IntroductionOver 52 million children under 5 years of age become wasted each year, but only 17% of these children receive treatment. Novel methods to identify and deliver treatment to malnourished ...children are necessary to achieve the sustainable development goals target for child health. Mobile health (mHealth) programmes may provide an opportunity to rapidly identify malnourished children in the community and link them to care.Methods and analysisThis randomised controlled trial will recruit 1200 children aged 6–12 months at routine vaccine appointments in Migori and Homa Bay Counties, Kenya. Caregiver–infant dyads will be randomised to either a maternally administered malnutrition monitoring system (MAMMS) or standard of care (SOC). Study staff will train all caregivers to measure their child’s mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC). Caregivers in the MAMMS arm will be given two colour coded and graduated insertion MUAC tapes and be enrolled in a mHealth system that sends weekly short message service (SMS) messages prompting caregivers to measure and report their child’s MUAC by SMS. Caregivers in the SOC arm will receive routine monitoring by community health volunteers coupled with a quarterly visit from study staff to ensure adequate screening coverage. The primary outcome is identification of childhood malnutrition, defined as MUAC <12.5 cm, in the MAMMS arm compared with the SOC arm. Secondary outcomes will assess the accuracy of maternal versus health worker MUAC measurements and determinants of acute malnutrition among children 6–18 months of age. Finally, we will explore the acceptability, fidelity and feasibility of implementing the MAMMS within existing nutrition programmes.Ethics and disseminationThe study was approved by review boards at the University of Washington and the Kenya Medical Research Institute. A data and safety monitoring board has been convened, and the results of the trial will be published in peer-reviewed scientific journals, presented at appropriate conferences and to key stakeholders.Trial registration numberNCT03967015; Pre-results.
Soil Transmitted Helminths (STH) infect over 1.5 billion people globally and are associated with anemia and stunting, resulting in an annual toll of 1.9 million Disability-Adjusted Life Years ...(DALYs). School-based deworming (SBD), via mass drug administration (MDA) campaigns with albendazole or mebendazole, has been recommended by the World Health Organization to reduce levels of morbidity due to STH in endemic areas. DeWorm3 is a cluster-randomized trial, conducted in three study sites in Benin, India, and Malawi, designed to assess the feasibility of interrupting STH transmission with community-wide MDA as a potential strategy to replace SBD. This analysis examines data from the DeWorm3 trial to quantify discrepancies between school-level reporting of SBD and gold standard individual-level survey reporting of SBD.
Population-weighted averages of school-level SBD calculated at the cluster level were compared to aggregated individual-level SBD estimates to produce a Mean Squared Error (MSE) estimate for each study site. In order to estimate individual-level SBD coverage, these MSE values were applied to SBD estimates from the control arm of the DeWorm3 trial, where only school-level reporting of SBD coverage had been collected. In each study site, SBD coverage in the school-level datasets was substantially higher than that obtained from individual-level datasets, indicating possible overestimation of school-level SBD coverage. When applying observed MSE to project expected coverages in the control arm, SBD coverage dropped from 89.1% to 70.5% (p-value < 0.001) in Benin, from 97.7% to 84.5% (p-value < 0.001) in India, and from 41.5% to 37.5% (p-value < 0.001) in Malawi.
These estimates indicate that school-level SBD reporting is likely to significantly overestimate program coverage. These findings suggest that current SBD coverage estimates derived from school-based program data may substantially overestimate true pediatric deworming coverage within targeted communities.
NCT03014167.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
The health benefits of physical activity are well established in older adults with arthritis. Despite these benefits, many older adults with arthritis are not active enough to maintain health; ...therefore, increasing physical activity in adults with arthritis is a public health priority. The purpose of this study was to use the Community Readiness Model to assess readiness for adopting a physical activity program for people with arthritis in 8 counties in West Virginia.
During 2007 and 2008, we conducted a telephone survey among 94 key informants who could provide insight into their community's efforts to promote physical activity among older adults with arthritis. We matched survey scores with 1 of 9 stages of readiness, ranging from 1 (no awareness) to 9 (high level of community ownership).
The survey placed the counties in stage 3 (vague awareness), indicating recognition of the need for more physical activity programming; community efforts were not focused and leadership was minimal. The interviews suggested that culturally sensitive, well-promoted free or low-cost programs conducted by community volunteers may be keys to success in West Virginia.
Information derived from our survey can be used to match intervention strategies for promoting physical activity among people with arthritis to communities in West Virginia according to their level of readiness.
•Rejection sensitivity (RS) is associated with BPD symptoms in a community sample.•Emotional maltreatment (ENA) is also linked to BPD symptoms.•ENA moderates the relationship between RS and BPD ...symptoms.
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is theorized to develop from a combination of dispositional and environmental risk factors. Among these risk factors, both childhood emotional neglect and abuse (ENA) and rejection sensitivity (RS) have been independently associated with BPD symptomatology. However, to our knowledge, no studies have examined the interaction between these variables as they relate to BPD symptoms. In the current study, greater ENA and RS were independently associated with more BPD symptoms in a sample of undergraduate students (n=133). In addition, there was an interaction such that RS was more strongly correlated with BPD symptoms at moderate and low levels of ENA. Our findings suggest dispositional and environmental factors combine to instantiate BPD symptoms and thus suggest RS and ENA merit investigation in clinical samples.
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a prevalent psychiatric disorder associated with significant distress, dysfunction, and treatment utilization. Though, theoretically, BPD is posited to arise ...from a combination of trait and environmental risk factors, few studies have tested trait-by-environment interactions in BPD. We investigated the roles of rejection sensitivity (RS) and childhood emotional neglect and abuse (ENA) as well as their interaction in BPD.
