Anjuli D. Wagner
University of Washington
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PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012
Karen C. Kosinski; Michael N. Adjei; Kwabena M. Bosompem; Jonathan J. Crocker; John L. Durant; Dickson Osabutey; Jeanine D. Plummer; Anjuli D. Wagner; Mark Woodin; David M. Gute
Background Urogenital schistosomiasis caused by Schistosoma haematobium was endemic in Adasawase, Ghana in 2007. Transmission was reported to be primarily through recreational water contact. Methods We designed a water recreation area (WRA) to prevent transmission to school-aged children. The WRA features a concrete pool supplied by a borehole well and a gravity-driven rainwater collection system; it is 30 m2 and is split into shallow and deep sections to accommodate a variety of age groups. The WRA opened in 2009 and children were encouraged to use it for recreation as opposed to the local river. We screened children annually for S. haematobium eggs in their urine in 2008, 2009, and 2010 and established differences in infection rates before (2008–09) and after (2009–10) installation of the WRA. After each annual screening, children were treated with praziquantel and rescreened to confirm parasite clearance. Principal Findings Initial baseline testing in 2008 established that 105 of 247 (42.5%) children were egg-positive. In 2009, with drug treatment alone, the pre-WRA annual cumulative incidence of infection was 29 of 216 (13.4%). In 2010, this incidence rate fell significantly (p<0.001, chi-squared) to 9 of 245 (3.7%) children after installation of the WRA. Logistic regression analysis was used to determine correlates of infection among the variables age, sex, distance between home and river, minutes observed at the river, low height-for-age, low weight-for-age, low Body Mass Index (BMI)-for-age, and previous infection status. Conclusion/Significance The installation and use of a WRA is a feasible and highly effective means to reduce the incidence of schistosomiasis in school-aged children in a rural Ghanaian community. In conjunction with drug treatment and education, such an intervention can represent a significant step towards the control of schistosomiasis. The WRA should be tested in other water-rich endemic areas to determine whether infection prevalence can be substantially reduced.
Acta Tropica | 2011
Karen C. Kosinski; Kwabena M. Bosompem; Anjuli D. Wagner; Jeanine D. Plummer; John L. Durant; David M. Gute
Two screening methods, reagent dipsticks for hematuria and urine filtration for Schistosoma haematobium eggs, were evaluated for their sensitivity and specificity in diagnosing infection with S. haematobium in lightly infected Ghanaian children. Schoolchildren aged 8-18 years (n=255) provided urine samples on three occasions. Overall, 36.4% of girls and 50.7% of boys presented with eggs at least once; 3.3% of girls and 7.5% of boys presented with both eggs and hematuria three times. Many children presented with eggs but without hematuria, or with hematuria but without eggs. When each child was screened three times, the sensitivity of each test method improved by at least 22.9% as compared with single screening, but previously unidentified infections were detected at the third screening, indicating that even three screenings is insufficient. Nearly half of lightly infected children (<50 eggs/10 ml urine, by maximum egg count) were egg-positive during only one of three screenings. Thus, data presented here indicate that when individuals are screened repeatedly, infection status can be assessed more accurately, control programs can be properly evaluated, and population estimates of S. haematobium infection may be made with increased confidence, as compared with single screening.
