Jan Singlovic
World Health Organization
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Featured researches published by Jan Singlovic.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Mohamadou Siribié; Catherine O. Falade; Luc Sermé; Andrew Balyeku; Chinenye Afonne; Armande K. Sanou; Vanessa Kabarungi; Frederick O. Oshiname; Zakaria Gansane; Josephine Kyaligonza; Ayodele S. Jegede; Alfred B. Tiono; Sodiomon B. Sirima; Amidou Diarra; Oyindamola B. Yusuf; Florence Fouque; Joëlle Castellani; Max Petzold; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
Background. Malaria-endemic countries are encouraged to increase, expedite, and standardize care based on parasite diagnosis and treat confirmed malaria using oral artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) or rectal artesunate plus referral when patients are unable to take oral medication. Methods. In 172 villages in 3 African countries, trained community health workers (CHWs) assessed and diagnosed children aged between 6 months and 6 years using rapid histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP2)–based diagnostic tests (RDTs). Patients coming for care who could take oral medication were treated with ACTs, and those who could not were treated with rectal artesunate and referred to hospital. The full combined intervention package lasted 12 months. Changes in access and speed of care and clinical course were determined through 1746 random household interviews before and 3199 during the intervention. Results. A total of 15 932 children were assessed: 6394 in Burkina Faso, 2148 in Nigeria, and 7390 in Uganda. Most children assessed (97.3% [15 495/15 932]) were febrile and most febrile cases (82.1% [12 725/15 495]) tested were RDT positive. Almost half of afebrile episodes (47.6% [204/429]) were RDT positive. Children eligible for rectal artesunate contributed 1.1% of episodes. The odds of using CHWs as the first point of care doubled (odds ratio [OR], 2.15; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.9–2.4; P < .0001). RDT use changed from 3.2% to 72.9% (OR, 80.8; 95% CI, 51.2–127.3; P < .0001). The mean duration of uncomplicated episodes reduced from 3.69 ± 2.06 days to 3.47 ± 1.61 days, Degrees of freedom (df) = 2960, Students t (t) = 3.2 (P = .0014), and mean duration of severe episodes reduced from 4.24 ± 2.26 days to 3.7 ± 1.57 days, df = 749, t = 3.8, P = .0001. There was a reduction in children with danger signs from 24.7% before to 18.1% during the intervention (OR, 0.68; 95% CI, .59–.78; P < .0001). Conclusions. Provision of diagnosis and treatment via trained CHWs increases access to diagnosis and treatment, shortens clinical episode duration, and reduces the number of severe cases. This approach, recommended by the World Health Organization, improves malaria case management. Clinical Trials Registration. ISRCTN13858170.
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2012
Ushma Mehta; Christine Clerk; Elizabeth Allen; Mackensie Yore; Esperança Sevene; Jan Singlovic; Max Petzold; Viviana Mangiaterra; Elizabeth Elefant; Frank M. Sullivan; Lewis B. Holmes; Melba Gomes
BackgroundThe absence of robust evidence of safety of medicines in pregnancy, particularly those for major diseases provided by public health programmes in developing countries, has resulted in cautious recommendations on their use. We describe a protocol for a Pregnancy Registry adapted to resource-limited settings aimed at providing evidence on the safety of medicines in pregnancy.Methods/DesignSentinel health facilities are chosen where women come for prenatal care and are likely to come for delivery. Staff capacity is improved to provide better care during the pregnancy, to identify visible birth defects at delivery and refer infants with major anomalies for surgical or clinical evaluation and treatment. Consenting women are enrolled at their first antenatal visit and careful medical, obstetric and drug-exposure histories taken; medical record linkage is encouraged. Enrolled women are followed up prospectively and their histories are updated at each subsequent visit. The enrolled woman is encouraged to deliver at the facility, where she and her baby can be assessed.DiscussionIn addition to data pooling into a common WHO database, the WHO Pregnancy Registry has three important features: First is the inclusion of pregnant women coming for antenatal care, enabling comparison of birth outcomes of women who have been exposed to a medicine with those who have not. Second is its applicability to resource-poor settings regardless of drug or disease. Third is improvement of reproductive health care during pregnancies and at delivery. Facility delivery enables better health outcomes, timely evaluation and management of the newborn, and the collection of reliable clinical data. The Registry aims to improve maternal and neonatal care and also provide much needed information on the safety of medicines in pregnancy.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Catherine O. Falade; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Mohamadou Siribié; Amidou Diarra; Luc Sermé; Chinenye Afonne; Oyindamola B. Yusuf; Zakaria Gansane; Ayodele S. Jegede; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
