthcare in LMICs. Interventions to improve detection should be prioritized. Systematic review registration PROSPERO CRD42016039704 .
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- 2022
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97. Exploring the association between child nutritional disorders and short birth interval: Evidence from 2017/18 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey data
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Mohammad Zahidul Islam, Mostafizur Rahman, and Nuruzzaman Khan
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Child nutritional disorder ,Short birth interval ,Low and middle-income countries ,Bangladesh ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Nutritional disorder is an ongoing public health threat in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) which is assumed to be higher among children born in shorter intervals (Short Birth Interval, SBI). However, high-quality research addressing this is lacking. We explored the association of nutritional disorder with SBI adjusting for possible confounders. Methods: We linked 5941 mother-child dyads included in 2017/18 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey with 1524 healthcare facilities included in the 2017 Bangladesh Health Facility Survey and analysed. Three forms of nutritional disorders were considered as outcome variables: stunting, wasting, and underweight. The major exposure variable was SBI. The multilevel Poisson regression model was used separately for each outcome to explore the association between exposure and outcome variables, adjusting for possible confounders at the individual-, household-, community- and health facility levels. Results: Almost 26% of the total children analysed were born in SBI among which the reported prevalence of stunting, wasting, and underweight was almost 30%, 22% and 29%, respectively. Children born in the SBI had a 1.20 times (aOR, 1.20, 95% CI, 1.08–1.33) higher likelihood of being stunted and a 1.14 times (aOR, 1.14, 95% CI, 1.00–1.30%) higher likelihood of being underweighted than their counterparts born in the normal interval. The association between wasting and SBI was not found statistically significant. Conclusion: This study confirms that SBI increases the occurrence of child nutritional disorders. Programs to aware mothers about the risk of close intervals children on becoming undernourished should be considered in national level policies and programs.
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- 2023
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98. Neurological signs as early determinants of dementia and predictors of mortality among older adults in Latin America: a 10/66 study using the NEUROEX assessment
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Pasquini, Lorenzo, Llibre Guerra, Jorge, Prince, Martin, Chua, Kia-Chong, and Prina, A Matthew
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Dementia ,Neurodegenerative ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Latin America ,Male ,Neurologic Examination ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Regression Analysis ,Epidemiology ,Low and middle-income countries ,Mortality ,Neurological signs ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundNeurodegenerative processes in the elderly damage the brain, leading to progressive, incapacitating cognitive, behavioral, and motor dysfunctions which culminate in dementia. Fully manifest dementia is likely to be preceded by the presence of neurological signs, which could serve as early determinants of dementia and predictors of mortality. The aims of this study were to assess the construct validity of a neurological battery assessed among older adults living in Latin America, and to test the association of groups of neurological signs with dementia cross-sectionally, and mortality longitudinally.MethodsThe 10/66 Dementia Research Group collected information on neurological symptoms via the NEUROEX assessment in population based surveys of older adults living in low and middle-income countries. Data from 10,856 adults participating in the baseline assessment of the 10/66 study and living in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Peru, Venezuela and Mexico were analysed. Exploratory and confirmatory analysis were used to explore dimensionality of neurological symptoms. Poisson regression analyses were used to link groups of neurological signs with dementia at baseline. Cox hazard regression models were used to explore the predictive validity of neurological signs with mortality at follow up.ResultsExploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed four dimensions of neurological signs, which are associated with lesions of specific brain regions. The identified factors showed consistency with groups of neurological signs such as frontal, cerebellar, extrapyramidal, and more generalized gait disturbance signs. Regression analyses revealed that all groups of neurological signs were positively associated with dementia at baseline and predicted mortality at follow up.ConclusionsOur findings support the construct and predictive validity of the NEUROEX assessment, linking neurological and gait impairments with dementia at baseline, and with mortality at follow up among older adults living in five Latin American countries.
