358 results on '"Njau P"'
Search Results
2. Impact of Financial Incentives on Intimate Partner Violence for Women Living with HIV Initiating Antiretroviral Therapy
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Hémono, Rebecca, Katabaro, Emmanuel, Joseph, Babuu, Maila, Hamza, Msasa, Janeth, Hassan, Kassim, Winters, Solis, Prata, Ndola, H. Dow, William, Njau, Prosper, Sabasaba, Amon, and I. McCoy, Sandra
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- 2025
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3. Prevention of adverse HIV treatment outcomes: machine learning to enable proactive support of people at risk of HIV care disengagement in Tanzania.
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Xie, Zhongming, Hu, Huiyu, Kadota, Jillian, Packel, Laura, Mlowe, Matilda, Kwilasa, Sylvester, Maokola, Werner, Shabani, Siraji, Sabasaba, Amon, Njau, Prosper, Wang, Jingshen, and McCoy, Sandra
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HIV & AIDS ,electronic health records ,machine learning ,Humans ,HIV Infections ,Tanzania ,Machine Learning ,Female ,Adult ,Male ,Electronic Health Records ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Young Adult ,Algorithms ,Adolescent ,Treatment Outcome - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to develop a machine learning (ML) model to predict disengagement from HIV care, high viral load or death among people living with HIV (PLHIV) with the goal of enabling proactive support interventions in Tanzania. The algorithm addressed common challenges when applying ML to electronic medical record (EMR) data: (1) imbalanced outcome distribution; (2) heterogeneity across multisite EMR data and (3) evolving virological suppression thresholds. DESIGN: Observational study using a national EMR database. SETTING: Conducted in two regions in Tanzania, using data from the National HIV Care database. PARTICIPANTS: The study included over 6 million HIV care visit records from 295 961 PLHIV in two regions in Tanzanias National HIV Care database from January 2015 to May 2023. RESULTS: Our ML model effectively identified PLHIV at increased risk of adverse outcomes. Key predictors included past disengagement from care, antiretroviral therapy (ART) status (which tracks a patients engagement with ART across visits), age and time on ART. The downsampling approach we implemented effectively managed imbalanced data to reduce prediction bias. Site-specific algorithms performed better compared with a universal approach, highlighting the importance of tailoring ML models to local contexts. A sensitivity analysis confirmed the models robustness to changes in viral load suppression thresholds. CONCLUSIONS: ML models leveraging large-scale databases of patient data offer significant potential to identify PLHIV for interventions to enhance engagement in HIV care in resource-limited settings. Tailoring algorithms to local contexts and flexibility towards evolving clinical guidelines are essential for maximising their impact.
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- 2024
4. Impact of financial incentives on viral suppression among adults initiating HIV treatment in Tanzania: a hybrid effectiveness–implementation trial
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Njau, Prosper F, Katabaro, Emmanuel, Winters, Solis, Sabasaba, Amon, Hassan, Kassim, Joseph, Babuu, Maila, Hamza, Msasa, Janeth, Fahey, Carolyn A, Packel, Laura, Dow, William H, Jewell, Nicholas P, Ulenga, Nzovu, Mwenda, Natalino, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Dissemination and Implementation Research ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Women's Health ,Social Determinants of Health ,Health Services ,Infectious Diseases ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSmall incentives could improve engagement in HIV care. We evaluated the short-term and longer-term effects of financial incentives for visit attendance on viral suppression among adults initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Tanzania.MethodsIn a type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation study, we randomised (1:1) 32 primary care HIV clinics in four Tanzanian regions to usual care (control group) or the intervention (usual care plus ≤6 monthly incentives [22 500 Tanzanian Shillings, about US$10, each], conditional on visit attendance). Adults (aged ≥18 years) initiating ART (
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- 2024
5. Biochars derived from banana and mango peels in isolated systems revealed high removal efficiency of endocrine-disrupting compounds from water
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Kasambala, Hildegard R., Rwiza, Mwemezi J., Mpumi, Nelson, Mwema, Mwema Felix, and Njau, Karoli K.
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- 2024
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6. Supporting young women’s health through girl-friendly drug vendors in Lake Zone, Tanzania: protocol for the AmbassADDOrs for Health cluster-randomised controlled trial
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Mnyippembe, Agatha, Sheira, Lila A, McCoy, Sandra I, Njau, Prosper F, Packel, Laura J, Hassan, Kassim, Solorzano-Barrera, Camila, Maokola, Werner, Dufour, Mi-Suk Kang, Sabasaba, Amon, and Liu, Jenny
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Teenage Pregnancy ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Pediatric ,Women's Health ,Prevention ,Adolescent Sexual Activity ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric AIDS ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Infectious Diseases ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Tanzania ,Female ,Adolescent ,Young Adult ,HIV Infections ,Pregnancy ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Commerce ,Clinical Trial ,Epidemiology ,HIV & AIDS ,Public health ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
IntroductionAdverse sexual and reproductive health (SRH) outcomes, such as unplanned pregnancies and HIV infection, disproportionately affect adolescent girls and young women (AGYW; aged 15-24 years) in east Africa. Increasing uptake of preventive SRH services via innovative, youth-centred interventions is imperative to addressing disparities in SRH outcomes.Methods and analysisFrom 2018 to 2019, we used human-centred design to co-develop a theoretically driven HIV and pregnancy prevention intervention for AGYW at private drug shops called Accredited Drug Dispensing Outlets (ADDOs) in Tanzania. The result, Malkia Klabu (Queen Club), was a customer loyalty programme designed to strengthen ADDOs' role as SRH providers while encouraging uptake of critical SRH prevention products among AGYW. Malkia Klabu members had access to free contraceptives and oral HIV self-test (HIVST) kits and earned punches on a loyalty card for other shop purchases; punches were redeemable for small prizes. Our pilot among 40 shops showed that intervention ADDOs had higher AGYW patronage and distributed more HIVST kits and contraceptives to AGYW relative to business-as-usual (ie, client purchasing) comparison shops. We will conduct a cluster-randomised controlled trial (c-RCT) among 120-140 ADDOs in 40 health catchment areas in Shinyanga and Mwanza Regions (Lake Zone), Tanzania. ADDO shop recruitment includes a 1-month run-in with a tablet-based electronic inventory management system for tracking shop transactions, followed by enrolment, randomisation and a 24-month trial period. Our c-RCT evaluating the human-centred design-derived intervention will assess population impact on the primary outcomes of HIV diagnoses and antenatal care registrations, measured with routine health facility data. We will also assess secondary outcomes focusing on mechanisms of action, evaluate programme exposure and AGYW behaviour change in interviews with AGYW, and assess shop-level implementation strategies and fidelity.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval was granted from both the University of California, San Francisco and the Tanzanian National Institute for Medical Research. Study progress and final outcomes will be posted annually to the National Clinical Trials website; study dissemination will occur at conferences, peer-reviewed manuscripts and local convenings of stakeholders.Trial registration numberNCT05357144.
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- 2024
7. Rudi Kundini, Pamoja Kundini (RKPK): study protocol for a hybrid type 1 randomized effectiveness-implementation trial using data science and economic incentive strategies to strengthen the continuity of care among people living with HIV in Tanzania.
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Packel, Laura, Mlowe, Matilda, Ulenga, Nzovu, Mwenda, Natalino, Njau, Prosper, Dow, William, Wang, Jingshen, Sabasaba, Amon, McCoy, Sandra, and Kadota, Jillian
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Conditional cash transfers ,Economic incentives ,Effectiveness-implementation hybrid ,HIV/AIDS ,Tanzania ,Humans ,Motivation ,Tanzania ,Data Science ,HIV Infections ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Clinical Trials ,Phase II as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Economic incentives can improve clinical outcomes among in-care people living with HIV (PLHIV), but evidence is limited for their effectiveness among out-of-care PLHIV or those at risk of disengagement. We propose a type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation study to advance global knowledge about the use of economic incentives to strengthen the continuity of HIV care and accelerate global goals for HIV epidemic control. METHODS: The Rudi Kundini, Pamoja Kundini study will evaluate two implementation models of an economic incentive strategy for supporting two groups of PLHIV in Tanzania. Phase 1 of the study consists of a two-arm, cluster randomized trial across 32 health facilities to assess the effectiveness of a home visit plus one-time economic incentive on the proportion of out-of-care PLHIV with viral load suppression (
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- 2024
8. QTL mapping for pod quality and yield traits in snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.).
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Njau, Serah, Parker, Travis, Duitama, Jorge, Gepts, Paul, and Arunga, Edith
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QTL mapping ,SNP ,pod fibre ,pod quality ,pod string ,pod yield ,snap bean ,vegetable industry - Abstract
Pod quality and yield traits in snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) influence consumer preferences, crop adoption by farmers, and the ability of the product to be commercially competitive locally and globally. The objective of the study was to identify the quantitative trait loci (QTL) for pod quality and yield traits in a snap × dry bean recombinant inbred line (RIL) population. A total of 184 F6 RILs derived from a cross between Vanilla (snap bean) and MCM5001 (dry bean) were grown in three field sites in Kenya and one greenhouse environment in Davis, CA, USA. They were genotyped at 5,951 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and composite interval mapping was conducted to identify QTL for 16 pod quality and yield traits, including pod wall fiber, pod string, pod size, and harvest metrics. A combined total of 44 QTL were identified in field and greenhouse trials. The QTL for pod quality were identified on chromosomes Pv01, Pv02, Pv03, Pv04, Pv06, and Pv07, and for pod yield were identified on Pv08. Co-localization of QTL was observed for pod quality and yield traits. Some identified QTL overlapped with previously mapped QTL for pod quality and yield traits, with several others identified as novel. The identified QTL can be used in future marker-assisted selection in snap bean.
