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Dive into the research topics where Donaldene E Thompson is active.

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Featured researches published by Donaldene E Thompson.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987

Age-related prevalence and intensity of Trichuris trichiura infection in a St. Lucian community

D. A. P. Bundy; Ed Cooper; Donaldene E Thompson; Roy M. Anderson; J.M. Didier

Age-related changes in the average worm burden and the prevalence of Trichuris trichiura infection, in a village community in St. Lucia, were examined by field studies based on worm expulsion techniques. Horizontal age-intensity profiles were convex in form with peak parasite loads occurring in the 2 to 15-year-old children. Prevalence is shown to be a poor indicator of changes in average worm load with age. Faecal egg counts (epg and epd) provide a qualitative measure of worm burdens since fecundity is shown to be approximately independent of worm load. The parasites were highly aggregated within the study community, with most people harbouring low burdens while a few individuals harboured very heavy burdens. Of the total parasite populations in the study sample, 84% were harboured by the 2 to 15-year-old children. Of those individuals harbouring 100 worms or more, 87% were in the 2 to 10-year-old age range. Crude estimates of population parameters (basic reproductive rate, 4-5; rate of reinfection, 90 year-1) suggest that the rate of reinfection is higher than for other helminth parasites of man. The control of morbidity and parasite transmission is discussed in the context of targeting drug treatment at the child segment of the study population.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987

Epidemiology and population dynamics of Ascaris lumbricoides and Trichuris trichiura infection in the same community

D.A.P. Bundy; E. S. Cooper; Donaldene E Thompson; J.M. Didier; I. Simmons

The gastrointestinal helminth infection status of an age-stratified sample from a single Caribbean community was assessed using anthelmintic expulsion techniques. The same sample was re-assessed in a similar manner after a 17 month period of re-infection. The age-prevalence profile of Ascaris lumbricoides was convex while that of Trichuris trichiura was asymptotic. The age-intensity profiles of both species were convex. These differing patterns are attributed to differences in the absolute worm burdens of the 2 species. The frequency distributions of infection intensity were similar for both species, and largely independent of host age. The basic reproductive rate of A. lumbricoides (Ro = 1-1.8) was similar to that recorded elsewhere and much lower than that of T. trichiura (Ro = 4-6), implying that the latter is intrinsically more resistant to control. Individual hosts were predisposed to high (or low) intensity infection with either species, although predisposition to both species simultaneously was not conclusively demonstrated. Further studies are required to determine the cause of these observations.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1985

Population distribution of Trichuris trichiura in a community of Jamaican children

Donald A. P Bundy; Donaldene E Thompson; Michael H. N Golden; Edward S Cooper; Rox M Anderson; Philip S. E. G Harland

The Trichuris trichiura worm burdens of 23 children living in a Place-of-Safety in Kingston, Jamaica, were assessed by stool collection for more than five days after treatment with mebendazole. This procedure was repeated after a seven-month period of natural re-infection. For both collections the maximum rate of worm expulsion was achieved on the fourth day after starting treatment. The worm population distributions were overdispersed and well described by the negative binomial probability model (k = 0.29) in each case. For any one individual, the number of worms passed on the first expulsion was unrelated, absolutely or relatively, to the number passed on the second. These data suggest that: knowledge of the time dependency of helminth expulsion is essential for the accurate estimation of worm burdens by this method; populations of Trichuris are more highly aggregated than those of Ascaris and may thus be more susceptible to control by selective rather than random chemotherapy; and the inherent predisposition of hosts to infection may be of minor importance in determining the distribution of worms in the population-heavily infected hosts appear no more or less likely to acquire large worm burdens on subsequent exposures.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1985

Population dynamics and chemotherapeutic control of Trichuris trichiura infection of children in Jamaica and St. Lucia

Donald A. P Bundy; Donaldene E Thompson; Edward S Cooper; Michael H. N Golden; Rox M Anderson

Population dynamical parameters of Trichuris trichiura infections in children were estimated from longitudinal intensity and prevalence data from a population (n = 23) in a childrens home in Jamaica. The theoretical predictions of a deterministic model incorporating these parameters were approximated to observed horizontal-age prevalence data from a naturally infected population (n = 203) of children in a St. Lucian village, and a rough estimate of the basic reproductive rate (Ro = 8-10) of T. trichiura obtained. The findings suggest that T. trichiura populations are intrinsically more difficult to control by traditional mass-treatment chemotherapy (eradication requires greater than 91% of the population to be treated every 6 months for greater than 5 years) than are populations of Ascaris, but may be more susceptible to selective chemotherapy programmes which aim to treat only the most heavily infected individuals.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1985

Rate of expulsion of Trichuris trichiura with multiple and single dose regimens of albendazole

Donald A. P Bundy; Donaldene E Thompson; Edward S Cooper; Jean Blanchard

The efficacy of multiple and single dose regimens of albendazole on Trichuris trichiura infection was evaluated by counting the number of worms expelled/day from two pair-matched groups of children, for nine days following therapy. The temporal patterns of worm expulsion were similar whether the children received a single 400 mg dose or two consecutive doses: no worms were passed before the second day, or after the sixth day, after intervention, and the maximum worm expulsion rate was attained on the fourth day. A second treatment six days after the first expelled no more worms. The results obtained here resemble those obtained previously with a three-day (600 mg) regimen of mebendazole in a study of heavily infected children. We conclude: that irrespective of dose, benzimidazole carbamates require the gut transit time plus 48 hours to immobilize T. trichiura; and that a single dose of albendazole is effective against light infections of T. trichiura but requires further evaluation with high intensity infections.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 1986

Epidemiological characteristics of Toxocara canis zoonotic infection of children in a Caribbean community.

Donaldene E Thompson; Donald A. P Bundy; Edward S Cooper; Peter M. Schantz


Tropical medicine and parasitology | 1987

Age-relationships of Toxocara canis seropositivity and geohelminth infection prevalence in two communities in St. Lucia, West Indies

Donald A. P Bundy; Donaldene E Thompson; B. D Robertson; Edward S Cooper


West Indian Medical Journal | 1987

A community-based study of gastrointestinal helminth and protozoan infection in Western Jamaica.

J. C Speed; Culpepper; Donaldene E Thompson; R Henson; Barrington A Wint; Donald A. P Bundy


West Indian Medical Journal | 1985

Horizontal-age prevalence and intensity of trichuris trichiura infection in a rural population in St. Lucia - abstract

Donald A. P Bundy; Edward S Cooper; Rox M Anderson; Donaldene E Thompson; Jean Blanchard


West Indian Medical Journal | 1986

Attitudes to after-hour calls in Barbadian family practice - abstract

Raana P Naidu; Douglas DaSilva; M Brown; Laurita Hawkins; Michael D Hoyos; Adrian Lorde; A Mohammed; C St. Thomas; Donaldene E Thompson

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Edward S Cooper

University of the West Indies

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Ed Cooper

Imperial College London

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