208 results on '"Tallo, Veronica"'
Search Results
202. Breastfeeding During Early Infancy is Associated with a Lower Incidence of Febrile Illnesses.
- Author
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Libraty DH, Capeding RZ, Obcena A, Brion JD, and Tallo V
- Abstract
Human breast milk is known to contain immunoprotective, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory agents. In a prospective clinical study of dengue virus infections during infancy, we examined the correlation between breastfeeding and the development of febrile illnesses in an infant population. We found that breastfeeding status and the frequency of breastfeeding during early infancy was associated with a lower incidence of febrile illnesses.
- Published
- 2013
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203. The data management of a phase III efficacy trial of an 11-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine and related satellite studies conducted in the Philippines.
- Author
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Sanvictores DH, Lucero MG, Nohynek H, Tallo VL, Tanskanen A, Nillos LT, and Williams G
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Double-Blind Method, Drug Costs, Humans, Immunity, Herd, Infant, Otitis Media immunology, Otitis Media microbiology, Philippines, Pneumococcal Vaccines adverse effects, Pneumococcal Vaccines economics, Pneumonia, Pneumococcal diagnostic imaging, Pneumonia, Pneumococcal economics, Pneumonia, Pneumococcal immunology, Pneumonia, Pneumococcal microbiology, Quality Control, Radiography, Respiratory Sounds immunology, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Vaccines, Conjugate administration & dosage, Health Information Management standards, Immunization economics, Information Storage and Retrieval standards, Pneumococcal Vaccines administration & dosage, Pneumonia, Pneumococcal prevention & control, Streptococcus pneumoniae immunology
- Abstract
Background: A large phase III placebo-controlled, randomized efficacy trial of an investigational 11-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine against pneumonia in children less than 2 years of age was conducted in the Philippines from July 2000 to December 2004. Clinical data from 12,194 children who were given either study vaccine or placebo was collected from birth up to two years of age for the occurrence of radiologically proven pneumonia as the primary endpoint, and for clinical pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal disease as the secondary endpoints. Several tertiary endpoints were also explored. Along the core trial, several satellite studies on herd immunity, cost-effectiveness of the study vaccine, acute otitis media, and wheezing were conducted., Results: We describe here in detail how the relevant clinical records were managed and how quality control procedures were implemented to ensure that valid data were obtained respectively for the core trial and for the satellite studies. We discuss how the task was achieved, what the challenges were and what might have been done differently., Conclusions: There were several factors that made the task of data management doable and efficient. First, a pre-trial data management system was available. Secondly, local committed statisticians, programmers and support staff were available and partly familiar to clinical trials. Thirdly, the personnel had undergone training during trial and grew with the task they were supposed to do. Thus the knowledge needed to develop and operate clinical data system was fully transferred to local staff., Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN62323832.
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- 2012
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204. Geographic Information System and tools of spatial analysis in a pneumococcal vaccine trial.
- Author
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Tanskanen A, Nillos LT, Lehtinen A, Nohynek H, Sanvictores DH, Simões EA, Tallo VL, and Lucero MG
- Abstract
Background: The goal of this Geographic Information System (GIS) study was to obtain accurate information on the locations of study subjects, road network and services for research purposes so that the clinical outcomes of interest (e.g., vaccine efficacy, burden of disease, nasopharyngeal colonization and its reduction) could be linked and analyzed at a distance from health centers, hospitals, doctors and other important services. The information on locations can be used to investigate more accurate crowdedness, herd immunity and/or transmission patterns., Method: A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of an 11-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (11PCV) was conducted in Bohol Province in central Philippines, from July 2000 to December 2004. We collected the information on the geographic location of the households (N = 13,208) of study subjects. We also collected a total of 1982 locations of health and other services in the six municipalities and a comprehensive GIS data over the road network in the area., Results: We calculated the numbers of other study subjects (vaccine and placebo recipients, respectively) within the neighborhood of each study subject. We calculated distances to different services and identified the subjects sharing the same services (calculated by distance). This article shows how to collect a complete GIS data set for human to human transmitted vaccine study in developing country settings in an efficient and economical way., Conclusions: The collection of geographic locations in intervention trials should become a routine task. The results of public health research may highly depend on spatial relationships among the study subjects and between the study subjects and the environment, both natural and infrastructural., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN: ISRCTN62323832.