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- 2018
99. Machine learning without borders? An adaptable tool to optimize mortality prediction in diverse clinical settings.
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Christie, S Ariane, Hubbard, Alan E, Callcut, Rachael A, Hameed, Morad, Dissak-Delon, Fanny Nadia, Mekolo, David, Saidou, Arabo, Mefire, Alain Chichom, Nsongoo, Pierre, Dicker, Rochelle A, Cohen, Mitchell Jay, and Juillard, Catherine
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Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Partial Thromboplastin Time ,Area Under Curve ,ROC Curve ,Forecasting ,Developed Countries ,Developing Countries ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Health Services Accessibility ,Cameroon ,South Africa ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Machine Learning ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD) ,Good Health and Well Being ,Precision medicine ,low and middle-income countries ,prediction ,machine learning ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundMortality prediction aids clinical decision making and is necessary for quality improvement initiatives. Validated metrics rely on prespecified variables and often require advanced diagnostics, which are unfeasible in resource-constrained contexts. We hypothesize that machine learning will generate superior mortality prediction in both high-income and low- and middle-income country cohorts.MethodsSuperLearner, an ensemble machine-learning algorithm, was applied to data from three prospective trauma cohorts: a highest-activation cohort in the United States, a high-volume center cohort in South Africa (SA), and a multicenter registry in Cameroon. Cross-validation was used to assess model discrimination of discharge mortality by site using receiver operating characteristic curves. SuperLearner discrimination was compared with standard scoring methods. Clinical variables driving SuperLearner prediction at each site were evaluated.ResultsData from 28,212 injured patients were used to generate prediction. Discharge mortality was 17%, 1.3%, and 1.7% among US, SA, and Cameroonian cohorts. SuperLearner delivered superior prediction of discharge mortality in the United States (area under the curve [AUC], 94-97%) and vastly superior prediction in Cameroon (AUC, 90-94%) compared with conventional scoring algorithms. It provided similar prediction to standard scores in the SA cohort (AUC, 90-95%). Context-specific variables (partial thromboplastin time in the United States and hospital distance in Cameroon) were prime drivers of predicted mortality in their respective cohorts, whereas severe brain injury predicted mortality across sites.ConclusionsMachine learning provides excellent discrimination of injury mortality in diverse settings. Unlike traditional scores, data-adaptive methods are well suited to optimizing precise site-specific prediction regardless of diagnostic capabilities or data set inclusion allowing for individualized decision making and expanded access to quality improvement programming.Level of evidencePrognostic and therapeutic, level II and III.
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- 2018
100. Unmet palliative care needs of a child with cancer in Indonesia.
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Vassileva, Sofi, Pangarso, Alexandra Widita Swipratami, Mulatsih, Sri, Sitaresmi, Mei, Kaspers, Gertjan, and Mostert, Saskia
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PALLIATIVE treatment , *CHILDHOOD cancer , *MIDDLE-income countries , *CANCER pain , *WELL-being , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Key points: Childhood cancer survival varies greatly between high‐income (80%) versus Low and middle‐income countries (LMIC) (<20%). To bridge this gap, provision of aggressive curative treatment has been prioritized in latter countries. Palliative care (PC), by contrast, has received little or no attentionWhen children who can no longer be cured from cancer continue aggressive treatment, they may suffer unnecessarily from pain, discomfort and low quality‐of‐life during prolonged periodsIn many LMIC, families are often not given the opportunity to participate in decision‐making whether they want to extend the life of their children or focus on relieving pain and discomfortThis case report illustrates difficulties that Indonesian families may face when their child is diagnosed with cancer, receives intensive chemotherapy despite poor prognosis and severe side‐effects, and is not informed about choices of treatment children have during final illnessThis study highlights the importance to start PC immediately at diagnosis. Both physical and psychosocial wellbeing of patients need to be closely monitored through regular symptom burden assessments. Training on open communication in PC is required in universities and hospitals to enable shared decision‐making and improve quality‐of‐life of children and their families [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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