Background. The World Health Organization recommends that malaria treatment be based on demonstration of the infecting Plasmodium parasite specie. Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are recommended at community points of care because they are accurate and rapid. We report on parasitological results in a malaria study in selected rural communities in 3 African countries. Methods. In Nigeria, community health workers (CHWs) performed RDTs (SD-Bioline) and thick blood smears on all children suspected to have malaria. Malaria RDT-positive children able to swallow received artemisinin-based combination therapy (Coartem). In all countries, children unable to take oral drugs received prereferral rectal artesunate irrespective of RDT result and were referred to the nearest health facility. Thick blood smears and RDTs were usually taken at hospital admission. In Nigeria and Burkina Faso, RDT cassettes and blood smears were re-read by an experienced investigator at study end. Results. Trained CHWs enrolled 2148 children in Nigeria. Complete parasitological data of 1860 (86.6%) enrollees were analyzed. The mean age of enrollees was 30.4 ± 15.7 months. The prevalence of malaria parasitemia in the study population was 77.8% (1447/1860), 77.6% (1439/1855), and 54.1% (862/1593) by RDT performed by CHWs vs an expert clinical research assistant vs microscopy (gold standard), respectively. Geometric mean parasite density was 6946/µL (range, 40–436 450/µL). There were 49 cases of RDT false-negative results with a parasite density range of 40–54 059/µL. False-negative RDT results with high parasitemia could be due to non-falciparum infection or result from a prozone effect. Sensitivity and specificity of SD-Bioline RDT results as read by CHWs were 94.3% and 41.6%, respectively, while the negative and positive predictive values were 86.1% and 65.6%, respectively. The level of agreement in RDT reading by the CHWs and experienced research staff was 86.04% and κ statistic of 0.60. The malaria parasite positivity rate by RDT and microscopy among children with danger signs in the 3 countries was 67.9% and 41.8%, respectively. Conclusions. RDTs are useful in guiding malaria management and were successfully used for diagnosis by trained CHWs. However, false-negative RDT results were identified and can undermine confidence in results and control efforts.
Applied neuropsychology. Child | 2018
Penny Holding; Adote Anum; Fons J. R. van de Vijver; Maclean Vokhiwa; Nancy Bugase; Toffajjal Hossen; Charles Makasi; Frank Baiden; Omari Kimbute; Oscar Bangre; Rafiqul Hasan; Khadija Nanga; Ransford Paul Selasi Sefenu; Nasmin A-Hayat; Naila Z. Khan; Abraham Oduro; Rumana Rashid; Rasheda Samad; Jan Singlovic; Abul Faiz; Melba Gomes
ABSTRACT We developed a test battery for use among children in Bangladesh, Ghana, and Tanzania, assessing general intelligence, executive functioning, and school achievement. The instruments were drawn from previously published materials and tests. The instruments were adapted and translated in a systematic way to meet the needs of the three assessment contexts. The instruments were administered by a total of 43 trained assessors to 786 children in Bangladesh, Ghana, and Tanzania with a mean age of about 13 years (range: 7–18 years). The battery provides a psychometrically solid basis for evaluating intervention studies in multiple settings. Within-group variation was adequate in each group. The expected positive correlations between test performance and age were found and reliability indices yielded adequate values. A confirmatory factor analysis (not including the literacy and numeracy tests) showed a good fit for a model, merging the intelligence and executive tests in a single factor labeled general intelligence. Measurement weights invariance was found, supporting conceptual equivalence across the three country groups, but not supporting full score comparability across the three countries.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Mohamadou Siribié; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Chinenye Afonne; Andrew Balyeku; Catherine O. Falade; Zakaria Gansane; Ayodele S. Jegede; Lillian Ojanduru; Frederick O. Oshiname; Vanessa Kabarungi; Josephine Kyaligonza; Armande K. Sanou; Luc Sermé; Joëlle Castellani; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
Background. Use of community health workers (CHWs) to increase access to diagnosis and treatment of malaria is recommended by the World Health Organization. The present article reports on training and performance of CHWs in applying these recommendations. Methods. Two hundred seventy-nine CHWs were trained for 3–5 days in Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Uganda, and 19 were certified to diagnose and treat only uncomplicated malaria and 235 to diagnose and treat both uncomplicated and severe malaria. Almost 1 year after training, 220 CHWs were assessed using standard checklists using facility staff responses as the reference standard. Results. Training models were slightly different in the 3 countries, but the same topics were covered. The main challenges noticed were the low level of education in rural areas and the involvement of health staff in the supervision process. Overall performance was 98% (with 99% in taking history, 95% in measuring temperature, 85% for measuring respiratory rates, 98% for diagnosis, 98% for classification, and 99% for prescribing treatment). Young, single, new CHWs performed better than their older, married, more experienced counterparts. Conclusions. Training CHWs for community-based diagnosis and treatment of uncomplicated and severe malaria is possible with basic and refresher training and close supervision of CHWs’ performance. Clinical Trials Registration. ISRCTRS13858170.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Marian Warsame; Margaret Gyapong; Betty Mpeka; Amabelia Rodrigues; Jan Singlovic; Abdel Babiker; Edison Mworozi; Irene Akua Agyepong; Evelyn K. Ansah; Robert Azairwe; Sidu Biai; Fred Binka; Peter I. Folb; John O. Gyapong; Omari Kimbute; Zena Machinda; Andrew Y Kitua; Tom Lutalo; Melkzedik Majaha; Jao Mamadu; Zakayo Mrango; Max Petzold; Joseph Rujumba; Isabela Ribeiro; Melba Gomes
