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Dive into the research topics where Amina Abubakar is active.

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Featured researches published by Amina Abubakar.


The Lancet Psychiatry | 2017

Burden, risk factors, and comorbidities of behavioural and emotional problems in Kenyan children: a population-based study

Symon M. Kariuki; Amina Abubakar; Martha Kombe; Michael Kazungu; Rachael Odhiambo; Alan Stein; Charles R. Newton

Summary Background Three-quarters of the burden of mental health problems occurs in low-and-middle-income countries, but few epidemiological studies of these problems in preschool children from sub-Saharan Africa have been published. Behavioural and emotional problems often start in early childhood, and this might be particularly important in Africa, where the incidence of perinatal and early risk factors is high. We therefore aimed to estimate the prevalence and risk factors of behavioural and emotional problems in young children in a rural area on the Kenyan coast. Methods We did a population-based epidemiological study to assess the burden of behavioural and emotional problems in preschool children and comorbidities in the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS, a database formed of the population under routine surveillance linked to admissions to Kilifi County Hospital). We used the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL) to assess behavioural and emotional problems. We then determined risk factors and medical comorbidities associated with behavioural and emotional problems. The strength of associations between the risk factors and the behavioural and emotional problems was estimated using generalised linear models, with appropriate distribution and link functions. Findings 3539 families were randomly selected from the KHDSS. Of these, 3273 children were assessed with CBCL. The prevalence of total behavioural and emotional problems was 13% (95% CI 12–14), for externalising problems was 10% (9–11), and for internalising problems was 22% (21–24). The most common CBCL syndrome was somatic problems (21%, 20–23), whereas the most common DSM-IV-oriented scale was anxiety problems (13%, 12–14). Factors associated with total problems included consumption of cassava (risk ratio 5·68, 95% CI 3·22–10·03), perinatal complications (4·34, 3·21–5·81), seizure disorders (2·90, 2·24–3·77), and house status (0·11, 0·08–0·14). Seizure disorders, burn marks, and respiratory problems were important comorbidities of behavioural and emotional problems. Interpretation Behavioural and emotional problems are common in preschool children in this Kenyan rural area and are associated with preventable risk factors. Behavioural and emotional problems and associated comorbidities should be identified and addressed in young children. Funding Wellcome Trust.


Epilepsia Open | 2017

Prevalence, causes, and behavioral and emotional comorbidities of acute symptomatic seizures in Africa: A critical review

Symon M. Kariuki; Amina Abubakar; Alan Stein; Kevin Marsh; Charles R. Newton

Seizures with fever includes both febrile seizures (due to nonneurological febrile infections) and acute symptomatic seizures (due to neurological febrile infections). The cumulative incidence (lifetime prevalence) of febrile seizures in children aged ≤6 years is 2–5% in American and European studies, but there are no community‐based data on acute symptomatic seizures in Africa. The incidence of acute symptomatic seizures in sub‐Saharan Africa is more than twice that in high‐income countries. However, most studies of acute symptomatic seizures from Africa are based on hospital samples or do not conduct surveys in demographic surveillance systems, which underestimates the burden. It is difficult to differentiate between febrile seizures and acute symptomatic seizures in Africa, especially in malaria‐endemic areas where malaria parasites can sequester in the brain microvasculature; but this challenge can be addressed by robust identification of underlying causes. The proportion of complex acute symptomatic seizures (i.e., seizures that are focal, repetitive, or prolonged) in Africa are twice that reported in other parts of the world (>60% vs. ∼30%), which is often attributed to falciparum malaria. These complex phenotypes of acute symptomatic seizures can be associated with behavioral and emotional problems in high‐income countries, and outcomes may be even worse in Africa. One Kenyan study reported behavioral and emotional problems in approximately 10% of children admitted with acute symptomatic seizures, but it is not clear whether the behavioral and emotional problems were due to the seizures, shared genetic susceptibility, etiology, or underlying neurological damage. The underlying neurological damage in acute symptomatic seizures can lead not only to behavioral and emotional problems but also to neurocognitive impairment and epilepsy. Electroencephalography may have a prognostic role in African children with acute symptomatic seizures. There are significant knowledge gaps regarding acute symptomatic seizures in Africa, which results in lack of reliable estimates for planning interventions. Future epidemiological studies of acute symptomatic seizures should be set up in Africa.