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- 2012
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205. Is mass treatment the appropriate schistosomiasis elimination strategy?
- Author
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Tallo VL, Carabin H, Alday PP, Balolong E Jr, Olveda RM, and McGarvey ST
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Preschool, Endemic Diseases prevention & control, Female, Humans, Male, Philippines epidemiology, Rural Health, Schistosomiasis drug therapy, Schistosomiasis epidemiology, Young Adult, Anthelmintics administration & dosage, Praziquantel administration & dosage, Schistosomiasis prevention & control
- Abstract
Objective: In the year 2000, the Philippines' Department of Health adopted mass chemotherapy using praziquantel to eliminate schistosomiasis. Mass treatment was offered to an eligible population of 30 187 residents of 50 villages in Western Samar, the Philippines, in 2004 as part of an ongoing epidemiological study, Schistosomiasis Transmission and Ecology in the Philippines (STEP), aimed at measuring the effect of irrigation on infection with schistosomiasis. This paper describes the mass-treatment activities and factors associated with participation., Methods: Advocacy, information dissemination and social mobilization activities were conducted before mass chemotherapy. Village leaders were primarily responsible for community mobilization. Mass treatment was offered in village meeting halls and schools. Participation proportions were estimated based on the 2002-2003 census. Community involvement was measured using a participation index. A Bayesian hierarchical logistic regression model was fitted to estimate the association between sociodemographic factors and residents coming to the treatment site., Findings: A village-level average of 53.1% of residents (range: 21.1-85.3) came to the treatment site, leading to a mass-treatment coverage with an average of 48.3% (range: 15.8-80.7). At the individual level, participation proportions were higher among males, preschool and school-age children, non-STEP participants and among those who provided a stool sample. At the village-level, better community involvement was associated with increased participation whereas a larger census was associated with decreased participation., Conclusion: The conduct of mass treatment in the 50 villages resulted in far lower participation than expected. This raises concern for the ongoing mass-treatment initiatives now taking place in developing countries.
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- 2008
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206. Multi-host transmission dynamics of Schistosoma japonicum in Samar province, the Philippines.
- Author
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Riley S, Carabin H, Bélisle P, Joseph L, Tallo V, Balolong E, Willingham AL, Fernandez TJ, Gonzales RO, Olveda R, and McGarvey ST
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Domestic parasitology, Animals, Wild parasitology, Cities, Cross-Sectional Studies, Disease Reservoirs, Endemic Diseases, Fresh Water parasitology, Humans, Parasite Egg Count, Philippines epidemiology, Rural Population, Schistosoma japonicum isolation & purification, Schistosomiasis japonica epidemiology, Schistosomiasis japonica prevention & control, Schistosomiasis japonica veterinary, Snails parasitology, Species Specificity, Zoonoses, Models, Theoretical, Schistosomiasis japonica transmission
- Abstract
Background: Among the 6.7 million people living in areas of the Philippines where infection with Schistosoma japonicum is considered endemic, even within small geographical areas levels of infection vary considerably. In general, the ecological drivers of this variability are not well described. Unlike other schistosomes, S. japonicum is known to infect several mammalian hosts. However, the relative contribution of different hosts to the transmission cycle is not well understood. Here, we characterize the transmission dynamics of S. japonicum using data from an extensive field study and a mathematical transmission model., Methods and Findings: In this study, stool samples were obtained from 5,623 humans and 5,899 potential nonhuman mammalian hosts in 50 villages in the Province of Samar, the Philippines. These data, with variable numbers of samples per individual, were adjusted for known specificities and sensitivities of the measurement techniques before being used to estimate the parameters of a mathematical transmission model, under the assumption that the dynamic transmission processes of infection and recovery were in a steady state in each village. The model was structured to allow variable rates of transmission from different mammals (humans, dogs, cats, pigs, domesticated water buffalo, and rats) to snails and from snails to mammals. First, we held transmission parameters constant for all villages and found that no combination of mammalian population size and prevalence of infectivity could explain the observed variability in prevalence of infection between villages. We then allowed either the underlying rate of transmission (a) from snails to mammals or (b) from mammals to snails to vary by village. Our data provided substantially more support for model structure (a) than for model structure (b). Fitted values for the village-level transmission intensity from snails to mammals appeared to be strongly spatially correlated, which is consistent with results from descriptive hierarchical analyses., Conclusions: Our results suggest that the process of acquiring mammalian S. japonicum infection is more important in explaining differences in prevalence of infection between villages than the process of snails becoming infected. Also, the contribution from water buffaloes to human S. japonicum infection in the Philippines is less important than has been recently observed for bovines in China. These findings have implications for the prioritization of mitigating interventions against S. japonicum transmission.