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- 2024
9. Using waist circumference as a predictor of hypertension in Manzese, Dar es Salaam: a community-based cross-sectional study, 2023
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Mfuru, Godbless Henry, Allan, James N., Njau, Agnes, Ubuguyu, Omary, and Malima, Khadija Y.
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- 2024
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10. Perceived barriers and opportunities for implementing an integrated psychological intervention for depression in adolescents living with HIV in Tanzania
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Njau, Tasiana, Mwakawanga, Dorkasi L., Sunguya, Bruno, Minja, Agape, Kaaya, Sylvia, and Fekadu, Abebaw
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- 2024
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11. Efficacy and safety of artemether-lumefantrine for the treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria in mainland Tanzania, 2019
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Ngasala, Billy E., Chiduo, Mercy G., Mmbando, Bruno P., Francis, Filbert T., Bushukatale, Samwel, Makene, Twilumba, Mandara, Celine I., Ishengoma, Deus S., Kamugisha, Erasmus, Ahmed, Maimuna, Mahende, Muhidin K., Kavishe, Reginald A., Muro, Florida, Molteni, Fabrizio, Reaves, Erik, Kitojo, Chonge, Greer, George, Nyinondi, Ssanyu, Kabula, Bilal, Lalji, Shabbir, Chacky, Frank, Njau, Ritha J., Warsame, Marian, and Mohamed, Ally
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- 2024
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12. Plasmodium falciparum pfhrp2 and pfhrp3 gene deletions among patients enrolled at 100 health facilities throughout Tanzania: February to July 2021
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Rogier, Eric, Battle, Nastassia, Bakari, Catherine, Seth, Misago D., Nace, Douglas, Herman, Camelia, Barakoti, Achut, Madebe, Rashid A., Mandara, Celine I., Lyimo, Beatus M., Giesbrecht, David J., Popkin-Hall, Zachary R., Francis, Filbert, Mbwambo, Daniel, Garimo, Issa, Aaron, Sijenunu, Lusasi, Abdallah, Molteni, Fabrizio, Njau, Ritha, Cunningham, Jane A., Lazaro, Samwel, Mohamed, Ally, Juliano, Jonathan J., Bailey, Jeffrey A., Udhayakumar, Venkatachalam, and Ishengoma, Deus S.
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- 2024
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13. Efficacy of artesunate-amodiaquine for treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria in mainland Tanzania
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Ngasala, Billy, Bushukatale, Samwel, Chiduo, Mercy, Makene, Twilumba, Mkony, Lilian, Mohamed, Ally, Molteni, Fablizio, Chacky, Frank, Njau, Ritha J. A., and Mwaiswelo, Richard
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- 2024
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14. Microsatellites reveal high polymorphism and high potential for use in anti-malarial efficacy studies in areas with different transmission intensities in mainland Tanzania
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Ishengoma, Deus S., Mandara, Celine I., Madebe, Rashid A., Warsame, Marian, Ngasala, Billy, Kabanywanyi, Abdunoor M., Mahende, Muhidin K., Kamugisha, Erasmus, Kavishe, Reginald A., Muro, Florida, Mandike, Renata, Mkude, Sigsbert, Chacky, Frank, Njau, Ritha, Martin, Troy, Mohamed, Ally, Bailey, Jeffrey A., and Fola, Abebe A.
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- 2024
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15. Trends of Plasmodium falciparum molecular markers associated with resistance to artemisinins and reduced susceptibility to lumefantrine in Mainland Tanzania from 2016 to 2021
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Bakari, Catherine, Mandara, Celine I., Madebe, Rashid A., Seth, Misago D., Ngasala, Billy, Kamugisha, Erasmus, Ahmed, Maimuna, Francis, Filbert, Bushukatale, Samwel, Chiduo, Mercy, Makene, Twilumba, Kabanywanyi, Abdunoor M., Mahende, Muhidin K., Kavishe, Reginald A., Muro, Florida, Mkude, Sigsbert, Mandike, Renata, Molteni, Fabrizio, Chacky, Frank, Bishanga, Dunstan R., Njau, Ritha J. A., Warsame, Marian, Kabula, Bilali, Nyinondi, Ssanyu S., Lucchi, Naomi W., Talundzic, Eldin, Venkatesan, Meera, Moriarty, Leah F., Serbantez, Naomi, Kitojo, Chonge, Reaves, Erik J., Halsey, Eric S., Mohamed, Ally, Udhayakumar, Venkatachalam, and Ishengoma, Deus S.
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- 2024
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16. Rudi Kundini, Pamoja Kundini (RKPK): study protocol for a hybrid type 1 randomized effectiveness-implementation trial using data science and economic incentive strategies to strengthen the continuity of care among people living with HIV in Tanzania
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Kadota, Jillian L., Packel, Laura J., Mlowe, Matilda, Ulenga, Nzovu, Mwenda, Natalino, Njau, Prosper F., Dow, William H., Wang, Jingshen, Sabasaba, Amon, and McCoy, Sandra I.
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- 2024
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17. Risk and protective factors for mental health and wellbeing among adolescent orphans
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Cherewick, Megan, Dahl, Ronald E, Bertomen, Samantha, Hipp, Emily, Shreedar, Priyanka, Njau, Prosper F, and Leiferman, Jenn A
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Brain Disorders ,Violence Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Orphans and vulnerable adolescents ,mental health ,wellbeing ,adverse life experiences ,protective factors ,sub-Saharan Africa ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
BackgroundResearch has demonstrated the importance of understanding risk factors for mental health and wellbeing. Less research has focused on protective factors that protect mental health and promote wellbeing in diverse contexts. Estimating structural paths from risk protective factors to psychopathology and wellbeing can inform prioritization of targeted investment in adolescent health programs that seek to modify factors that are most closely associated with mental wellbeing.Study objectiveThe purpose of this study was to examine risk factors (e.g. emotional neglect, emotional abuse, physical neglect, stigma) and protective factors (e.g. community relationships, self-esteem, and autonomy) among adolescent orphans, protective associations with depression, anxiety and externalizing behaviors and promotive associations with hope, happiness, and health.MethodsThe analytic sample was collected between January and March of 2019 and included 350 adolescent orphans ages 10-15 from three districts in Tanzania. Participants completed survey interviews, 75-90 min in length, that measured risk and protective factors, psychological symptoms, and mental wellbeing measures.ResultsResults of the fitted structural equation model indicated that structural paths from protective factors to psychopathology (β = -0.53, p = 0.015) and mental wellbeing (β = 0.72, p = 0.014) outcomes were significant. Structural paths from risk factors to psychopathology (β = -0.34, p = 0.108) and mental wellbeing (β = -0.24, p = 0.405) were not significant.ConclusionIn a sample of vulnerable youth, protective factors (e.g. community relationships, self-esteem, and autonomy) were significantly associated with reduced depression, anxiety and externalizing behaviors and increased hope, happiness, and health in a structural equation model that included risk factors (emotional neglect, emotional abuse, physical neglect). Results suggest that strong community relationships, self-esteem and autonomy may be important modifiable factors to target in intervention programs aimed at supporting adolescent mental wellbeing.
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- 2023
18. Gender and Age Differences in the Relationship between Sensation-Seeking and Sexual Risk-Taking Behavior among Adolescents
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Njau, Annie N., Othuon, Lucas, and Oburu, Paul
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The study examined gender and age differences in the relationship between sensation seeking and sexual risk behaviors among secondary school students in Kenya. The study was conducted in Kisumu Municipality. Kisumu was chosen as it is one of the leading regions in HIV prevalence, estimated at 15%. The HIV prevalence was assumed to indicate a positive relationship between sensation seeking and high sexual risk-taking behavior. A sample size of 357 adolescents (44% males and 56% females) was drawn using a stratified sampling method from a population of 10,278 secondary school students. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze quantitative data, while the qualitative data was summarized thematically. The study's findings indicated that about half the adolescents were highly sensational seekers predisposing them to take risks. There also existed significant gender differences in the prevalence of sensation-seeking and sexual risk-taking behavior, with the male adolescents being higher risk-takers than their female counterparts. Similarities in the prevalence of sensation-seeking were also reported. However, this varied across ages and different gender. Female adolescents' sensation-seeking increased earlier in life than their male counterparts. Further, the study indicated gender differences in the adolescents' tendency to indulge in sexually risky behaviors due to their sensation-seeking. This behavior tendency was higher for males than for female adolescents. Additionally, the results indicated significant age differences, with the susceptibility to indulge in such risky behaviors increasing with advancement in age.