Journal of Health Psychology | 2018

Young people’s and stakeholders’ perspectives of adolescent sexual risk behavior in Kilifi County, Kenya: A qualitative study

Derrick Ssewanyana; Patrick N. Mwangala; Vicki Marsh; Irene Jao; A.L. van Baar; Charles R. Newton; Amina Abubakar

A lack of research exists around the most common forms of sexual risk behaviors among adolescents, including their underlying factors, in Sub-Saharan Africa. Using an Ecological Model of Adolescent Behavior, we explore the perceptions of 85 young people and 10 stakeholders on sexual risk behavior of adolescents in Kilifi County on the coast of Kenya. Our findings show that transactional sex, early sexual debut, coerced sex, and multiple sexual partnerships are prevalent. An urgent need exists to develop measures to counter sexual risk behaviors. The results contribute to understanding the range of risks and protective factors in differing contexts, tackling underlying issues at individual, family, local institutional, wider socio-economic, and political levels.


Wellcome Open Research | 2017

Psychometric evaluation of the Major Depression Inventory among young people living in Coastal Kenya.

Mark Otiende; Amina Abubakar; George Mochamah; David Walumbe; Christopher Nyundo; Aoife M. Doyle; David A. Ross; Charles R. Newton; Evasius Bauni

Background: The lack of reliable, valid and adequately standardized measures of mental illnesses in sub-Saharan Africa is a key challenge for epidemiological studies on mental health. We evaluated the psychometric properties and feasibility of using a computerized version of the Major Depression Inventory (MDI) in an epidemiological study in rural Kenya. Methods: We surveyed 1496 participants aged 13-24 years in Kilifi County, on the Kenyan coast. The MDI was administered using a computer-assisted system, available in three languages. Internal consistency was evaluated using both Cronbach’s alpha and the Omega Coefficient. Confirmatory factor analysis was performed to evaluate the factorial structure of the MDI. Results: Internal consistency using both Cronbach’s Alpha (α= 0.83) and the Omega Coefficient (0.82; 95% confidence interval 0.81- 0.83) was above acceptable thresholds. Confirmatory factor analysis indicated a good fit of the data to a unidimensional model of MDI (χ 2 (33, N = 1409) = 178.52 p < 0.001, TLI = 0.947, CFI = 0.961, and Root Mean Square Error of Approximation, RMSEA = .056), and this was confirmed using Item Response Models (Loevinger’s H coefficient 0.38) that proved the MDI was a unidimensional scale. Equivalence evaluation indicated invariance across sex and age groups. In our population, 3.6% of the youth presented with scores suggesting major depression using the ICD-10 scoring algorithm, and 8.7% presented with total scores indicating presence of depression (mild, moderate or severe). Females and older youth were at the highest risk of depression. Conclusions: The MDI has good psychometric properties. Given its brevity, relative ease of usage and ability to identify at-risk youth, it may be useful for epidemiological studies of depression in Africa. Studies to establish clinical thresholds for depression are recommended. The high prevalence of depressive symptoms suggests that depression may be an important public health problem in this population group.