Background. If malaria patients who cannot be treated orally are several hours from facilities for injections, rectal artesunate prior to hospital referral can prevent death and disability. The goal is to reduce death from malaria by having rectal artesunate treatment available and used. How best to do this remains unknown. Methods. Villages remote from a health facility were randomized to different community-based treatment providers trained to provide rectal artesunate in Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Tanzania, and Uganda. Prereferral rectal artesunate treatment was provided in 272 villages: 109 through community-based health workers (CHWs), 112 via trained mothers (MUMs), 25 via trained traditional healers (THs), and 26 through trained community-chosen personnel (COMs); episodes eligible for rectal artesunate were established through regular household surveys of febrile illnesses recording symptoms eligible for prereferral treatment. Differences in treatment coverage with rectal artesunate in children aged <5 years in MUM vs CHW (standard-of-care) villages were assessed using the odds ratio (OR); the predictive probability of treatment was derived from a logistic regression analysis, adjusting for heterogeneity between clusters (villages) using random effects. Results. Over 19 months, 54 013 children had 102 504 febrile episodes, of which 32% (31 817 episodes) had symptoms eligible for prereferral therapy; 14% (4460) children received treatment. Episodes with altered consciousness, coma, or convulsions constituted 36.6% of all episodes in treated children. The overall OR of treatment between MUM vs CHW villages, adjusting for country, was 1.84 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.20–2.83; P = .005). Adjusting for heterogeneity, this translated into a 1.67 higher average probability of a child being treated in MUM vs CHW villages. Referral compliance was 81% and significantly higher with CHWs vs MUMs: 87% vs 82% (risk ratio [RR], 1.1 [95% CI, 1.0–1.1]; P < .0001). There were more deaths in the TH cluster than elsewhere (RR, 2.7 [95% CI, 1.4–5.6]; P = .0040). Conclusions. Prereferral episodes were almost one-third of all febrile episodes. More than one-third of patients treated had convulsions, altered consciousness, or coma. Mothers were effective in treating patients, and achieved higher coverage than other providers. Treatment access was low. Clinical Trials Registration. ISRCTN58046240.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Joëlle Castellani; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Borislava Mihaylova; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Mohamadou Siribié; Chinenye Afonne; Andrew Balyeku; Luc Sermé; Armande K. Sanou; Benjamin Sombie; Alfred B. Tiono; Sodiomon B. Sirima; Vanessa Kabarungi; Catherine O. Falade; Josephine Kyaligonza; Silvia M. A. A. Evers; Aggie Paulus; Max Petzold; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
Background. Community health workers (CHWs) were trained in Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Uganda to diagnose febrile children using malaria rapid diagnostic tests, and treat positive malaria cases with artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and those who could not take oral medicines with rectal artesunate. We quantified the impact of this intervention on private household costs for childhood febrile illness. Methods. Households with recent febrile illness in a young child in previous 2 weeks were selected randomly before and during the intervention and data obtained on household costs for the illness episode. Household costs included consultation fees, registration costs, user fees, diagnosis, bed, drugs, food, and transport costs. Private household costs per episode before and during the intervention were compared. The interventions impact on household costs per episode was calculated and projected to districtwide impacts on household costs. Results. Use of CHWs increased from 35% of illness episodes before the intervention to 50% during the intervention (P < .0001), and total household costs per episode decreased significantly in each country: from US Dollars (USD)
PLOS ONE | 2015
Joëlle Castellani; Borislava Mihaylova; Silvia M. A. A. Evers; Aggie Paulus; Zakayo Mrango; Omari Kimbute; Joseph P. Shishira; Francis Mulokozi; Max Petzold; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
4.36 to USD
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Jan Singlovic; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Mohamadou Siribié; Armande K. Sanou; Ayodele S. Jegede; Catherine O. Falade; Luc Sermé; Zakaria Gansane; Chinenye Afonne; Vanessa Kabarungi; Josephine Kyaligonza; Joëlle Castellani; Max Petzold; Melba Gomes
1.54 in Burkina Faso, from USD
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016
Joëlle Castellani; Borislava Mihaylova; IkeOluwapo O. Ajayi; Mohamadou Siribié; Jesca Nsungwa-Sabiiti; Chinenye Afonne; Luc Sermé; Andrew Balyeku; Vanessa Kabarungi; Josephine Kyaligonza; Silvia M. A. A. Evers; Aggie Paulus; Max Petzold; Jan Singlovic; Melba Gomes
3.90 to USD