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- 2022
19. Risks of Intimate Partner Violence for Women Living with HIV Receiving Cash Transfers: A Qualitative Study in Shinyanga, Tanzania
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Hémono, Rebecca, Mnyippembe, Agatha, Kalinjila, Atuganile, Msoma, Jesca, Prata, Ndola, Dow, William H, Snell-Rood, Claire, Sabasaba, Amon, Njau, Prosper, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Mental Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,HIV/AIDS ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Violence Against Women ,Clinical Research ,Violence Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Pediatric ,Gender Equality ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,HIV Infections ,Intimate Partner Violence ,Qualitative Research ,Risk Factors ,Sexual Behavior ,Tanzania ,Behavioral economics ,Cash transfers ,HIV ,Intimate partner violence ,Gender-based violence ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health - Abstract
Cash transfers are increasingly used to motivate adherence to HIV care. However, evidence on cash transfers and intimate partner violence (IPV) is mixed and little is known about their safety for women living with HIV. We conducted in-depth interviews with women living with HIV who participated in a randomized trial providing 6 months of cash transfers (~$4.5 or $11 USD) conditional on HIV clinic attendance in Shinyanga, Tanzania to assess how receiving cash affects IPV and relationship dynamics. Eligible participants were 18-49 years, received cash transfers, and in a partnership at baseline. Data were analyzed in Dedoose using a combined inductive-deductive coding approach. 25 interviews were conducted between November 2019-February 2020. Women's employment was found to be a source of household tension and violence. None of the participants reported physical or sexual IPV in relation to cash transfers, however, some women experienced controlling behaviors or emotional violence including accusations and withholding of money, particularly those who were unemployed. Cash transfers were predominantly used for small household expenses and were not viewed as being substantial enough to shift the financial dynamic or balance of power within relationships. Our findings suggest that small, short-term cash transfers do not increase physical or sexual IPV for women living with HIV however can exacerbate controlling behaviors or emotional violence. Modest incentives used as a behavioral nudge to improve health outcomes may affect women differently than employment or larger cash transfers. Nonetheless, consultations with beneficiaries should be prioritized to protect women from potential IPV risks.
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- 2023
20. Financial incentives to improve re-engagement in HIV care: results from a randomized pilot study
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Hémono, Rebecca, Kelly, Nicole K, Fahey, Carolyn A, Hassan, Kassim, Msasa, Janeth, Mfaume, Rashid S, Njau, Prosper F, Dow, William H, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Pediatric AIDS ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Health Services ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Motivation ,Pilot Projects ,HIV Infections ,Tanzania ,HIV care continuum ,adherence ,retention ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveDetermine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of financial incentives to motivate re-engagement in HIV care in Shinyanga, Tanzania.MethodsOut-of-care people living with HIV (PLHIV) were identified from medical records in four clinics and home-based care providers (HBCs) from April 13, 2018 to March 3, 2020. Shinyanga Region residents, ≥18 years, who were disengaged from care were randomized 1:1 to a financial incentive (∼$10 USD) or the standard of care (SOC), stratified by site, and followed for 180 days. Primary outcomes were feasibility (located PLHIV who agreed to discuss the study), acceptability (enrollment among eligibles), and re-engagement in care (clinic visit within 90 days).ResultsHBCs located 469/1,309 (35.8%) out-of-care PLHIV. Of these, 215 (45.8%) were preliminarily determined to be disengaged from care, 201 (93.5%) agreed to discuss the study, and 157 eligible (100%) enrolled. Within 90 days, 71 (85.5%) PLHIV in the incentive arm re-engaged in care vs. 58 (78.4%) in the SOC (Adjusted Risk Difference [ARD] = 0.08, 95% CI: -0.03, 0.19, p = 0.09). A higher proportion of incentivized PLHIV completed an additional (unincentivized) visit between 90-180 days (79.5% vs. 71.6%, ARD = 0.10, 95% CI: -0.03, 0.24, p = 0.13) and remained in care at 180 days (57.8% vs. 51.4%, ARD = 0.07, 95% CI: -0.09, 0.22, p = 0.40).ConclusionsShort-term financial incentives are feasible, acceptable, and have the potential to encourage re-engagement in care, warranting further study of this approach.
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- 2023
21. Increased prevalence of depression and anxiety among adults initiating antiretroviral therapy during the COVID-19 pandemic in Shinyanga region, Tanzania.
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Winters, Solis, Sabasaba, Amon, Fahey, Carolyn A, Packel, Laura, Katabaro, Emmanuel, Ndungile, Yudas, Njau, Prosper F, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Prevalence ,Depression ,Anxiety ,Adult ,Tanzania ,Pandemics ,COVID-19 ,HIV ,Mental health ,Syndemic ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Immunology ,Virology - Abstract
BackgroundConcerns about the interconnected relationship between HIV and mental health were heightened during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study assessed whether there were temporal changes in the mental health status of people living with HIV presenting for care in Shinyanga region, Tanzania. Specifically, we compared the prevalence of depression and anxiety before and during COVID-19, with the goal of describing the changing needs, if any, to person-centered HIV services.MethodsWe analyzed baseline data from two randomized controlled trials of adults initiating ART in Shinyanga region, Tanzania between April-December 2018 (pre-COVID-19 period, n = 530) and May 2021-March 2022 (COVID-19 period, n = 542), respectively. We compared three mental health indicators that were similarly measured in both surveys: loss of interest in things, hopelessness about the future, and uncontrolled worrying. We also examined depression and anxiety which were measured using the Hopkins Symptom Checklist-25 in the pre-COVID-19 period and the Patient Health Questionnaire-4 in the COVID-19 period, respectively, and classified as binary indicators per each scale's threshold. We estimated prevalence differences (PD) in adverse mental health status before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, using stabilized inverse probability of treatment weighting to adjust for underlying differences in the two study populations.ResultsWe found significant temporal increases in the prevalence of feeling 'a lot' and 'extreme' loss of interest in things ['a lot' PD: 38, CI 34,41; 'extreme' PD: 9, CI 8,12)], hopelessness about the future [' a lot' PD: 46, CI 43,49; 'extreme' PD: 4, CI 3,6], and uncontrolled worrying [' a lot' PD: 34, CI 31,37; 'extreme' PD: 2, CI 0,4] during the COVID-19 pandemic. We also found substantially higher prevalence of depression [PD: 38, CI 34,42] and anxiety [PD: 41, CI 37,45].ConclusionsAfter applying a quasi-experimental weighting approach, the prevalence of depression and anxiety symptoms among those starting ART during COVID-19 was much higher than before the pandemic. Although depression and anxiety were measured using different, validated scales, the concurrent increases in similarly measured mental health indicators lends confidence to these findings and warrants further research to assess the possible influence of COVID-19 on mental health among adults living with HIV. Trial Registration NCT03351556, registered November 24, 2017; NCT04201353, registered December 17, 2019.
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- 2023
22. Designing for two: How enhancing human-centered design with behavioral nudges unlocked breakthroughs to promote young women's psychological safety and access to reproductive care in Tanzania.
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Liu, Jenny X, Vallin, Janelli, Chiu, Calvin, Cabrera, F Abigail, Hunter, Lauren A, Rao, Aarthi, Njau, Prosper, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Contraception ,Sexual Behavior ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Reproductive Health Services ,Tanzania ,Female ,Young Adult ,Adolescent girls and young women ,Behavioral economics ,Drug shops ,HIV ,Human-centered design ,Sexual and reproductive health ,Pediatric ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Economics ,Studies in Human Society ,Public Health - Abstract
Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW; ages 15-24) in sub-Saharan Africa face many barriers to accessing preventive sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. We drew upon the strengths of two complementary approaches, human-centered design and behavioral economics, to craft a holistic, highly-tailored, and empathetic intervention to motivate AGYW to seek contraception and HIV self-test kits at community drug shops. To encourage engagement, we embedded "nudge" strategies at different opportunity points (uncovered during our design research) along the care-seeking and service delivery journey. Our Malkia Klabu intervention is a loyalty program designed to enhance drug shops' role as SRH providers through which AGYW earned punches for shop purchases redeemable for small prizes; free SRH products could be requested at any time. From our 4-month pilot in Shinyanga, Tanzania, we assess the extent to which different behavioral nudge strategies motivated behaviors as predicted by synthesizing findings from (1) in-depth interviews with AGYW and shopkeepers, (2) shop program records, (3) shop observations, and (4) customer exit surveys. Overall, we find that AGYW and shopkeepers were motivated by many intervention features as intended and consistent with hypothesized mechanisms. We found strong evidence of social norms for helping to spread awareness of Malkia Klabu among peers, prize incentives for drawing AGYW back to shops, and the opt-out default membership gift of an HIV self-test kit for encouraging testing uptake and exploration of contraceptives. Shopkeepers in both arms noted increased community status from distributing HIV self-testing kits (ego). Malkia Klabu shopkeepers experienced increased customer traffic and business revenues (incentives), which reduced shopkeepers' gatekeeping tendencies and earned them additional recognition as champions of AGYW well-being. Integrating human-centered design and behavioral economics was effective for developing an innovative and effective intervention that simultaneously met the different needs of economic actors in support of public health priorities.
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- 2023
23. Psychometric validation of the collective asset Utu: associations with coping strategies and resilience during adolescence
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Cherewick, Megan, Dahl, Ronald E, Rubin, Daphna, Leiferman, Jenn A, and Njau, Prosper F
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Resilience ,Psychological ,Psychometrics ,Reproducibility of Results ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Risk ,Resilience ,Adolescents ,Orphans ,Collective Assets ,Utu - Abstract
BackgroundUtu is a Kiswahili term with a long history of cultural significance in Tanzania. It conveys a value system of shared, collective humanity. While variants of Utu have been studied in other contexts, a measure of Utu that captures this important collective asset has not been developed in Tanzania. The aims of this study were to (1) examine dimensional constructs that represent Utu, (2) validate a measurement scale of Utu for use with adolescents, (3) examine differences between orphan and non-orphan adolescents in self-reported Utu and, (4) examine structural paths between adverse life experiences, coping strategies, Utu, and resilience. METHODS: This study collected survey data from adolescents from three districts in peri-urban Tanzania in two samples: 189 orphan adolescents ages 10-17 in May 2020 and 333 non-orphan adolescents ages 10-14 in August 2020. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to validate the hypothesized factor structure of the developed Utu measure. Structural equation models were used to examine path associations with adverse life experiences, coping and resilience.ResultsThe five dimensional constructs comprising the Utu measure included Resource Sharing, Group Solidarity, Respect and Dignity, Collectivity, and Compassion. Confirmatory factor analysis of the Utu measure demonstrated excellent fit (CFI = 0.98; TLI = 0.97; SRMR = 0.024; RMSEA = 0.046) and internal consistency (α = 0.94) among adolescents in this study. Positive, significant associations were found between Utu and coping (β = 0.29, p
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- 2023
24. Reaching Adolescent Girls and Young Women With HIV Self-Testing and Contraception at Girl-Friendly Drug Shops: A Randomized Trial in Tanzania.
