Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brooke A. Levandowski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brooke A. Levandowski.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2008

Keep them in school: the importance of education as a protective factor against HIV infection among young South African women.

Audrey Pettifor; Brooke A. Levandowski; Catherine MacPhail; Nancy S. Padian; Myron S. Cohen; Helen Rees

OBJECTIVE To identify risk factors for HIV infection among young women aged 15-24 years reporting one lifetime partner in South Africa. Design In 2003, we conducted a nationally representative household survey of sexual behaviour and HIV testing among 11 904 young people aged 15-24 years in South Africa. This analysis focuses on the subset of sexually experienced young women with only one reported lifetime sex partner (n = 1708). METHODS Using the proximate determinants framework and the published literature we identified factors associated with HIV in young women. The associations between these factors and HIV infection were explored in multivariable logistic regression models. RESULTS Of the young women, 15% reporting one lifetime partner were HIV positive. In multivariable analyses, young women who had not completed high school were more likely to be infected with HIV compared with those that had completed high school (AOR 3.75; 95% CI 1.34-10.46). CONCLUSIONS Young South African women in this population were at high risk of HIV infection despite reporting only having one lifetime partner. Few individual level factors were associated with HIV infection, emphasizing the importance of developing HIV prevention interventions that address structural and partner level risk factors.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2008

Incarceration and Sexually Transmitted Infections: A Neighborhood Perspective

James C. Thomas; Brooke A. Levandowski; Malika Roman Isler; Elizabeth Torrone; George Wilson

The social dynamics of some communities are affected by the loss of significant numbers of people to prison and by the release of others who encounter the challenge of coping with the negative effects of the incarceration experience. The effects on communities are evident, in part, in the high rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in North Carolina (NC) counties that have a high rate of incarceration. In the present study, we examined whether the same associations can be observed at the census tract level in one urban city of NC. To identify the mechanisms by which incarceration can affect the transmission of STIs, we conducted ethnographic interviews with ex-offenders and people who lost a sexual partner to prison. We found that census tract rates of incarceration were consistently associated with gonorrhea rates in the subsequent year. An increase of the percentage of census tract person-time spent in prison from 2.0% to 2.5% corresponded to a gonorrhea rate increase of 7.1 cases per 100,000 person-years. The people interviewed spoke of sexual partnership changes including those left behind finding new partners, in part for help in making financial ends meet; men having sex with men for the first time in prison; and having multiple new partners upon reentry to the community. The statistical associations and stories of the effects of incarceration on sexual relationships provide additional evidence of unintended community health consequences of high rates of incarceration.


AIDS | 2007

Highly efficient HIV transmission to young women in South Africa

Audrey Pettifor; Michael G. Hudgens; Brooke A. Levandowski; Helen Rees; Myron S. Cohen

Background:Young women in sub-Saharan Africa are at very high risk of HIV acquisition, and high prevalence levels have been observed among women reporting one lifetime partner and few sexual contacts. Such findings have led to hypotheses that the probability of HIV transmission from men to women must be far higher than previously appreciated. Methods:We used the data from a cross-sectional national household survey of HIV among South African women aged 15–24 years to estimate the per-partnership transmission probability from men to women. Estimates were obtained using maximum likelihood methods and a transmission probability model allowing for random error in the self-reported number of lifetime partners. Sensitivity analyses were employed to assess the robustness of the per-partnership transmission probability estimates to the assumed HIV prevalence in male partners. Results:HIV prevalence in women was 21.2% (95% confidence interval 17.9–24.5). The mean reported number of lifetime partners was 2.3. A significant increase in prevalence was observed with increasing lifetime partner numbers (P = 0.02). For a range of plausible values of the partner prevalence, the estimated per-partnership transmission probability varied from 0.74 to 1.00 with 95% confidence intervals ranging from 0.56 to 1.00. Discussion:The per-partnership probability of HIV transmission from men to women in this population was very high. Before this, the majority of studies examining per-partnership transmission probabilities estimated values below 50%. Identifying the factors that may drive the efficient spread of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa is essential for the development of effective prevention interventions.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2012

Investigating social consequences of unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion in Malawi: The role of stigma

Brooke A. Levandowski; Linda Kalilani-Phiri; Fannie Kachale; Paschal Awah; Godfrey Kangaude; Chisale Mhango