AIDS | 2017
Anjuli D. Wagner; Cyrus Mugo; Shay Bluemer-miroite; Peter M. Mutiti; Dalton Wamalwa; David Bukusi; Jillian Neary; Irene N. Njuguna; Gabrielle O’Malley; Grace John-Stewart; Jennifer A. Slyker; Pamela K. Kohler
Objectives: To determine whether continuous quality improvement (CQI) improves quality of HIV testing services for adolescents and young adults (AYA). Design: CQI was introduced at two HIV testing settings: Youth Centre and Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) Center, at a national referral hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. Methods: Primary outcomes were AYA satisfaction with HIV testing services, intent to return, and accurate HIV prevention and transmission knowledge. Healthcare worker (HCW) satisfaction assessed staff morale. T tests and interrupted time series analysis using Prais–Winsten regression and generalized estimating equations accounting for temporal trends and autocorrelation were conducted. Results: There were 172 AYA (Youth Centre = 109, VCT = 63) during 6 baseline weeks and 702 (Youth Centre = 454, VCT = 248) during 24 intervention weeks. CQI was associated with an immediate increase in the proportion of AYA with accurate knowledge of HIV transmission at Youth Centre: 18 vs. 63% [adjusted risk difference (aRD) 0.42,95% confidence interval (CI) 0.21 to 0.63], and a trend at VCT: 38 vs. 72% (aRD 0.30, 95% CI −0.04 to 0.63). CQI was associated with an increase in the proportion of AYA with accurate HIV prevention knowledge in VCT: 46 vs. 61% (aRD 0.39, 95% CI 0.02–0.76), but not Youth Centre (P = 0.759). In VCT, CQI showed a trend towards increased intent to retest (4.0 vs. 4.3; aRD 0.78, 95% CI −0.11 to 1.67), but not at Youth Centre (P = 0.19). CQI was not associated with changes in AYA satisfaction, which was high during baseline and intervention at both clinics (P = 0.384, P = 0.755). HCW satisfaction remained high during intervention and baseline (P = 0.746). Conclusion: CQI improved AYA knowledge and did not negatively impact HCW satisfaction. Quality improvement interventions may be useful to improve adolescent-friendly service delivery.
AIDS | 2017
Kate S. Wilson; Kristin Beima-Sofie; Helen Moraa; Anjuli D. Wagner; Cyrus Mugo; Peter M. Mutiti; Dalton Wamalwa; David Bukusi; Grace John-Stewart; Jennifer A. Slyker; Pamela K. Kohler; Gabrielle O’Malley
Objectives: Adolescents in Africa have low HIV testing rates. Better understanding of adolescent, provider, and caregiver experiences in high-burden countries such as Kenya could improve adolescent HIV testing programs. Design: We conducted 16 qualitative interviews with HIV-positive and HIV-negative adolescents (13–18 years) and six focus group discussions with Healthcare workers (HCWs) and caregivers of adolescents in Nairobi, Kenya. Methods: Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were recorded and transcribed. Analysis employed a modified constant comparative approach to triangulate findings and identify themes influencing testing experiences and practices. Results: All groups identified that supportive interactions during testing were essential to the adolescents positive testing experience. HCWs were a primary source of support during testing. HCWs who acted respectful and informed helped adolescents accept results, link to care, or return for repeat testing, whereas HCWs who acted dismissive or judgmental discouraged adolescent testing. Caregivers universally supported adolescent testing, including testing with the adolescent to demonstrate support. Caregivers relied on HCWs to inform and encourage adolescents. Although peers played less significant roles during testing, all groups agreed that school-based outreach could increase peer demand and counteract stigma. All groups recognized tensions around adolescent autonomy in the absence of clear consent guidelines. Adolescents valued support people during testing but wanted autonomy over testing and disclosure decisions. HCWs felt pressured to defer consent to caregivers. Caregivers wanted to know results regardless of adolescents’ wishes. Conclusion: Findings indicate that strengthening HCW, caregiver, and peer capacities to support adolescents while respecting their autonomy may facilitate attaining ‘90-90-90’ targets for adolescents.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2016
Anjuli D. Wagner; Cyrus M M Wachira; Irene N. Njuguna; Elizabeth Maleche-Obimbo; Kenneth Sherr; Irene Inwani; James P. Hughes; Dalton Wamalwa; Grace John-Stewart; Jennifer A. Slyker
Objectives:Few routine systems exist to test older, asymptomatic children for HIV. Testing all children in the population has high uptake but is inefficient, whereas testing only symptomatic children increases efficiency but misses opportunities to optimize outcomes. Testing children of HIV-infected adults in care may efficiently identify previously undiagnosed HIV-infected children before symptomatic disease. Methods:HIV-infected parents in HIV care in Nairobi, Kenya were systematically asked about their childrens HIV status and testing history. Adults with untested children ⩽12 years old were actively referred and offered the choice of pediatric HIV testing at home or clinic. Testing uptake and HIV prevalence were determined, as were bottlenecks in pediatric HIV testing cascade. Results:Of 10,426 HIV-infected adults interviewed, 8,287 reported having children, of whom 3,477 (42%) had children of unknown HIV status, and 611 (7%) had children ⩽12 years of unknown HIV status. After implementation of active referral, the rate of pediatric HIV testing increased 3.8-fold from 3.5 to 13.6 children tested per month (Relative risk: 3.8, 95% confidence interval: 2.3 to 6.1). Of 611 eligible adults, 279 (48%) accepted referral and were screened, and 74 (14%) adults completed testing of 1 or more children. HIV prevalence among 108 tested children was 7.4% (95% confidence interval: 3.3 to 14.1%) and median age was 8 years (interquartile range: 2–11); 1 child was symptomatic at testing. Conclusions:Referring HIV-infected parents in care to have their children tested revealed many untested children and significantly increased the rate of pediatric testing; prevalence of HIV was high. However, despite increases in pediatric testing, most adults did not complete testing of their children.
Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2016
Irene N. Njuguna; Anjuli D. Wagner; Lisa M Cranmer; Vincent Otieno; Judith A. Onyango; Daisy Chebet; Helen Moraa Okinyi; Sarah Benki-Nugent; Elizabeth Maleche-Obimbo; Jennifer A. Slyker; Grace John-Stewart; Dalton Wamalwa
To identify missed opportunities in HIV prevention, diagnosis, and linkage to care, we enrolled 183 hospitalized, HIV-infected, ART-naïve Kenyan children 0-12 years from four hospitals in Nairobi and Kisumu, and reviewed prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT), hospitalization, and HIV testing history. Median age was 1.8 years (IQR = 0.8, 4.5). Most mothers received HIV testing during pregnancy (77%). Among mothers tested, 60% and 40% reported HIV-negative and positive results, respectively; 33% of HIV-diagnosed mothers did not receive PMTCT antiretrovirals. First missed opportunities for pediatric diagnosis and linkage were due to failure to test mothers (23.1%), maternal HIV acquisition following initial negative test (45.7%), no early infant diagnosis (EID) or provider-initiated testing (PITC) (12.7%), late breastfeeding transmission (8.7%), failure to collect child HIV test results (1.2%), and no linkage to care following HIV diagnosis (8.7%). Among previously hospitalized children, 38% never received an HIV test. Strengthening initial and repeat maternal HIV testing and PITC are key interventions to prevent, detect, and treat pediatric HIV infections.
BMJ Open | 2018
Anjuli D. Wagner; Irene N. Njuguna; Jillian Neary; Vincent O. Omondi; Verlinda A. Otieno; Joseph B. Babigumira; Elizabeth Maleche-Obimbo; Dalton Wamalwa; Grace John-Stewart; Jennifer A. Slyker
Introduction Index case testing (ICT) to identify HIV-infected children is efficient but has suboptimal uptake. Financial incentives (FI) have overcome financial barriers in other populations by offsetting direct and indirect costs. A pilot study found FI to be feasible for motivating paediatric ICT among HIV-infected female caregivers. This randomised trial will determine the effectiveness of FI to increase uptake of paediatric ICT. Methods and analysis The Financial Incentives to Increase Uptake of Pediatric HIV Testing trial is a five-arm, unblinded, randomised controlled trial that determines whether FI increases timely uptake of paediatric ICT. The trial will be conducted in multiple public health facilities in western Kenya. Each HIV-infected adult enrolled in HIV care will be screened for eligibility: primary caregiver to one or more children of unknown HIV status aged 0–12 years. Eligible caregivers will be individually randomised at the time of recruitment in equal 1:1:1:1:1 allocation to one of five arms (US
Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2018
Jillian Neary; Anjuli D. Wagner; Cyrus Mugo; Peter M. Mutiti; David Bukusi; Grace John-Stewart; Dalton Wamalwa; Pamela K. Kohler; Jennifer A. Slyker
0 (control), US
AIDS | 2017
Anjuli D. Wagner; Irene N. Njuguna; Ruth A. Andere; Lisa M. Cranmer; Helen Moraa Okinyi; Sarah Benki-Nugent; Bhavna Chohan; Elizabeth Maleche-Obimbo; Dalton Wamalwa; Grace John-Stewart
1.25, US
PLOS Medicine | 2014
Alison L. Drake; Anjuli D. Wagner; Barbra A. Richardson; Grace John-Stewart
2.50, US