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Hunter, Lauren A, Rao, Aarthi, Napierala, Sue, Kalinjila, Atuganile, Mnyippembe, Agatha, Hassan, Kassim, Bertozzi, Stefano M, Mfaume, Rashid, Njau, Prosper, Liu, Jenny X, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Contraception ,Pregnancy ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Family Planning Services ,Tanzania ,Female ,Young Adult ,Self-Testing ,Adolescent girls and young women ,Drug shops ,HIV self-testing ,Human-centered design ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Gender Equality ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeWe hypothesized that an intervention designed to create girl-friendly drug shops would increase access to sexual and reproductive health products and services among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) (ages 15-24 years) in Tanzania.MethodsWe conducted a four-month randomized trial at 20 drug shops in Shinyanga, Tanzania from August-December 2019 to determine if the Malkia Klabu ("Queen Club") intervention increased AGYW patronage and the provision of HIV self-testing (HIVST), contraception, and health facility referrals to AGYW (primary outcomes). Drug shops were randomized 1:1 to the intervention or comparison arm. All shops were provided with OraQuick HIVST kits to give to AGYW for free. Intervention shops implemented Malkia Klabu, a loyalty program for AGYW created using human-centered design through which AGYW could also access free contraception. We compared outcomes in intention-to-treat analyses using shop observations and shopkeeper records.ResultsBy endline, shops implementing Malkia Klabu had higher AGYW patronage than comparison shops (rate ratio: 4.4; 95% confidence interval: 2.0, 9.8). Intervention shops distributed more HIVST kits (median per shop: 130.5 vs. 58.5, P = .02) and contraceptives (325.5 vs. 7.0, P < .01) to AGYW and provided more referrals for HIV, family planning, or pregnancy services combined (3.5 vs. 0.5, P = .02) than comparison shops.DiscussionThe Malkia Klabu intervention increased AGYW patronage and the provision of HIVST kits, contraception, and referrals to AGYW at drug shops, despite HIVST kits being freely available at all participating shops. Enhancing drug shops with girl-friendly services may be an effective strategy to reach AGYW with sexual and reproductive health services.
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- 2023
25. Impact of Breastfeeding Barriers on Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Breastfeeding Outcomes in North Dakota
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Ross, Anna, MacPherson, Cora, Baker, Lannesse, Kim, Soojung, Njau, Grace, and Williams, Andrew D.
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- 2024
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26. Loss of pod strings in common bean is associated with gene duplication, retrotransposon insertion and overexpression of PvIND
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Parker, Travis A, Cetz, Jose, de Sousa, Lorenna Lopes, Kuzay, Saarah, Lo, Sassoum, de Oliveira Floriani, Talissa, Njau, Serah, Arunga, Esther, Duitama, Jorge, Jernstedt, Judy, Myers, James R, Llaca, Victor, Herrera‐Estrella, Alfredo, and Gepts, Paul
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Domestication ,Gene Duplication ,Phaseolus ,Phenotype ,Retroelements ,bHLH transcription factor ,differential expression ,domestication ,gain-of-function mutation ,gene duplication ,Phaseolus vulgaris ,pod dehiscence ,Ty1-copia retrotransposon ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Plant Biology & Botany ,Plant biology ,Climate change impacts and adaptation ,Ecological applications - Abstract
Fruit development has been central in the evolution and domestication of flowering plants. In common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), the principal global grain legume staple, two main production categories are distinguished by fibre deposition in pods: dry beans, with fibrous, stringy pods; and stringless snap/green beans, with reduced fibre deposition, which frequently revert to the ancestral stringy state. Here, we identify genetic and developmental patterns associated with pod fibre deposition. Transcriptional, anatomical, epigenetic and genetic regulation of pod strings were explored through RNA-seq, RT-qPCR, fluorescence microscopy, bisulfite sequencing and whole-genome sequencing. Overexpression of the INDEHISCENT ('PvIND') orthologue was observed in stringless types compared with isogenic stringy lines, associated with overspecification of weak dehiscence-zone cells throughout the pod vascular sheath. No differences in DNA methylation were correlated with this phenotype. Nonstringy varieties showed a tandemly direct duplicated PvIND and a Ty1-copia retrotransposon inserted between the two repeats. These sequence features are lost during pod reversion and are predictive of pod phenotype in diverse materials, supporting their role in PvIND overexpression and reversible string phenotype. Our results give insight into reversible gain-of-function mutations and possible genetic solutions to the reversion problem, of considerable economic value for green bean production.
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- 2022
27. Pharmacokinetics, safety, tolerability, and antiviral activity of dolutegravir dispersible tablets in infants and children with HIV-1 (IMPAACT P1093): results of an open-label, phase 1–2 trial
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Ruel, Theodore D, Acosta, Edward P, Liu, Jessica P, Gray, Kathryn P, George, Kathleen, Montañez, Nicole, Popson, Stephanie, Buchanan, Ann M, Bartlett, Mattie, Dayton, Dale, Anthony, Patricia, Brothers, Cynthia, Vavro, Cynthia, Singh, Rajendra, Koech, Lucy, Vhembo, Tichaona, Mmbaga, Blandina T, Pinto, Jorge A, Dobbels, Els FM, Archary, Moherndran, Chokephaibulkit, Kulkanya, Ounchanum, Pradthana, Deville, Jaime G, Hazra, Rohan, Townley, Ellen, Wiznia, Andrew, team, IMPAACT P1093, Carter, Michele F, Mansky, Hannah, Ferreira, Flavia F, Romeiro, Juliana, D'Angelo, Jessica, Williams, Ruth, Jundi, Fernanda, Cruz, Maria Letícia Santos, Sidi, Claude Leon, Kataike, Hajira, Owor, Maxensia, Ahimbisibwe, Grace Miriam, van Rensburg, Anita Janse, Andrea, Catherine V, Ponatshego, Ponego L, Budu, Marian, Tirelo, Lesedi, Masheto, Gaerolwe R, Raesi, Mpho S, Ramogodiri, Moakanyi, Chanthong, Jiraporn, Khamrong, Chintana, Aurpibul, Linda, Fairlie, Lee, Patel, Faeezah, Soma-Kashiram, Hamisha, Hanley, Sherika, Govender, Vani, Sturzbecher, Fernanda Tomé, Cervi, Maria Célia, Njau, Boniface, Matibe, Petronilla, Mukonowenzou, Ruvimbo, Marozva, Catherine C, Keter, Winnie C, Bii, Priscilla C, Cressey, Tim R, Sukrakanchana, Pra-ornsuda, Rungmaitree, Supattra, Pilotto, Jose Henrique, Fernandes, Luis Eduardo, and Gomes, Ivete Martins
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Women's Health ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,6.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Antiviral Agents ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,HIV Infections ,HIV Integrase Inhibitors ,HIV Seropositivity ,HIV-1 ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,3-Ring ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Oxazines ,Piperazines ,Pyridones ,RNA ,Tablets ,IMPAACT P1093 team ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSafe and potent antiretroviral medications in child-friendly formulations are needed to treat young children living with HIV-1. We aimed to select dosing for a dispersible tablet formulation of dolutegravir that achieved pharmacokinetic exposures similar to those in adults, and was safe and well tolerated in young children.MethodsInternational Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trial (IMPAACT) P1093 is a phase 1-2 ongoing multicentre, open-label, non-comparative study of dolutegravir. A 5 mg dispersible tablet formulation of dolutegravir was studied in children aged 4 weeks to less than 6 years old, weighing at least 3 kg, with HIV RNA of greater than 1000 copies per mL and no previous treatment with integrase strand transfer inhibitor recruited from IMPAACT clinical research sites in Africa, the Americas, and Asia. Doses were selected on the basis of intensive pharmacokinetic evaluation on days 5-10, with safety and tolerability assessed up to 48 weeks. The primary objectives of this study are to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of dolutegravir in combination with optimised background therapy and to establish the dose of dolutegravir that achieves the targeted 24-h trough concentration and 24-h area under the curve for infants, children, and adolescents with HIV-1, to establish the safety and tolerability of dolutegravir at 24 and 48 weeks, and to select a dose that achieves similar exposure to the dolutegravir 50 mg once daily dose in adults. This analysis included participants treated with the proposed dose of dolutegravir dispersible tablets in two stages for each of three age cohorts. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01302847) and is ongoing.FindingsWe recruited 181 participants from April 20, 2011, to Feb 19, 2020; of these, 96 received dolutegravir dispersible tablets. This analysis included 73 (35, 48% female) participants who received the final proposed dose with median (range) age of 1 year (0·1 to 6·0), weight (minimum-maximum) of 8·5 kg (3·7 to 18·5), plasma HIV-1 RNA concentration of 4·2 log10 copies per mL (2·1 to 7·0), and CD4% of 24·0% (0·3 to 49·0); 64 (87·7%) were treatment-experienced. The selected dose within each age cohort (≥2 years to
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- 2022
28. A developmental analysis of dimensions of empathy during early adolescence: Behavioral empathy but not cognitive empathy is associated with lower psychopathology.