Malawian women in all sectors of society are suffering from social implications of unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion. Unwanted pregnancies occur among women who have limited access to family planning and safe abortion. A legally restrictive setting for safe abortion services leads many women to unsafe abortion, which has consequences for them and their families. In‐depth interviews were conducted with 485 Malawian stakeholders belonging to different political and social structures. Interviewees identified the impact of unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion to be the greatest on young women. Premarital and extramarital pregnancies were highly stigmatized; stigma directly related to abortion was also found. Community‐level discussions need to focus on reduction of stigma.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2011

A Tale of Two Countries: Rethinking Sexual Risk for HIV Among Young People in South Africa and the United States

Audrey Pettifor; Brooke A. Levandowski; Catherine MacPhail; William C. Miller; Joyce Tabor; Carol A. Ford; Cheryl R. Stein; Helen Rees; Myron S. Cohen

PURPOSE To compare the sexual behaviors of young people in South Africa (SA) and the United States (US) with the aim to better understand the potential role of sexual behavior in HIV transmission in these two countries that have strikingly different HIV epidemics. METHODS Nationally representative, population-based surveys of young people aged 18-24 years from SA (n = 7,548) and the US (n = 13,451) were used for the present study. RESULTS The prevalence of HIV was 10.2% in SA and <1% in the US. Young women and men in the US reported an earlier age of first sex than those in SA (mean age of coital debut for women: US [16.5], SA [17.4]; for men: US [16.4], SA [16.7]). The median number of lifetime partners is higher in the US than in SA: women: US (4), SA (2); men: US (4), SA (3). The use of condom at last sex is reported to be lower in the US than in SA: women: US (36.1%), SA (45.4%); men: US (48%), SA (58%). On average, young women in SA report greater age differences with their sex partners than young women in the US. CONCLUSION Young people in the US report riskier sexual behaviors than young people in SA, despite the much higher prevalence of HIV infection in SA. Factors above and beyond sexual behavior likely play a key role in the ongoing transmission of HIV in South African youth, and thus should be urgently uncovered to develop maximally effective prevention strategies.


Health Promotion Practice | 2006

Parental Literacy and Infant Health: An Evidence-Based Healthy Start Intervention

Brooke A. Levandowski; Priya Sharma; Sandra D. Lane; Noah J. Webster; Amanda M. Nestor; Donald A. Cibula; Sally Huntington

Syracuse Healthy Start, a federally funded infant mortality prevention project in Onondaga County, New York, has undertaken a range of interventions to address parental low literacy as a risk factor for infant mortality. A growing number of studies advocate for health-related information that is easy to read, of a low literacy level, and culturally appropriate. Creation of an evidence-based public health intervention involves analyzing local data, reviewing published studies, assessing available materials, initiating programmatic interventions, and evaluating the outcomes. Preparing health educational materials that are clear, culturally sensitive, and at appropriate reading levels follows Paulo Freire’s lead in empowering the disadvantaged to positively affect their health and the health of their infants toward the reduction of infant mortality.


International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2013

The incidence of induced abortion in Malawi.

Brooke A. Levandowski; Chisale Mhango; Edgar Kuchingale; Juliana Lunguzi; Hans R. Katengeza; Hailemichael Gebreselassie; Susheela Singh

CONTEXT Abortion is legally restricted in Malawi, and no data are available on the incidence of the procedure. METHODS The Abortion Incidence Complications Methodology was used to estimate levels of induced abortion in Malawi in 2009. Data on provision of postabortion care were collected from 166 public, nongovernmental and private health facilities, and estimates of the likelihood that women who have abortions experience complications and seek care were obtained from 56 key informants. Data from these surveys and from the 2010 Malawi Demographic and Health Survey were used to calculate abortion rates and ratios, and rates of pregnancy and unintended pregnancy. RESULTS Approximately 18,700 women in Malawi were treated in health facilities for complications of induced abortion in 2009. An estimated 67,300 induced abortions were performed, equivalent to a rate of 23 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44 and an abortion ratio of 12 per 100 live births. The abortion rate was higher in the North (35 per 1,000) than in the Central region or the South (20-23 per 1,000). The unintended pregnancy rate in 2010 was 139 per 1,000 women aged 15-44, and an estimated 52% of all pregnancies were unintended. CONCLUSIONS Unsafe abortion is common in Malawi. Interventions are needed to help women and couples avoid unwanted pregnancy, reduce the need for unsafe abortion and decrease maternal mortality.