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- 2008
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207. Cross-sectional associations between intensity of animal and human infection with Schistosoma japonicum in Western Samar province, Philippines.
- Author
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McGarvey ST, Carabin H, Balolong E Jr, Bélisle P, Fernandez T, Joseph L, Tallo V, Gonzales R, Tarafder MR, Alday P, Willingham AL, and Olveda R
- Subjects
- Animals, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Philippines epidemiology, Schistosoma japonicum parasitology, Zoonoses, Schistosoma japonicum isolation & purification, Schistosomiasis japonica epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the association between the intensity of animal infection with Schistosoma japonicum and human infection in Western Samar province, the Philippines., Methods: We conducted an observational cross-sectional study of 1425 households in 50 villages. Stool samples were collected on each of 1-3 days from 5623 humans, 1275 cats, 1189 dogs, 1899 pigs, 663 rats and 873 water buffalo. Intensity of infection with S. japonicum was measured by the number of eggs per gram (EPG). Egg counts were done using the Kato-Katz method. We used a Bayesian hierarchical cumulative logit model, with adjustments for age, sex, occupation and measurement error., Findings: The adjusted proportions of humans lightly infected (classified as 1-100 EPG) was 17.7% (95% Bayesian credible interval = 15.3-20.2%); the proportion classified as at least moderately infected (>100 EPG) was 3.2% (2.2-4.6%). The crude parasitological results for animals indicated that 37 cats (2.9%), 228 dogs (19.2%), 39 pigs (2.1%), 199 rats (30.0%) and 28 water buffalo (3.2%) were infected. In univariate analyses the odds ratios corresponding to a unit increase in the mean number of EPG at the village-level in dogs was 1.05 (1.01-1.09), in cats 1.35 (1.02-1.78), in pigs 1.16 (0.24- 5.18) and in rats 1.00 (1.00-1.01). Mean EPG values in cats, dogs, pigs and rats were correlated with one another. This confounding made interpreting the odds ratios difficult, but the odds ratios for dogs and cats were more consistent., Conclusion: S. japonicum is endemic in areas of the Philippines despite implementation of control programmes. This may be due to the association of infections in dogs and cats with human infections. Infection control in dogs and cats is challenging, and there is a need to develop new methods to control transmission across all species.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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208. Physician migration: views from professionals in Colombia, Nigeria, India, Pakistan and the Philippines.
- Author
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Astor A, Akhtar T, Matallana MA, Muthuswamy V, Olowu FA, Tallo V, and Lie RK
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- Colombia ethnology, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Education, Medical, Foreign Medical Graduates supply & distribution, Humans, India ethnology, Motivation, Nigeria ethnology, Pakistan ethnology, Philippines ethnology, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Attitude of Health Personnel, Emigration and Immigration, Foreign Medical Graduates psychology, International Cooperation, Public Policy
- Abstract
There has been much debate recently about several issues related to the migration of physicians from developing to developed countries. However, few studies have been conducted to address these issues in a systematic fashion. In an attempt to begin the process of generating systematic data, we designed and distributed a questionnaire addressing several core issues surrounding physician migration to respondents selected on the basis of their special expertise or experience in India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Colombia, and the Philippines. The issues addressed relate to the reasons physicians migrate to developed countries, how migration is related to the structure of medical education, the effect that migration has on the health care infrastructure of developing countries, and various policy options for dealing with physician migration. Though responses varied somewhat by country, a desire for increased income, greater access to enhanced technology, an atmosphere of general security and stability, and improved prospects for one's children were the primary motivating factors for physician migration. A majority of respondents believed that physicians in developing counties are provided with highly specialized skills that they can better utilize in developed countries, but respondents were ambivalent with respect to the utility of educational reform. Responses varied significantly by country with regard to whether physician migration results in physician shortages, but there was widespread agreement that it exacerbates shortages in rural and public settings. With respect to policy options, increasing physician income, improving working conditions, requiring physicians to work in their home countries for a period following graduation from medical school, and creating increased collaboration between health ministries in developed and developing countries found the most favor with respondents.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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