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Cherewick, Megan, Schmiege, Sarah, Hipp, Emily, Leiferman, Jenn, Njau, Prosper, and Dahl, Ronald
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Construct definitions of empathy have sought to distinguish between different dimensions of empathetic capacity that are significantly associated with psychological distress or wellbeing. Research has provided substantial evidence differentiating affective and cognitive empathy; however, more recent research has cited the importance of a third domain represented by empathetic behaviors and compassionate intent to comfort others. Examining developmental and maturational stage during the rapid transitional period of early adolescence is needed to model developmental trajectories, mechanisms of change and mental health outcomes. This study aims to assess relationships between pubertal developmental stage, dimensions of empathy, and depression, anxiety and externalizing behaviors among early adolescents. A cross-sectional survey among young adolescents ages 9-12 years was conducted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The relationships between pubertal developmental stage, affective, cognitive, and behavioral empathy scores and internalizing and externalizing symptoms were evaluated using hierarchical regression modeling. Structural equation modeling was used to test a theoretical model of structural paths between these variables. A sample of 579 very young adolescents (270 boys and 309 girls) aged 9-12 years participated in the study. Pubertal development scale scores were associated with affective, cognitive, and behavioral empathy. Adolescents who had greater behavioral empathy scores reported lower internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Adolescents who had transitioned further through puberty and had higher cognitive empathy scores and reported higher internalizing symptoms. These findings support the importance of pubertal developmental stage in assessing risk and protective paths to mental health during adolescence. While empathetic capacity is widely perceived to be a positive trait, dimensional analysis of empathy among early adolescents indicates that behavioral skills and compassionate acts may be particularly protective and promote positive mental health outcomes.
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- 2022
29. Durability of effects from short-term economic incentives for clinic attendance among HIV positive adults in Tanzania: long-term follow-up of a randomised controlled trial
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Fahey, Carolyn A, Njau, Prosper F, Kelly, Nicole K, Mfaume, Rashid S, Bradshaw, Patrick T, Dow, William H, and McCoy, Sandra I
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BRII recipient: Fahey - Abstract
Introduction Conditional economic incentives are shown to promote medication adherence across a range of health conditions and settings; however, any long-term harms or benefits from these time-limited interventions remainlargely unevaluated. We assessed 2–3 years outcomes from a 6-month incentive programme in Tanzania that originally improved short-term retention in HIV care and medication possession.Methods We traced former participants in a 2013–2016 trial, which randomised 800 food-insecure adults starting HIV treatment at three clinics to receive eitherusual care (control) or up to 6 months of cash or food transfers (~US$11/month) contingent on timely attendance at monthly clinic appointments. The primaryintention-to-treat analysis estimated 24-month and 36-month marginal risk differences (RD) between incentive and control groups for retention in care and all-cause mortality, using multiple imputation for a minority of missing outcomes. We also estimated mortality HRs from time-stratified Cox regression.Results From 3 March 2018 to 19 September 2019, we determined 36-month retention and mortality statusesfor 737 (92%) and 700 (88%) participants, respectively. Overall, approximately 660 (83%) participants were in care at 36 months while 43 (5%) had died. Therewere no differences between groups in retention at 24 months (86.5% intervention vs 84.4% control, RD 2.1,95% CI −5.2 to 9.3) or 36 months (83.3% vs 77.8%, RD 5.6, –2.7 to 13.8), nor in mortality at either time point. The intervention group had a lower rate of death during the first 18 months (HR 0.27, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.74); mortality was similar thereafter (HR 1.13, 95% CI 0.33to 3.79).Conclusion These findings confirm that incentives are a safe and effective tool to promote short-term adherence and potentially avert early deaths at thecritical time of HIV treatment initiation. Complementary strategies are recommended to sustain lifelongretention in HIV care.Trial registration number NCT01957917
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- 2021
30. Preparing a financial incentive program to improve retention in HIV care and viral suppression for scale: using an implementation science framework to evaluate an mHealth system in Tanzania
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Packel, Laura, Fahey, Carolyn, Kalinjila, Atuganile, Mnyippembe, Agatha, Njau, Prosper, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,ART ,Conditional Cash Transfers ,HIV/ADS ,Implementation Science ,Retention in Care ,Viral Suppression ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundViral suppression is key to ending the HIV epidemic, yet only 58% of people living with HIV (PLHIV) in sub-Saharan Africa are suppressed. Cash transfers are an effective strategy to improve retention in care, but little is known about optimization of implementation; for example, designing effective programs that integrate into existing clinic workflows. We studied implementation of an mHealth system to deliver cash transfers to support retention.MethodsWe conducted a mixed-methods study assessing implementation of an mHealth cash transfer study. This was part of a larger, hybrid implementation-effectiveness randomized controlled trial evaluating cash transfers conditional on visit attendance for viral suppression among Tanzanian PLHIV initiating ART. An mHealth system using fingerprint identification and mobile payments was used to automatically disburse mobile money to eligible PLHIV. We used Proctor's framework, assessing implementation of the mHealth system from the perspectives of PLHIV and clinicians. We analyzed mHealth system data and conducted surveys (n = 530) and in-depth interviews (n = 25) with PLHIV, clinic and pharmacy staff (n = 10), and structured clinic observations (n = 2293 visits).ResultsOne thousand six hundred fifty-one cash transfers were delivered to 346 PLHIV in the cash arms, 78% through mobile money. Among those in the cash arms, 81% registered their mobile money account with the mHealth system by study end, signaling high adoption. While acceptability for fingerprinting and mobile payments was high among PLHIV, interviews revealed mixed views: some had privacy concerns while others felt the system was secure and accurate, and provided some legitimacy to the clinical visits. Pharmacists praised system efficiency, but concerns about duplicative recordkeeping and added work arose. Clinic staff voiced excitement for the system's potential to bring the cash program to all patients and simplify workflows; yet concerns about multiple systems, staffing, and intermittent connectivity tempered enthusiasm, highlighting structural issues beyond program scope. Structured observations revealed a steep learning curve; repeat fingerprint scans and manual entry declined as the system improved.ConclusionsBiometric identification and mobile payments were acceptable to most patients and staff. Fingerprinting encountered some feasibility limitations in the first months of testing; however, mobile payments were highly successful. Biometric identification and mobile payments may provide a scalable mechanism to improve patient tracking and efficiently implement financial incentives in low-resource settings.Trial registrationName of the registry: clinicaltrials.gov Trial registration number: NCT03351556 Date of registration: 11/24/2017 Checklists: StaRI (included with submission). Note CONSORT for cluster-randomized trials was used for the main trial but is not directly applicable to this manuscript.
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- 2021
31. Adolescent, caregiver and community experiences with a gender transformative, social emotional learning intervention
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Cherewick, Megan, Lebu, Sarah, Su, Christine, Richards, Lisa, Njau, Prosper F, and Dahl, Ronald E
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Adolescent ,Caregivers ,Child ,Cognition ,Community Participation ,Emotions ,Female ,Focus Groups ,Gender Identity ,Humans ,Interviews as Topic ,Male ,Program Evaluation ,Qualitative Research ,Tanzania ,Developmental science ,Adolescence ,Social emotional learning ,Gender equity ,Public Health and Health Services ,Sociology ,Public Health - Abstract
BackgroundInequitable gender norms, beliefs and behaviors, are shaped by learning experiences during key developmental stages in an individual's life course, and can have negative impacts on health and well-being outcomes. Very early adolescence represents one stage when formative learning experiences about gender inequity can have the potential to support or hinder more equitable gender norms, beliefs and behaviors. The aim of this qualitative study was to evaluate the effect of a gender transformative, social emotional learning intervention for very young adolescents (VYAs) that included experiential learning with peers, parents/caregivers and community members.MethodsThis study examined the effects of an intervention designed to provide social emotional learning opportunities for adolescents ages 10-11 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The qualitative sample included 279 participants. Qualitative methods included 102 in-depth interviews with VYAs, 22 focus groups with 117 VYAs, 60 in-depth interviews with parents/caregivers and 54 participant observations. A grounded theory approach was used to identify emergent themes.ResultsParticipants reported growth in targeted areas of social emotional mindsets and skills, including a shift in gender norms, beliefs and behaviors. VYAs reported that experiential learning in mixed gender teams provided opportunities to actively practice and reflect on gender norms, beliefs and behaviors. VYAs also reported active practice of social emotional mindsets and skills with peers, parents/caregivers and the community. Parents/caregivers reported changes in VYAs' social emotional mindsets and skills within the home, with the community and with siblings and peers. Both adolescents and parent/caregivers reported positive change towards more equitable gender norms, beliefs and behaviors through participation in experiential learning activities and reflective discussions.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that an intervention providing social and emotional experiential learning opportunities during the developmental window of very young adolescence can be effective in transforming gender norms, beliefs and behaviors. Involvement of peers, parents/caregivers and community members was effective at supporting learning social emotional mindsets and skills in VYAs. Findings encourage local and global adolescent programming to include gender transformative content paired with social emotional experiential learning with peers, family and the community and can stimulate positive change in gender norms, beliefs and behaviors to promote gender equity.
