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Featured researches published by Jean-Paul Boutin.


Medicine | 2012

Morbidity and impaired quality of life 30 months after chikungunya infection: comparative cohort of infected and uninfected French military policemen in Reunion Island.

Catherine Marimoutou; Elodie Vivier; Manuela Oliver; Jean-Paul Boutin; Fabrice Simon

AbstractWe compared the morbidity and quality of life of military policemen (“gendarmes”) infected with chikungunya virus (CHIKV+) 30 months after contamination. We categorized the subjects in 3 groups: healed patients (n = 48), non-healed patients (n = 37, 44% of CHIKV+), and uninfected subjects (CHIKV−, n = 297).Data were self-recorded in this retrospective cohort study; they included sociodemographic information, clinical symptoms, and the Medical Outcome Study 36-item short-form health survey (MOS-SF36) quality of life questionnaire.The study population was mostly men (92%), with a median age of 42.8 years, regardless of CHIKV status. The main complaints were rheumatic symptoms (pain, stiffness, and swelling), reported 5 times more often by non-healed CHIKV+ subjects and 2–3 times more often by healed CHIKV+ subjects than by CHIKV− subjects, and fatigue. The CHIKV+ patients reported more use of health care services. Thirty months after infection, all rheumatic symptoms were more frequent and intense among CHIKV+ than among CHIKV− subjects, with a gradient of severity between healed and non-healed CHIKV+ subjects. Non-healed CHIKV+ subjects reported subsequent limitation in their activities. All dimensions of MOS-SF36 as well as physical and mental component summaries were impaired in CHIKV+ compared to CHIKV− subjects, with a decreasing gradient of impairment from non-healed to healed CHIKV+ subjects, then to CHIKV− subjects.These observations confirm the long-term impact of CHIKV infection on both physical and mental health. Questions persist regarding the duration of this impairment and the possibility of a return to “before CHIKV” health status for infected patients.


Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Characteristics of human intestinal Escherichia coli with changing environments.

David Skurnik; Daniel Bonnet; Claire Bernède-Bauduin; Rémy Michel; Christian Guette; Jean‐Marie Becker; Corinne Balaire; Françoise Chau; Jacqueline Mohler; Vincent Jarlier; Jean-Paul Boutin; Brigitte Moreau; Didier Guillemot; Erick Denamur; Antoine Andremont; Raymond Ruimy

To investigate if the characteristics of human intestinal Escherichia coli are changing with the environment of the host, we studied intestinal E. coli from subjects having recently migrated from a temperate to a tropical area. We determined the phylogenetic group, the prevalence of the antibiotic resistance, the presence of integrons and the strain diversity in faecal isolates from 25 subjects originally from metropolitan France and expatriated to French Guyana. These characteristics were compared with those of 25 previously studied Wayampi Amerindian natives of French Guyana and from 25 metropolitan French residents. The three groups of subjects were matched for age and sex, had not taken antibiotics for at least 1 month, nor had been hospitalized within the past year. In all, the characteristics of intestinal E. coli from Expatriates were intermediate between those found in residents from metropolitan France and those found in natives of French Guyana. Prevalence of carriage of resistant Gram-negative bacteria in Expatriates was intermediate between French residents and Wayampi as were the prevalence of integrons in E. coli (12.3% versus 16.3% and 7.8% respectively), and the intra-host diversity of E. coli (2.3 strains/subject versus 1.9 and 3.1, respectively); lastly, in Expatriates, the prevalence of carriage of phylogenetic group B2 strains was lower than in French residents (16% versus 56%, P = 0.005), while carriage of phylogenetic group A strains was lower than in Wayampi (56% versus 88%, P = 0.03). Our results suggest that the composition of the commensal intestinal flora of humans is not static but changes dynamically in response to new environmental conditions.