Women & Health | 2014

Developing a Scale to Measure Stigmatizing Attitudes and Beliefs About Women Who Have Abortions: Results from Ghana and Zambia

Kristen M. Shellenberg; Leila Hessini; Brooke A. Levandowski

The objective of this research was to explore the context of abortion stigma in Ghana and Zambia through qualitative research, and develop a quantitative instrument to measure stigmatizing attitudes and beliefs about abortion. Ultimately, we aimed to develop a scale to measure abortion stigma at the individual and community level that can also be used in the evaluation of stigma reduction interventions. Focus group discussions were conducted in both countries to provide information around attitudes and beliefs about abortion. A 57-item instrument was created from these data, pre-tested, and then administered to 531 individuals (n = 250 in Ghana and n = 281 in Zambia). Exploratory factor analyses were conducted on 33 of the original 57 items to identify a statistically and conceptually relevant scale. Items with factor loadings >0.39 were retained. All analyses were completed using Stata IC/11.2. Exploratory factor analysis resulted in a three-factor solution that explained 53% of the variance in an 18-item instrument. The three identified subscales are: (i) negative stereotypes (eight items), (ii) discrimination and exclusion (seven items), and (iii) potential contagion (three items). Coefficient alphas of 0.85, 0.80, and 0.80 for the three subscales, and 0.90 for the full 18-item instrument provide evidence of internal consistency reliability. Our Stigmatizing Attitudes, Beliefs, and Actions scale captures three important dimensions of abortion stigma: negative stereotypes about men and women who are associated with abortion, discrimination/exclusion of women who have abortions, and fear of contagion as a result of coming in contact with a woman who has had an abortion. The development of this scale provides a validated tool for measuring stigmatizing attitudes and beliefs about abortion in Ghana and Zambia. Additionally, the scale has the potential to be applicable in other country settings. It represents an important contribution to the fields of reproductive health, abortion, and stigma.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2015

The severity of abortion complications in Malawi

Linda Kalilani-Phiri; Hailemichael Gebreselassie; Brooke A. Levandowski; Edgar Kuchingale; Fannie Kachale; Godfrey Kangaude

To assess the severity of abortion complications in Malawi and to determine associated risk factors.


Global Health Action | 2013

Implementation of misoprostol for postabortion care in Kenya and Uganda: a qualitative evaluation

Joachim Osur; Traci L. Baird; Brooke A. Levandowski; Emily Jackson; Daniel Murokora

Objective Evaluate implementation of misoprostol for postabortion care (MPAC) in two African countries. Design Qualitative, program evaluation. Setting Twenty-five public and private health facilities in Rift Valley Province, Kenya, and Kampala Province, Uganda. Sample Forty-five MPAC providers, health facility managers, Ministry of Health officials, and non-governmental (NGO) staff involved in program implementation. Methods and main outcome measures In both countries, the Ministry of Health, local health centers and hospitals, and NGO staff developed evidence-based service delivery protocols to introduce MPAC in selected facilities; implementation extended from January 2009 to October 2010. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews evaluated the implementation process, identified supportive and inhibitive policies for implementation, elicited lessons learned during the process, and assessed provider satisfaction and providers’ impressions of client satisfaction with MPAC. Project reports were also reviewed. Results In both countries, MPAC was easy to use, and freed up provider time and health facility resources traditionally necessary for provision of PAC with uterine aspiration. On-going support of providers following training ensured high quality of care. Providers perceived that many women preferred MPAC, as they avoided instrumentation of the uterus, hospital admission, cost, and stigma associated with abortion. Appropriate registration of misoprostol for use in the pilot, and maintaining supplies of misoprostol, were significant challenges to service provision. Support from the Ministry of Health was necessary for successful implementation; lack of country-based standards and guidelines for MPAC created challenges. Conclusions MPAC is simple, cost-effective and can be readily implemented in settings with high rates of abortion-related mortality.

Collaboration


Dive into the Brooke A. Levandowski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Audrey Pettifor

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Donald A. Cibula

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Helen Rees

University of the Witwatersrand

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Myron S. Cohen

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert H. Keefe

State University of New York System

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge