Donna Barry
Partners In Health
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Featured researches published by Donna Barry.
The Lancet | 2004
Joia S. Mukherjee; Michael W. Rich; Adrienne R. Socci; J. Keith Joseph; Felix A. Alcantara Viru; Sonya Shin; Jennifer Furin; Mercedes C. Becerra; Donna Barry; Jim Yong Kim; Jaime Bayona; Paul Farmer; Mary Kay C Smith Fawzi; Kwonjune J. Seung
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) presents an increasing threat to global tuberculosis control. Many crucial management issues in MDR-TB treatment remain unanswered. We reviewed the existing scientific research on MDR-TB treatment, which consists entirely of retrospective cohort studies. Although direct comparisons of these studies are impossible, some insights can be gained: MDR-TB can and should be addressed therapeutically in resource-poor settings; starting of treatment early is crucial; aggressive treatment regimens and high-end dosing are recommended given the lower potency of second-line antituberculosis drugs; and strategies to improve treatment adherence, such as directly observed therapy, should be used. Opportunities to treat MDR-TB in developing countries are now possible through the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria, and the Green Light Committee for Access to Second-line Anti-tuberculosis Drugs. As treatment of MDR-TB becomes increasingly available in resource-poor areas, where it is needed most, further clinical and operational research is urgently needed to guide clinicians in the management of this disease.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011
Paul Farmer; Charles P. Almazor; Emily T. Bahnsen; Donna Barry; Junior Bazile; Barry R. Bloom; Niranjan Bose; Thomas G Brewer; Stephen B. Calderwood; John D. Clemens; Alejandro Cravioto; Eddy Eustache; Gregory Jerome; Neha Gupta; Jason B. Harris; Howard H. Hiatt; Cassia van der hoof Holstein; Peter J. Hotez; Louise C. Ivers; Vanessa B. Kerry; Serena P. Koenig; Regina C. LaRocque; Fernet Leandre; Wesler Lambert; Evan Lyon; John J. Mekalanos; Joia S. Mukherjee; Cate Oswald; Jean W. Pape; Anany Gretchko Prosper
Cholera in Haiti: Acute-on-Chronic Long before the devastating earthquake on January 12, 2010, Haiti struggled beneath the burdens of intractable poverty and ill health. The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti also faces some of the highest rates of maternal and infant mortality—widely used indicators of the robustness of a health system—in the world ([S1] in Text S1; [2], [3]). The October 2010 cholera outbreak is the most recent of a long series of affronts to the health of Haitis population; it is yet another acute symptom of the chronic weakness of Haitis health, water, and sanitation systems. Water and sanitation conditions highlight these systemic weaknesses. In 2002, Haiti ranked last out of 147 countries for water security [4], [5]. Before the earthquake struck, only half of the population in the capital, Port-au-Prince, had access to latrines or other forms of modern sanitation, and roughly one-third had no access to tap water [6]. Across the country, access to sanitation and clean water is even more limited: only 17% of Haitians had access to adequate sanitation in 2008, and 12% received treated water [7]. Not surprisingly, diarrheal diseases have long been a significant cause of death and disability, especially among children under 5 years of age [6]. The cholera outbreak began less than a year after a 7.0-magnitude earthquake took the lives of more than 300,000 people and left nearly 1.5 million homeless [6]. Almost 1 million Haitians still live in spontaneous settlements known as internally displaced persons (IDP) camps [8]. While post-earthquake conditions in Haiti were ripe for outbreaks of acute diarrheal illness, cholera was deemed “very unlikely to occur” by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other public health authorities [9]. Cholera had never before been reported in Haiti [S2] [10], [11]; health providers were unprepared for an influx of patients presenting with acute watery diarrhea. The cholera epidemic has been most severe in rural areas and large urban slums. Rural communities were charged with hosting hundreds of thousands of displaced people after the earthquake, placing greater demands on their already-scarce resources, including water. Surface water drawn directly from the source or piped from rivers and streams constitutes the principal supply of drinking water in rural Haiti. The lack of adequate piping, filtration, and water treatment systems (including chlorination) made these rural regions vulnerable to the rapid spread of waterborne disease. While most IDP camps have been supplied with potable water, large urban slums have had to rely on existing water sources—some of them containing Vibrio cholerae—and have therefore been vulnerable to rapid disease spread. Most slums also have poor sanitation infrastructure. Since the first cases were reported in Saint-Marc and Mirebalais, cholera has spread to every department in Haiti, and to other countries, too [S3] [12]–[14]. Public suspicion (ultimately validated by genomic sequence analyses [15]) of the strains link to South Asia, home to a group of United Nations peacekeepers stationed in central Haiti, triggered blame and violence that interfered with response efforts. As we have learned from the global AIDS pandemic and other infectious disease epidemics, cycles of accusation can continue for years, diverting attention and resources from the delivery of care and prevention services [16]. Systemic problems that brought cholera to epidemic levels in Haiti will (unless addressed) continue to facilitate its spread. As a disease of poverty, cholera preys upon the bottom of the social gradient; international trade, migration, and travel—from South Asia or elsewhere—open direct channels for pathogens that follow social fault lines.