Journal of Public Health | 2008

Evaluation of a syndromic surveillance for the early detection of outbreaks among military personnel in a tropical country

Henry Jefferson; Bruce Dupuy; Hervé Chaudet; Gaëtan Texier; Andrew Green; Guy Barnish; Jean-Paul Boutin; Jean-Baptiste Meynard

BACKGROUND To evaluate a new military syndromic surveillance system (2SE FAG) set up in French Guiana. METHODS The evaluation was made using the current framework published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA. Two groups of system stakeholders, for data input and data analysis, were interviewed using semi-structured questionnaires to assess timeliness, data quality, acceptability, usefulness, stability, portability and flexibility of the system. Validity was assessed by comparing the syndromic system with the routine traditional weekly surveillance system. RESULTS Qualitative data showed a degree of poor acceptability among people who have to enter data. Timeliness analysis showed excellent case processing time, hindered by delays in case reporting. Analysis of stability indicated a high level of technical problems. System flexibility was found to be high. Quantitative data analysis of validity indicated better agreement between syndromic and traditional surveillance when reporting on dengue fever cases as opposed to other diseases. CONCLUSIONS The sophisticated technical design of 2SE FAG has resulted in a system which is able to carry out its role as an early warning system. Efforts must be concentrated on increasing its acceptance and use by people who have to enter data and decreasing the occurrence of the frequency of technical problems.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2002

Tolerability of doxycycline monohydrate salt vs. chloroquine–proguanil in malaria chemoprophylaxis

Frédéric Pagès; Jean-Paul Boutin; Jean-Baptiste Meynard; Annick Keundjian; Serge Ryfer; Luciano Giurato; Dominique Baudon

The resistance of Plasmodium falciparum to the chloroquine–proguanil association (C/P) as antimalarial chemoprophylaxis is becoming increasingly common in Africa. Daily oral doxycycline hyclate 100 mg is effective as malaria prophylaxis. But the hyclate salts adverse effects combined with the capsules galenic form are incompatible with good chemoprophylaxis compliance. We conducted a randomized group study of 522 French soldiers deployed in Gabon and Chad for 4 months to determine the tolerability of short‐term malaria chemoprophylaxis with a 100‐mg daily tablet of a monohydrate doxycycline salt compared with a daily C/P capsule. At days 7 and 120, compliance was better in the doxycycline group [respectively 98.5%vs. 73.9% (P < 0.001) and 90.5%vs. 74% (P < 0.001)]. No major event (evacuation, hospitalization) was related to the medications. Epigastralgia, diarrhoea, urticaria, mouth ulcers, sun sensitization and desquamation were significantly more frequent in the C/P group (P < 0.05). There was no statistical difference for malaria incidence, vertigo, nausea and hair loss. These results suggest that doxycycline monohydrate may be safely used in short‐term malaria chemoprophylaxis. With the same efficacy as a hyclate doxycycline, doxycycline monohydrate could be a good chemoprophylaxis for short‐term travellers at particular risk of C/P resistant P. falciparum malaria.


BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2008

Value of syndromic surveillance within the Armed Forces for early warning during a dengue fever outbreak in French Guiana in 2006.

Jean-Baptiste Meynard; Hervé Chaudet; Gaëtan Texier; Vanessa Ardillon; Françoise Ravachol; X. Deparis; Henry Jefferson; Philippe Dussart; Jacques Morvan; Jean-Paul Boutin

BackgroundA dengue fever outbreak occured in French Guiana in 2006. The objectives were to study the value of a syndromic surveillance system set up within the armed forces, compared to the traditional clinical surveillance system during this outbreak, to highlight issues involved in comparing military and civilian surveillance systems and to discuss the interest of syndromic surveillance for public health response.MethodsMilitary syndromic surveillance allows the surveillance of suspected dengue fever cases among the 3,000 armed forces personnel. Within the same population, clinical surveillance uses several definition criteria for dengue fever cases, depending on the epidemiological situation. Civilian laboratory surveillance allows the surveillance of biologically confirmed cases, within the 200,000 inhabitants.ResultsIt was shown that syndromic surveillance detected the dengue fever outbreak several weeks before clinical surveillance, allowing quick and effective enhancement of vector control within the armed forces. Syndromic surveillance was also found to have detected the outbreak before civilian laboratory surveillance.ConclusionMilitary syndromic surveillance allowed an early warning for this outbreak to be issued, enabling a quicker public health response by the armed forces. Civilian surveillance system has since introduced syndromic surveillance as part of its surveillance strategy. This should enable quicker public health responses in the future.