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- 2021
32. Designing drug shops for young women in Tanzania: applying human-centred design to facilitate access to HIV self-testing and contraception
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Hunter, Lauren A, McCoy, Sandra I, Rao, Aarthi, Mnyippembe, Agatha, Hassan, Kassim, Njau, Prosper, Mfaume, Rashid, and Liu, Jenny X
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Prevention ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Gender Equality ,Adolescent ,Contraception ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Pregnancy ,Self-Testing ,Sexual Behavior ,Tanzania ,Young Adult ,Human-centred design ,adolescent health ,HIV self-testing ,contraception ,drug shops ,Public Health and Health Services ,Policy and Administration ,Political Science ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
Adolescent and young adult women in sub-Saharan Africa experience barriers to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services that elevate their risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) acquisition and unintended pregnancy. Community drug shops may be effective distribution points to connect young women with SRH products. Thus, we used human-centred design (HCD) to create drug shops where young women could access HIV self-testing and contraception in Shinyanga, Tanzania. Enhancing the HCD process with behavioural science, we collected diverse data (i.e. 18 in-depth interviews, 9 'shadowing' interviews, 6 shop observations, 6 focus groups) to understand the latent needs and motivations of young women and drug shopkeepers, brainstormed creative solutions and iteratively refined and tested solutions for acceptability, feasibility and cultural fit. We found a widespread moral imperative to control young women's behaviour via misinformation about SRH, community gossip and financial control. Young women often engaged in mundane shopping at the behest of others. At drug shops, few SRH products were deemed appropriate for unmarried women, and many reactively sought SRH products only after engaging in higher risk behaviours. In response to these insights, we designed the 'Malkia Klabu' ('Queen Club') loyalty programme through which young women could earn mystery prizes by shopping at drug shops and discreetly request free SRH products, including HIV self-test kits, by pointing at symbols on loyalty cards. Our HCD approach increases the likelihood that the intervention will address the specific needs and preferences of both drug shopkeepers and young women. We will evaluate its effectiveness in a randomized trial.
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- 2021
33. Sales and pricing decisions for HIV self-test kits among local drug shops in Tanzania: a prospective cohort study.
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Chiu, Calvin, Hunter, Lauren A, McCoy, Sandra I, Mfaume, Rashid, Njau, Prosper, and Liu, Jenny X
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Prospective Studies ,Adult ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Tanzania ,Female ,Male ,Drug shops ,HIV self-testing ,Pricing ,Private sector distribution ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Library and Information Studies ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
BackgroundPublic health initiatives must look for ways to cost-effectively scale critical interventions to achieve high coverage. Private sector distribution channels, can potentially distribute preventive healthcare products to hard-to-reach populations, decongest public healthcare systems, and increase the sustainability of programs by getting customers to share costs. However, little is known about how sellers set prices for new products. By introducing a new product, HIV self-test kits, to local drug shops, we observed whether shops experimented with pricing, charged different buyers different prices, and whether prices converged within the local market over our study period.MethodsFrom August to December 2019, we provided free HIV self-test kits, a new product, to 26 drug shops in Shinyanga, Tanzania to sell to the local community. We measured sales volume, price, customer age and sex using shop records. Using a multiple linear regression model, we conducted F-tests to determine whether shop, age, sex, and time (week) respectively were associated with price. We measured willingness-to-pay to restock test kits at the end of the study.Results514 test kits were sold over 18 weeks; 69% of buyers were male, 40% were aged 25-34 and 32% aged 35-44. Purchase prices ranged from 1000 to 6000 Tsh (median 3000 Tsh; ~$1.30 USD). Within shops, prices were 11.3% higher for 25-34 and 12.7% higher for 45+ year olds relative to 15-19-year olds (p = 0.029) and 13.5% lower for men (p = 0.023) on average. Although prices varied between shops, prices varied little within shops over time, and did not converge over the study period or cluster geospatially. Mean maximum willingness-to-pay to restock was 2000 Tsh per kit.ConclusionsShopkeepers charged buyers different prices depending on buyers' age and sex. There was limited variation in prices within shops over time and low demand among shopkeepers to restock at the end of the study. Given the subsidized global wholesale price ($2 USD or ~ 4600 Tsh), further demand creation and/or cost-reduction is required before HIV self-test kits can become commercially viable in drug shops in this setting. Careful consideration is needed to align the motivations of retailers with public health priorities while meeting their private for-profit needs.
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- 2021
34. HIV prevention at drug shops: awareness and attitudes among shop dispensers and young women about oral pre-exposure prophylaxis and the dapivirine ring in Shinyanga, Tanzania.
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Tubert, Julia, Packel, Laura, Hunter, Lauren A, Mfaume, Rashid, Njau, Prosper, Ramadhani, Angela A, Liu, Jenny X, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Pyrimidines ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Infant ,Newborn ,Tanzania ,Female ,Young Adult ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Adolescent girls ,Dapivirine ring ,Drug shops ,HIV ,HIV prevention ,Long-acting PrEP ,PrEP ,Pre-exposure prophylaxis ,Sub-Saharan Africa ,Young women ,Pediatric ,Infectious Diseases ,Pediatric AIDS ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Immunology ,Virology - Abstract
BackgroundHIV risk remains high among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW, ages 15-24) in Tanzania. Many AGYW experience stigma and provider bias at health facilities, deterring their use of HIV prevention services. Privately-owned drug shops, ubiquitous in many communities, may be an effective and accessible channel to deliver HIV prevention products to AGYW, including oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and the dapivirine vaginal ring.MethodsIn July-August 2019, we enrolled 26 drug shops in Shinyanga, Tanzania in an ongoing study to create "girl-friendly" drug shops where AGYW can access HIV self-testing and contraception. At baseline, all shop dispensers were given basic information about oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring and were asked about their interest in stocking each. During the next 3-5 months, we surveyed AGYW (n = 56) customers about their interest in oral PrEP and the ring.ResultsAmong dispensers, the median age was 42 years and 77% were female. Overall, 42% of dispensers had heard of a medication for HIV prevention. Almost all dispensers reported some interest in stocking oral PrEP (92%) and the dapivirine ring (96%). Most (85%) reported they would provide oral PrEP to AGYW who requested it. Among AGYW customers, the median age was 17 years; 29% of AGYW were married or had a steady partner and 18% had children. Only 20% of AGYW had heard of a medication to prevent HIV, yet 64% and 43% expressed some interest in using oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring, respectively, after receiving information about the products. PrEP interest was higher among AGYW who were partnered and had children.ConclusionsDespite low prior awareness of PrEP among shop dispensers and AGYW, we found high levels of interest in oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring in both groups. Community-based drug shops represent a promising strategy to make HIV prevention more accessible to AGYW.
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- 2021
35. Transportation cost as a barrier to contraceptive use among women initiating treatment for HIV in Tanzania.
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Hunter, Lauren A, Prata, Ndola, Eskenazi, Brenda, Njau, Prosper F, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Contraceptive Agents ,Female ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Contraception ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Condoms ,Contraception Behavior ,Transportation ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Health Services Accessibility ,Tanzania ,Female ,Young Adult ,Food Insecurity ,HIV ,PMTCT ,food insecurity ,transportation ,Infectious Diseases ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public Health - Abstract
Transportation cost is a barrier to HIV treatment, yet no studies have examined its association with contraceptive use among women living with HIV. We analyzed cross-sectional data from women attending three public healthcare facilities in Shinyanga, Tanzania where they initiated antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection in the previous 90 days; all facilities offered free contraception. Women self-reported current contraceptive use and the round-trip cost of transportation to the facility. Among 421 women aged 18-49, 86 (20.4%) were using any modern contraceptive method, of which half were using modern methods other than condoms. Women who paid more than 2,000 Tanzanian shillings for transportation had a significantly lower prevalence of any modern method use than women who paid nothing (9.1% vs. 21.3%; adjusted difference: -12.9; 95% confidence interval: -21.3, -4.4). A similar difference was observed for non-condom modern method use. We conclude that high transportation cost may impede contraceptive use even among women accessing HIV treatment.
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- 2021
36. Heavy Load Carrying and Symptoms of Pelvic Organ Prolapse among Women in Tanzania and Nepal: An Exploratory Study.
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Koyuncu, Aybüke, Kadota, Jillian, Mnyippembe, Agatha, Njau, Prosper, Sijali, Tula, McCoy, Sandra, Bates, Michael, Harris-Adamson, Carisa, and Prata, Ndola
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heavy load carrying ,pelvic organ prolapse (POP) ,uterine prolapse ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Nepal ,Pelvic Organ Prolapse ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Tanzania - Abstract
Heavy load carrying of water, firewood, and sand/stones is a ubiquitous activity for women living in developing countries. Although the intra-abdominal pressure associated with heavy load carrying is hypothesized to increase the risk of pelvic organ prolapse (POP) among women, relevant epidemiologic data are lacking. We conducted a comparative study involving two exploratory cross-sectional studies among convenience samples of women carrying heavy loads, with different characteristics: (1) as part of their activities for daily living, in Shinyanga region, Tanzania; and (2) working as sand miners in Pokhara, Nepal. Women were categorized has having low or high load-carrying exposures based on the measured weights of the loads being carried at the time of the survey, as well as on self-reported duration and frequency of load carrying. A summary score for lower abdominal discomfort suggestive of POP was generated using questions from the Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory (POPDI-6). Women with higher load carrying exposures had on average higher discomfort scores in both Tanzania (adjusted prevalence difference (PDa) = 3.7; 95% CI: -3.8-11.3; p = 0.33) and Nepal (PDa = 9.3; 95% CI: -4.9-23.6; p = 0.18). We identified trends suggestive of an association between increasing heavy load carrying exposures and symptoms of lower abdominal discomfort. Our findings underscore the need for larger epidemiologic studies of the potential adverse reproductive health effects of heavy load carrying activities on women in developing countries.
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- 2021
37. Study Protocol of a Distance Learning Intervention to Support Social Emotional Learning and Identity Development for Adolescents Using Interactive Mobile Technology.
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Cherewick, Megan, Lebu, Sarah, Su, Christine, Richards, Lisa, Njau, Prosper F, and Dahl, Ronald E
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adolescence ,developmental science ,distance learning ,identity development ,learning with technology ,social emotional learning ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Background: The maturational period from age 10 to 14-often referred to as very young adolescents (VYAs)-represents a dynamic period of learning and neurobehavioral development as individuals transition from childhood to adolescence. This developmental period presents a window of opportunity for strategic investment to improve trajectories of health, education and well-being among young people. More specifically, neurodevelopmental changes during pubertal maturation influence neural circuitry involved in processing emotions, risks, rewards and social relationships. Technology can be leveraged to create social emotional learning experiences for VYAs and provide opportunities for flexible, distance learning in low-income countries. The aim of this study protocol is to detail how insights from developmental science can be used to inform the intervention design, implementation and evaluation of a distance learning, social emotional learning intervention for VYAs. Methods: This study will be delivered to 500 VYAs in Temeke District, Dar es salaam. Study participants will watch culturally-relevant, animated videos on social emotional mindsets and skills and content will be paired with experiential learning activities over a period of 10 weeks. A nested smart-phone based study will practice learning social emotional skills and mindsets through engagement with multi-media material via the WhatsApp messenger application. Surveys and in-depth interviews will be administered to adolescents, their parents/caregivers and teachers before and after the intervention to evaluate the effect of the intervention on study outcomes. Discussion: This study is among the first to provide results on how to effectively design a distance-learning intervention to promote social emotional learning and identity development within a low-resource context. The findings will provide substantial evidence to inform new intervention approaches that are effective in low-resource contexts and strategies to reach scale among similar programs invested in leveraging technology to support adolescent health and development. Clinical Trial registration: Study registered with ClinicalTrials.gov. Identifier number NCT0445807.
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- 2021
38. Promoting gender equity in very young adolescents: targeting a window of opportunity for social emotional learning and identity development
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Cherewick, Megan, Lebu, Sarah, Su, Christine, Richards, Lisa, Njau, Prosper F, and Dahl, Ronald E
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Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Child ,Cognition ,Emotions ,Gender Equity ,Humans ,Social Learning ,Tanzania ,Adolescence ,gender equity ,social emotional learning ,gender norms and attitudes ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health - Abstract
BackgroundThe transition from childhood to adolescence is a uniquely sensitive period for social and emotional learning in the trajectory of human development. This transition is characterized by rapid physical growth, sexual maturation, cognitive and behavioral changes and dynamic changes in social relationships. This pivotal transition provides a window of opportunity for social emotional learning that can shape early adolescent identity formation and gender norms, beliefs and behaviors. The objective of this study is to evaluate the potential of a social emotional learning intervention for very young adolescents (VYAs) to improve social emotional mindsets and skills.MethodsDiscover Learning is a social emotional learning intervention designed for VYAs (10-11 years of age) to support development of social emotional mindsets and skills from four primary schools in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The intervention delivered three different packages of learning experiences to three arms of the study. 528 VYAs were randomized to each of the three study arms (A-Content learning, B-Content learning and reflection, and C-Content learning, reflection and experiential practice). A quantitative survey was administered to all participants before and after the intervention to capture changes in social emotional mindsets and skills. A discrete choice experiment measured changes in gender norms, beliefs and behaviors.Results528 VYAs were included in the analysis. Participants in all three arms of the study demonstrated significant improvements in social emotional mindsets and skills outcomes (generosity, curiosity, growth mindset, persistence, purpose and teamwork). However, Group C (who received experiential social learning opportunities in small, mixed-gender groups and a parent and community learning components demonstrated larger treatment effects on key outcomes in comparison to Groups A and B. Results indicate Group C participants had greater change in gender equity outcomes (OR = 1.69, p =
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- 2021
39. Impact of 1,7-malaria reactive community-based testing and response (1,7-mRCTR) approach on malaria prevalence in Tanzania
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Chang, Wei, Cohen, Jessica, Wang, Duo-Quan, Abdulla, Salim, Mahende, Muhidin Kassim, Gavana, Tegemeo, Scott, Valerie, Msuya, Hajirani M., Mwanyika-Sando, Mary, Njau, Ritha John A., Lu, Shen-Ning, Temu, Silas, Masanja, Honorati, Anthony, Wilbald, Aregawi W., Maru, Sunder, Naveen, Kun, Tang, Bruxvoort, Katia, Kitau, Jovin, Kihwele, Fadhila, Chila, Godlove, Michael, Mihayo, Castro, Marcia, Menzies, Nicolas A., Kim, Sein, Ning, Xiao, Zhou, Xiao-Nong, Chaki, Prosper, and Mlacha, Yeromin P.
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- 2023
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40. Community knowledge, attitude, practices and beliefs associated with persistence of malaria transmission in North-western and Southern regions of Tanzania
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Liheluka, Edwin A., Massawe, Isolide S., Chiduo, Mercy G., Mandara, Celine I., Chacky, Frank, Ndekuka, Leah, Temba, Filbert F., Mmbando, Bruno P., Seth, Misago D., Challe, Daniel P., Makunde, Williams H., Mhina, Athanas D., Baraka, Vito, Segeja, Method D., Derua, Yahya A., Batengana, Bernard M., Hayuma, Paul M., Madebe, Rashid A., Malimi, Masunga C., Mandike, Renata, Mkude, Sigsbert, Molteni, Fabrizio, Njau, Ritha, Mohamed, Ally, Rumisha, Susan F., and Ishengoma, Deus S.
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- 2023
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41. Geographic disparities and temporal changes of COVID-19 incidence risks in North Dakota, United States
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Deb Nath, Nirmalendu, Khan, Md Marufuzzaman, Schmidt, Matthew, Njau, Grace, and Odoi, Agricola
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- 2023
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42. HIV Prevention at Drug Shops: Awareness and Attitudes among Shop Dispensers and Young women about Oral Pre-exposure Prophylaxis and the Dapivirine Ring in Shinyanga, Tanzania
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Tubert, Julia, Packel, Laura, Hunter, Lauren A, Mfaume, Rashid, Njau, Prosper, Ramadhani, Angela A, Liu, Jenny X, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
Abstract Background: HIV risk remains high among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW, ages 15-24) in Tanzania. Many AGYW experience stigma and provider bias at health facilities, deterring their use of HIV prevention services. Privately-owned drug shops, ubiquitous in many communities, may be an effective and accessible channel to deliver HIV prevention products to AGYW, including oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and the dapivirine vaginal ring. Methods: In July-August 2019, we enrolled 26 drug shops in Shinyanga, Tanzania in an ongoing study to create “girl-friendly” drug shops where AGYW can access HIV self-testing and contraception. At baseline, all shop dispensers were given basic information about oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring and were asked about their interest in stocking each. During the next 3-5 months, we surveyed AGYW (n=56) customers about their interest in oral PrEP and the ring. Results: Among dispensers, the median age was 42 years and 77% were female. Overall, 42% of dispensers had heard of a medication for HIV prevention. Almost all dispensers reported some interest in stocking oral PrEP (92%) and the dapivirine ring (96%). Most (85%) reported they would provide oral PrEP to AGYW who requested it. Among AGYW customers, the median age was 17 years; 18% of AGYW were married and 7% had children. Only 20% of AGYW had heard of a medication to prevent HIV, yet 64% and 43% expressed some interest in using oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring, respectively, after receiving information about the products. PrEP interest was higher among AGYW who were partnered and had children.Conclusions: Despite low prior awareness of PrEP among shop dispensers and AGYW, we found high levels of interest in oral PrEP and the dapivirine ring in both groups. Community-based drug shops represent a promising strategy to make HIV prevention more accessible to AGYW.