The Lancet Psychiatry | 2016

Autism spectrum disorders in sub-Saharan Africa

Amina Abubakar; Derrick Ssewanyana; Petrus J. de Vries; Charles R. Newton

Autism spectrum disorder is one of the most prevalent neurodevelopmental disorders in high-income countries, but little is known about the disorder in low-income and middle-income regions, such as Africa. A review of the global prevalence of autism did not identify any data from sub-Saharan Africa, even though this region has a population of nearly 1 billion, 40% of whom are children younger than 14 years. Although public-health emphasis in sub-Saharan Africa has been on communicable conditions such as HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis, with the reduction in childhood mortality rates in the past 20 years, non-communicable diseases (particularly, neurodevelopmental disorders) are likely to become a greater health burden in these countries. Studies on autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders in Africa are urgently needed. of HIV since 2005, but intravenous drug users are still a major population at risk of HIV transmission in China. Pilot programmes in methadone maintenance treatment showed effi cacy in decreasing heroin use, intravenous injection, and drug-related crime, which led to the expansion of such programmes in 2005 that is continuing to date. HIV prevalence was shown to remain steady at 3·9% in one study with methadone maintenance treatment. Needle-exchange programmes were implemented, condom use was promoted, the classifi cation of HIV/AIDS was changed in law to a type B infectious disease (thus disease reporting and mandatory quarantine were relaxed), and the same law stated that those infected should not be discriminated against. Eligibility criteria for methadone maintenance treatment diff er depending on location, but generally, the patient must be a local resident, 18–20 years old, and a law-abiding citizen. However, the criteria for entering programmes and the registration of patients might be barriers to accessing care. Previous requirements of people having failed detoxifi cation multiple times or having attended a RETLC are less commonly used, and people living with HIV/AIDS now have easier access to care than in the past few decades. Initial challenges included low doses of methadone, restricted access to clinics, and a scarcity of additional services, all of which could contribute to reduced adherence in China compared with other countries. Despite these challenges, assessment of methadone maintenance treatment suggests reductions in heroin use, risky injection practices, and criminal behaviours, as well as the prevention of 3919 new HIV cases in 2009. Overall, this impressive scale-up of methadone maintenance treatment and other services refl ects substantial changes in governmental strategy and important cooperation and understanding on the part of Ministries of Health, Public Security, Justice, and the State Food and Drug Administration. Methadone maintenance treatment was introduced to reduce the spread of HIV by intravenous drug users, although reduction of illegal drug use and other harms is now also a focus. Through monitoring, health-outcome studies, and measurement of the eff ectiveness of interventions, much potential exists for methadone treatment in China to off er a humane solution to the problem of heroin addiction and to prevent the spread of infectious diseases, such as HIV. The approach in China is showing that new treatment models can be successfully implemented and have a major impact.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2018

Evaluation of Psychometric Properties and Factorial Structure of ADHD Module of K-SADS-PL in Children From Rural Kenya:

Symon M. Kariuki; Newton Crjc.; Amina Abubakar; Mary A. Bitta; Rachael Odhiambo; J Phillips Owen

Objective: We determined the reliability of The Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-Age Children–Present and Lifetime (K-SADS-PL) for screening and diagnosing ADHD in children. Method: K-SADS-PL was administered to 2,074 children in the community. Psychometric properties, factorial structure, and clinical validity of K-SADS-PL in screening or diagnosis of ADHD were examined. Results: Internal consistency was excellent for items in the screening interview (Macdonald’s Omega [ω] = 0.89; 95% confidence interval [CI] [0.87, 0.94]) and diagnostic supplement (ω = 0.95; 95% CI [0.92, 0.99]). The standardized coefficients for items in the screening interview were acceptable (0.59-0.85), while fit indices for single factorial structure reached acceptable levels. Screening items were associated with high sensitivity (97.8%; 95% CI [97.2, 98.5%]) and specificity (94.0%; 95% CI [93.0, 95.0%]) for diagnosis of ADHD in the supplement. The test-retest and interinformant reliability as measured by intraclass correlation coefficient was good for most of the items. Conclusion: This large study shows that K-SADS-PL can be reliably used to screen and diagnose ADHD in children in Kenya.