Eighty-five adults with a lifetime mood disorder who were recruited for outpatient studies in a psychiatric clinic were assessed for ENA using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire and for RS with the Adult Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaire. BPD diagnoses were made by consensus using data collected on the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Hierarchical logistic regression was used to test associations between RS, ENA, their interaction and BPD.
RS and ENA interacted to predict co-occurring BPD in our sample of mood-disordered patients, with the strength of the relationship between RS and BPD depending on the severity of ENA. In the context of little or no ENA, RS and BPD were more strongly related than when ENA was more severe.
Our results extend previous findings suggesting RS and ENA are risk factors for BPD. They also provide preliminary support for contemporary theories of BPD positing trait-by-environment interactions in the development of BPD. Prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings.
mHealth shows high potential for nutrition interventions in low and middle-income countries. Mama Aweza, a mHealth intervention in Migori, Kenya, teaches caregivers of children aged 6-12 months to ...measure their child’s mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) and asks them to respond to a weekly short message system (SMS) message with the measurements. This mixed-methods study aims to determine the perceived facilitators and barriers to engaging in Mama Aweza using data from five formative focus groups discussions (FGDs) with caregivers and assess sociodemographic factors associated with engagement (response) to weekly system messages using enrollment and midpoint response data from Mama Aweza. On average, 71% of caregivers responded to weekly SMS messages. Shared phones and mobile illiteracy were barriers to engagement Relative Risk (RR): 0.76 and RR: 0.44, respectively. Other concerns including message timing and language were taken into account in Mama Aweza. Facilitators to engagement included higher education, ease of use of the MUAC tape, and higher frequency of SMS use prior to study. FGDs highlighted the importance of stigma, husband and community influence on nutritional health seeking behavior and engagement in the intervention. Future mHealth interventions should consider adapting the system to increase accessibility for those with shared phones and difficulty with using SMS. Including the community and spouses in the design and dissemination of mHealth interventions will also help promote engagement.
Globally, only 17% of children with wasting receive treatment. In Kenya, 4% of the 7 million children under-5 years of age are wasted and 26% are stunted. The Mama Aweza trial will test whether a ...two-way short message service (SMS) mobile health system, the Maternal Administered Malnutrition Monitoring System (MAMMS), can increase the coverage of malnutrition management programs in low-and-middle income countries.
Five formative focus group discussions (FGDs) were conducted with caregivers at an immunization clinic in Migori County, Kenya to inform feasibility and content of SMS messages in the MAMMS system. Caregivers were asked to explain anticipated facilitators and barriers to participation in a SMS program to facilitate home-based mid upper-arm circumference (MUAC) monitoring. FGDs also reviewed educational messages that accompany weekly SMS reminders to measure and report their child’s MUAC. The feedback from these FGDs was included in the clinical trial, which begun in August 2019.
The most anticipated challenge to responding to weekly messages was the use of a shared phone particularly that the SMS would be deleted or the caregiver would not be informed of the message. The greatest anticipated challenge for sending messages was and not knowing how to send a SMS. Overall, 52 messages were written on the following topics: developmental milestones, encouragement, fever, diarrhea, malaria, ear infections, sanitation and hygiene, vaccinations, respiratory illness, and kitchen gardening. To date, 144 mother-infant dyads have been enrolled and 77 randomly assigned to the MAMMS arm. Sixty-nine (90%) caregivers have responded to ≥1 message and 503 (68%) of 742 automated messages have received a response. At enrollment, 21 (27%) of caregivers in the MAMMS arm reported a shared phone, with no current evidence that caregivers sharing a phone respond less than those with their own phone.
Caregivers found SMS-based malnutrition screening to be acceptable and engaging. In regions with high literacy and high mobile phone ownership, such as Kenya, SMS supported home MUAC monitoring may improve malnutrition screening coverage and lead to earlier identification and treatment.
Thrasher Research Foundation 14,656.
Abstract There is recent evidence that acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients with first time incident major depressive disorder (MDD) and those with recurrent MDD represent different subtypes among ...individuals with ACS and comorbid depression. However, few studies have examined whether or not these subtypes differ in coronary artery disease (CAD) severity. We assessed whether those with incident MDD (in-hospital MDD and negative for history of MDD) or recurrent MDD (in-hospital MDD and a positive history of MDD) differ in angiographically documented CAD severity. Within 1 week of admission for ACS, 88 patients completed a clinical interview to assess current and past diagnosis of MDD. CAD severity was assessed in all patients by coronary angiography. A hierarchical regression analysis showed that neither in-hospital MDD status, nor history of MDD were significant predictors of CAD severity, but the interaction term between in-hospital MDD status and history of MDD was a significant predictor of CAD severity, after controlling for age, sex and ethnicity. Follow-up analyses showed that patients with first time, incident MDD had significantly more severe CAD compared to patients with recurrent MDD ( p = 0.043). To conclude, our study adds to the growing evidence that patients with incident MDD should be considered as a clinically distinct subtype from those with recurrent MDD. Possible mechanisms for differing CAD severity by angiogram between these two subtypes are proposed and implications for prognosis and treatment are discussed.
Kingsnakes observed in the process of locating nests containing young birds were apparently aided in their search by the relative intensity of the attacking response by the parents. The vivid marks ...and coloration of these snakes appear to serve as reinforcement signals to maintain the intensity of the attacks, as well as to provide directional signals to the snake. It is believed that this phenomenon is described for the first time and may be an additional explanation for the presence of vivid marks and colors in some snakes.