BMJ | 2012
Amir Attaran; Donna Barry; Shamnad Basheer; James Chauvin; Laurie Garrett; Ilona Kickbusch; Jillian Clare Kohler; Kamal Midha; Paul N. Newton; Sania Nishtar; Paul Orhii; Martin McKee
Substandard and falsified medicines kill patients, yet progress on the twin challenges of safeguarding the quality of genuine medicine and criminalising falsified ones has been held back by controversy over intellectual property rights and confusion over terms. Amir Attaran and colleagues propose a global treaty to overcome the problems
Journal of Womens Health | 2011
Joia S. Mukherjee; Donna Barry; Hind Satti; Maxi Raymonville; Sarah Marsh; Mary Kay Smith-Fawzi
In 2000, all 191 United Nations member states agreed to work toward the achievement of a set of health and development goals by 2015. The achievement of these eight goals, the Millennium Development goals (MDGs) is highly dependent on improving the status of women, who play a key role in health and education in families and communities around the world. Yet structural violence, defined as the systematic exclusion of a group from the resources needed to develop their full human potential, remains a significant barrier against womens development and threatens the achievement of the MDGs. Although sound evidence has long existed for improving womens survival, the will to address womens health concretely and holistically is only recently gaining the advocacy needed to change policy. Concrete examples of the integration of approaches to mitigate structural violence within the delivery of health services do exist and should be incorporated into global advocacy for womens health.
Antiviral Therapy | 2014
Rouzier; Paul Farmer; Pape Jw; Jerome Jg; Van Onacker Jd; Willy Morose; Patrice Joseph; Fernet Leandre; Patrice Severe; Donna Barry; Marie-Marcelle Deschamps; Serena P. Koenig
Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and has the highest number of people living with HIV in the Caribbean, the region most impacted by HIV outside of Africa. Despite continuous political, socioeconomic and natural catastrophes, Haiti has mounted a very successful response to the HIV epidemic. Prevention and treatment strategies implemented by the government in collaboration with non-governmental organizations have been instrumental in decreasing the national HIV prevalence from a high of 6.2% in 1993 to 2.2% in 2012. We describe the history and epidemiology of HIV in Haiti and the expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART) over the past decade, with the achievement of universal access to ART for patients meeting the 2010 World Health Organization guidelines. We also describe effective models of care, successes and challenges of international funding, and current challenges in the provision of ART. We are optimistic that the goal of providing ART for all in need remains in reach.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Hind Satti; Sophie Motsamai; Palesa Chetane; Leshoboro Marumo; Donna Barry; Jennifer Riley; Megan M. McLaughlin; Kwonjune J. Seung; Joia S. Mukherjee
Background Although it is now widely recognized that reductions in maternal mortality and improvements in womens health cannot be achieved through simple, vertical strategies, few programs have provided successful models for how to integrate services into a comprehensive program for maternal health. We report our experience in rural Lesotho, where Partners In Health (PIH) in partnership with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare implemented a program that provides comprehensive care of pregnant women from the community to the clinic level. Methods Between May and July 2009, PIH trained 100 women, many of whom were former traditional birth attendants, to serve as clinic-affiliated maternal health workers. They received performance-based incentives for accompanying pregnant women during antenatal care (ANC) visits and facility-based delivery. A nurse-midwife provided ANC and delivery care and supervised the maternal health workers. To overcome geographic barriers to delivering at the clinic, women who lived far from the clinic stayed at a maternal lying-in house prior to their expected delivery dates. We analyzed data routinely collected from delivery and ANC registers to compare service utilization before and after implementation of the program. Results After the establishment of the program, the average number first ANC visits increased from 20 to 31 per month. The clinic recorded 178 deliveries in the first year of the program and 216 in the second year, compared to 46 in the year preceding the program. During the first two years of the program, 49 women with complications were successfully transported to the district hospital, and no maternal deaths occurred among the women served by the program. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that it is possible to achieve dramatic improvements in the utilization of maternal health services and facility-based delivery by strengthening human resource capacity, implementing active follow-up in the community, and de-incentivizing home births.
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2011
Mary C. Smith Fawzi; Susan R. Holman; Robert Kiley; Michelle S. Li; Donna Barry; Sachini Bandara; Arlan F. Fuller
While delivering innovative care for over 17 million children living with and affected by HIV/AIDS is a priority for todays global health community, most of these childrens health needs remain unmet. Concerns about funding, implementation, and transparency continue to obstruct quality care for all. This paper discusses why services supported by macro-level funding, local initiatives, innovative financing, and enhanced long-term development strategies, are imperative. Concurrent advocacy and preventive measures, such as universal access to education, can sustain this investment in human capital. Such efforts may enhance economic growth, expand local capacity, and improve the quality of life in communities currently burdened by the HIV epidemic.
The Lancet | 2010
Emily deRiel; Meredith P. Fort; Donna Barry
590 www.thelancet.com Vol 376 August 21, 2010 privatis ation, and imposing wage and other budget ceilings. The IMF continues to prioritise inflation targets below 5%, fiscal deficits below 3%, and large foreign currency reserves even after the recent financial crisis. Lu and colleagues explore plausible explanations for subadditionality, including differing priorities, a desire to build currency reserves, and insufficient absorptive capacity. However by leaving IMF policies unexamined, they neglect the most plausible one.
International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2006
Sonya Shin; Alexander D. Pasechnikov; Irina Y. Gelmanova; Genadi Peremitin; Aivar K. Strelis; Sergey P. Mishustin; Alexander Barnashov; Y. Karpeichik; Yevgeny G. Andreev; Vera T. Golubchikova; Tonkel Tp; Galina V. Yanova; Nikiforov M; A. Yedilbayev; Joia S. Mukherjee; Jennifer Furin; Donna Barry; Paul Farmer; Michael W. Rich; Salmaan Keshavjee
Health and Human Rights | 2008
Monika Kalra Varma; Margaret L. Satterthwaite; Amanda M. Klasing; Tammy Shoranick; Jude Jean; Donna Barry; Mary C. Smith Fawzi; James McKeever; Evan Lyon