BioMed Research International | 2018

Health Risk Behaviour among Adolescents Living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Derrick Ssewanyana; Patrick N. Mwangala; Anneloes L. van Baar; Charles R. Newton; Amina Abubakar

The burden of health risk behaviour (HRB) among adolescents living with HIV (ALWHIV) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is currently unknown. A systematic search for publications on HRB among ALWHIV in SSA was conducted in PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts databases. Results were summarized following PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Heterogeneity was assessed by the DerSimonian and Laird method and the pooled estimates were computed. Prevalence of current condom nonuse behaviour was at 59.8% (95% CI: 47.9–71.3%), risky sexual partnerships at 32.9% (95% CI: 15.4–53.2%), transactional sex at 20.1% (95% CI: 9.2–33.8%), and the experience of sexual violence at 21.4% (95% CI: 16.3–27.0%) among ALWHIV. From this meta-analysis, we did not find statistically significant differences in pooled estimates of HRB prevalence between ALWHIV and HIV uninfected adolescents. However, there was mixed evidence on the occurrence of alcohol and drug use behaviour. Overall, we found that research on HRB among ALWHIV tends to focus on behaviour specific to sexual risk. With such a high burden of HRB for the individuals as well as society, these findings highlight an unmet need for age-appropriate interventions to address the behavioural needs of these adolescents.


Archive | 2018

Community Dialogues as a Strategy for Identifying and Addressing Child Protection Needs in Shinyanga, Tanzania

Amina Abubakar; Sadaf Shallwani; Stanley Wechuli Wanjala; Patrick N. Mwangala; Moses K. Nyongesa

Developmental science is both concerned with and has accumulated a wealth of evidence around factors that support and harm child development – many of which overlap substantially with the recently agreed upon global Sustainable Development Goals, placing developmental scientists in an apt position to contribute to the realization of these goals and targets.


Journal of Health Psychology | 2018

Socio-ecological determinants of alcohol, tobacco, and drug use behavior of adolescents in Kilifi County at the Kenyan coast.

Derrick Ssewanyana; Patrick N. Mwangala; Vicki Marsh; Irene Jao; Anneloes L. van Baar; Charles R. Newton; Amina Abubakar

Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use form a risk factor for health and social problems during adolescence. From a socio-ecological model, perceptions of 85 young people and 10 stakeholders on the types of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs used and the predisposing and protective factors were explored; among adolescents at the Kenyan Coast in the Kilifi County. We found that the consumption of home-brewed alcohol, tobacco and marijuana smoking, and khat chewing was common and requires multi-component and community-centered intervention. Countering alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use needs enforcement of strong measures to regulate access to alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs for minors; addressing social and cultural norms; strategies for poverty alleviation; and community empowerment.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2018

Cognition, mood and quality-of-life outcomes among low literacy adults living with epilepsy in rural Kenya: A preliminary study

Patrick N. Mwangala; Symon M. Kariuki; Moses Kachama Nyongesa; Paul Mwangi; Esther Chongwo; Charles R. Newton; Amina Abubakar

Epilepsy is frequently associated with neurocognitive impairments, mental health, and psychosocial problems but these are rarely documented in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this study was to examine the neurocognitive outcomes, depressive symptoms, and psychosocial adjustments of people with epilepsy (PWE) in Kilifi, Kenya. We evaluated the impact of these outcomes on health-related quality of life. Self-report, interviewer-administered measures of depression (Major Depression Inventory) and quality of life (RAND SF-36) were administered to 63 PWE and 83 community controls. Neurocognitive functioning was assessed using Ravens Standard Progressive Matrices, Digit Span, and Contingency Naming Test. The results show that PWE have poorer scores for executive function, working memory, intelligence quotient (IQ), depression, and quality of life than controls. Twenty-seven (27%) of PWE had depressive symptoms, which was significantly greater than in controls (6%); P < 0.001. Quality-of-life scores were significantly lower in PWE with depressive symptoms than in those without depressive symptoms (Mean QoL scores (standard deviation (SD)): 46.43 (13.27) versus 64.18 (17.69); P = 0.01. On adjusted linear regression models, depression affected total quality-of-life scores (P = 0.07) as well as individual health indicator domains touching on pain (P = 0.04), lethargy/fatigue (P = 0.01), and emotional well-being (P = 0.02). Our results show that epilepsy is associated with a significant burden of mental health and neurocognitive impairments in the community; however, community-based studies are needed to provide precise estimates of these disorders.

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Derrick Ssewanyana

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Patrick N. Mwangala

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Michael Kazungu

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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