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- 2020
43. Burden of prehypertension among adults in Kenya: a retrospective analysis of findings from the Healthy Heart Africa (HHA) Programme
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Mecha, Jared O, Kubo, Elizabeth N, Odhiambo, Collins O, Kinoti, Freda G, Njau, Kennedy, Yonga, Gerald, and Ogola, Elijah N
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Health Services ,Prevention ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Heart Disease ,Hypertension ,Aetiology ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Kenya ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prehypertension ,Prevalence ,Retrospective Studies ,Young Adult ,Cardiovascular disease ,Sub-Saharan Africa ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Hypertension is the leading risk factor for mortality globally. African countries, including Kenya, have a high and rising prevalence of hypertension. Prehypertension is associated with an increased risk of progression to overt hypertension and a higher risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality. Despite this, little is documented on the prevalence and distribution of prehypertension in sub-Saharan Africa. This study sought to estimate the overall burden of prehypertension in Kenyan adults enrolled in a large hypertension control programme, Healthy Heart Africa. The distribution and determinants of prehypertension in the sample were explored as secondary objectives. METHODS:This was a post hoc analysis of cross-sectional data obtained from population-level blood pressure (BP) screening of adults aged ≥18 years in the community and ambulatory care facilities in 17/47 sub-national administrative units in Kenya. All participants with a complete record for systolic and diastolic BP were included. Descriptive analyses were performed for sociodemographic characteristics. Pearson's chi-square test was used to assess differences in categorical variables. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors independently associated with prehypertension. RESULTS:Of 5,985,185 participant records that were included in the analysis, 34% were men (mean age: 45 [SD 2.9] years). The majority (63%) lived in rural Kenya. The prevalence of prehypertension was 54.5% and that of hypertension was 20.8%. Characteristics that were independently associated with prehypertension (adjusted odds ratio [95% CI]) included male sex (1.23 [±0.0023], p 25 years) and rural residence (1.60 [±0.023], p
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- 2020
44. Optimizing the efficiency and implementation of cash transfers to improve adherence to antiretroviral therapy: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial
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Packel, Laura, Njau, Prosper, Fahey, Carolyn, Ramadhani, Angela, Dow, William H, Jewell, Nicholas P, and McCoy, Sandra
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anti-HIV Agents ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Motivation ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Tanzania ,Treatment Outcome ,HIV ,Implementation-effectiveness hybrid design ,Cash transfer ,ART adherence ,Cluster randomized trial ,Implementation–effectiveness hybrid design ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Health services and systems - Abstract
BackgroundAntiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV, taken daily, is an effective strategy to clinically suppress the virus, providing the dual benefit of improved survival and vastly decreasing the risk of transmission. However, this highly effective intervention has not yet reached all who could benefit. Cash transfers are increasingly recognized as an effective strategy to motivate behavior change and improve HIV care and treatment outcomes, including engagement in HIV care and adherence to ART. Despite a growing evidence base and strong theoretical foundation for the cash transfer approach, key questions remain. To address these questions and begin to bridge the "know-do gap" with respect to cash transfers, our team is employing an implementation science approach to iterative development of an incentive-based intervention to promote ART uptake and adherence among people living with HIV (PLHIV) in the Lake Zone region, Tanzania.MethodsWe will conduct a type I hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial to test the effectiveness of a cash transfer intervention on the outcome of HIV viral suppression, and concurrently examine the potential for real-world implementation with a mobile health technology (mHealth) system. Specifically, our team will expand the intervention to 32 clinics and enroll 1984 PLHIV to (a) evaluate its effectiveness by conducting a cluster randomized controlled trial with clinics as the unit of randomization and 12-month viral suppression as the primary outcome and (b) evaluate the implementation challenges and successes at multiple levels (patient, provider, clinic).DiscussionThis trial will provide evidence not only about the real-world effectiveness of cash transfers for retention in HIV care and viral suppression, but also on the implementation challenges and successes that will facilitate or hinder wider scale-up within Tanzania and beyond.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT04201353 . Registered on December 17, 2019.
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- 2020
45. Financial incentives to promote retention in care and viral suppression in adults with HIV initiating antiretroviral therapy in Tanzania: a three-arm randomised controlled trial.
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Fahey, Carolyn, Njau, Prosper, Katabaro, Emmanuel, Mfaume, Rashid, Ulenga, Nzovu, Mwenda, Natalino, Bradshaw, Patrick, Dow, William, Padian, Nancy, Jewell, Nicholas, and McCoy, Sandra
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Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Retention in Care ,Sustained Virologic Response ,Tanzania ,Token Economy ,Viral Load - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Financial incentives promote use of HIV services and might support adherence to the sustained antiretroviral therapy (ART) necessary for viral suppression, but few studies have assessed a biomarker of adherence or evaluated optimal implementation. We sought to determine whether varying sized financial incentives for clinic attendance effected viral suppression in patients starting ART in Tanzania. METHODS: In a three-arm, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial at four health facilities in Shinyanga region, Tanzania, adults aged 18 years or older with HIV who had started ART within the past 30 days were randomly assigned (1:1:1) using a tablet-based application (stratified by site) to receive usual care (control group) or to receive a cash incentive for monthly clinic attendance in one of two amounts: 10 000 Tanzanian Shillings (TZS; about US$4·50) or 22 500 TZS (about $10·00). There were no formal exclusion criteria. Participants were masked to the existence of two incentive sizes. Incentives were provided for up to 6 months via mobile health technology (mHealth) that linked biometric attendance monitoring to automated mobile payments. We evaluated the primary outcome of retention in care with viral suppression (
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- 2020
46. Raltegravir versus efavirenz in antiretroviral-naive pregnant women living with HIV (NICHD P1081): an open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 4 trial
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João, Esaú C, Morrison, R Leavitt, Shapiro, David E, Chakhtoura, Nahida, Gouvèa, Maria Isabel S, de Lourdes B Teixeira, Maria, Fuller, Trevon L, Mmbaga, Blandina T, Ngocho, James S, Njau, Boniface N, Violari, Avy, Mathiba, Ruth, Essack, Zaynab, Pilotto, Jose Henrique S, Moreira, Luis Felipe, Rolon, Maria Jose, Cahn, Pedro, Prommas, Sinart, Cressey, Timothy R, Chokephaibulkit, Kulkanya, Werarak, Peerawong, Laimon, Lauren, Hennessy, Roslyn, Frenkel, Lisa M, Anthony, Patricia, Best, Brookie M, Siberry, George K, and Mirochnick, Mark
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Reproductive Medicine ,Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Women's Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,Pregnancy ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Infection ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Alkynes ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Benzoxazines ,Cyclopropanes ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Female ,HIV Infections ,HIV Integrase Inhibitors ,Humans ,Infant ,Newborn ,Infectious Disease Transmission ,Vertical ,Lamivudine ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Pregnancy Complications ,Infectious ,Raltegravir Potassium ,Viral Load ,Young Adult ,Zidovudine ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough antiretroviral regimens containing integrase inhibitors rapidly suppress HIV viral load in non-pregnant adults, few published data from randomised controlled trials have compared the safety and efficacy of any integrase inhibitor to efavirenz when initiated during pregnancy. We compared safety and efficacy of antiretroviral therapy with either raltegravir or efavirenz in late pregnancy.MethodsAn open-label, randomised controlled trial was done at 19 hospitals and clinics in Argentina, Brazil, South Africa, Tanzania, Thailand, and the USA. Antiretroviral-naive pregnant women (20-
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- 2020
47. Investigating Euthymia in Bipolar Disorder and Neurochemical Mechanisms of Ketamine Infusions in Treatment-Resistant Depression
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Njau, Stephanie Njeri
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Neurosciences ,Bipolar Disorder ,Emotion Regulation ,Hierarchal Clustering ,Ketamine ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Treatment-Resistant Depression - Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) are debilitating neuropsychiatric disorders affecting millions of people worldwide. Despite the success of medications and psychotherapy in alleviating symptoms, challenges remain in achieving and maintaining remission. In BD, a key therapeutic goal is to reach a state of euthymia, characterized by reduced intensity and frequency of symptoms or no symptoms at all. However, even in euthymia, subtle emotion regulation difficulties often persist, suggesting the illness remains active. Emotion dysregulation in BD is associated with abnormalities in brain regions involved in emotion processing and regulation, including the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus, insula and striatum (M. L. Phillips & Swartz, 2014; Strakowski et al., 2005). In Chapter 2, I explore functional abnormalities within the emotion regulation network in euthymic BD and their relationship to subclinical symptoms and clinical characteristics of the disorder. Specifically, this study investigates cognitive-emotion regulation processes in the context of negative stimuli. In Chapter 3 and 4, I address the effects of subanesthetic ketamine on neurochemical disturbances in MDD. In this disorder, a subset of patients, approximately 30%, do not achieve remission despite multiple pharmacotherapy trials, a condition known as treatment-resistant depression (TRD). Subanesthetic ketamine has shown promising rapid antidepressant effects in TRD, yet the underlying neurochemical mechanisms remain unclear. I investigated these mechanisms by utilizing proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1HMRS) to measure in vivo neurochemistry of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), a region implicated in MDD pathophysiology. Chapter 3 describes a study where sixty volunteers with TRD received a single intravenous infusion of subanesthetic ketamine. 1HMRS was used to measure levels of glutamate and GABA, along with additional biochemical compounds associated with MDD pathophysiology or treatment, including N-acetylaspartate, N-acetylaspartylglutamate, Creatine, Phosphocreatine and Choline-containing compounds. In Chapter 4, I extend the experiment to explore the effects of repeated ketamine infusions in fifty volunteers with TRD. A summary of literature pertinent to each study presented in this thesis is provided in Chapter 1. Collectively, the findings from this dissertation could lead to improved therapeutic strategies and enhanced patient outcomes in both BD and MDD.
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- 2024
48. Art Therapy Autobiographical Intervention for Addiction Treatment in Tanzania
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Luzzatto, Paola, Ruzibuka, Letisia, Njau, Mary, Makoye, Anitha, and Mbwambo, Jessie
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An autobiographical, narrative art therapy approach to treat drug addiction was co-developed at the Methadone Clinic of Muhimbili National Hospital, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. The 10-session art therapy intervention included a group of 7 men. The protocol, as illustrated with a case example, suggests that it could help resolve deep-seated pain, decrease shame, and increase self-esteem.
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- 2022
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49. Tracing the dominant sources of sediment flowing towards Lake Victoria using geochemical tracers and a Bayesian mixing model
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James, Renatus, Amasi, Aloyce I., Wynants, Maarten, Nobert, Joel, Mtei, Kelvin M., and Njau, Karoli
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- 2023
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50. Global tourism, climate change and energy sustainability: assessing carbon reduction mitigating measures from the aviation industry
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Leal Filho, Walter, Ng, Artie W., Sharifi, Ayyoob, Janová, Jitka, Özuyar, Pınar Gökçin, Hemani, Chinmai, Heyes, Graeme, Njau, Dennis, and Rampasso, Izabela
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- 2023
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