BMC Public Health | 2008

Proposal of a framework for evaluating military surveillance systems for early detection of outbreaks on duty areas

Jean-Baptiste Meynard; Hervé Chaudet; Andrew Green; Henry Jefferson; Gaëtan Texier; Daniel Webber; Bruce Dupuy; Jean-Paul Boutin

BackgroundIn recent years a wide variety of epidemiological surveillance systems have been developed to provide early identification of outbreaks of infectious disease. Each system has had its own strengths and weaknesses. In 2002 a Working Group of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) produced a framework for evaluation, which proved suitable for many public health surveillance systems. However this did not easily adapt to the military setting, where by necessity a variety of different parameters are assessed, different constraints placed on the systems, and different objectives required. This paper describes a proposed framework for evaluation of military syndromic surveillance systems designed to detect outbreaks of disease on operational deployments.MethodsThe new framework described in this paper was developed from the cumulative experience of British and French military syndromic surveillance systems. The methods included a general assessment framework (CDC), followed by more specific methods of conducting evaluation. These included Knowledge/Attitude/Practice surveys (KAP surveys), technical audits, ergonomic studies, simulations and multi-national exercises. A variety of military constraints required integration into the evaluation. Examples of these include the variability of geographical conditions in the field, deployment to areas without prior knowledge of naturally-occurring disease patterns, the differences in field sanitation between locations and over the length of deployment, the mobility of military forces, turnover of personnel, continuity of surveillance across different locations, integration with surveillance systems from other nations working alongside each other, compatibility with non-medical information systems, and security.ResultsA framework for evaluation has been developed that can be used for military surveillance systems in a staged manner consisting of initial, intermediate and final evaluations. For each stage of the process parameters for assessment have been defined and methods identified.ConclusionThe combined experiences of French and British syndromic surveillance systems developed for use in deployed military forces has allowed the development of a specific evaluation framework. The tool is suitable for use by all nations who wish to evaluate syndromic surveillance in their own military forces. It could also be useful for civilian mobile systems or for national security surveillance systems.


Journal of Addictive Diseases | 2010

Survey of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Cannabis Use in the French Army

Catherine Marimoutou; Benjamin Queyriaux; Rémy Michel; Catherine Verret; R. Haus-Cheymol; Aurélie Mayet; X. Deparis; Jean-Paul Boutin

ABSTRACT The aim of the current study is to describe the consumption rate of alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis in the French Army. A cross-sectional two strata randomized survey was performed between October 2006 and March 2007 using self-report questionnaires (n = 990) to collect individual characteristics, consumption, and addictive behaviors with urinal tests for cannabis (n = 985). The surveyed sample comprised 59% privates, 26% non-commissioned officers, and 6% officers, was predominantly male (89%) and young (median age: 29 years), and had a low level of education (60% attended secondary school). The consumption rate was high: 54.1% were active tobacco smokers, 56.0% were heavy drinkers, 20.5% declared drunkenness more than once per month, 52.6% at least experienced cannabis while 12.3% were occasional users, 8.2% were regular users, and 15.0% displayed multi-risk behaviors. Consumption was higher in the younger age (18 to 25 years) and lower educational group, leading to a high prevalence among privates and suggesting an “army effect.” However, large scale behavioral social studies may help distinguish between personal and peer effect among the targeted population.


Journal of Travel Medicine | 2008

Remote Sensing and Malaria Risk for Military Personnel in Africa

Vanessa Machault; Eve Orlandi-Pradines; Rémy Michel; Frédéric Pagès; Gaëtan Texier; Bruno Pradines; Thierry Fusai; Jean-Paul Boutin; Christophe Rogier

BACKGROUND Nonimmune travelers in malaria-endemic areas are exposed to transmission and may experience clinical malaria attacks during or after their travel despite using antivectorial devices or chemoprophylaxis. Environment plays an essential role in the epidemiology of this disease. Remote-sensed environmental information had not yet been tested as an indicator of malaria risk among nonimmune travelers. METHODS A total of 1,189 personnel from 10 French military companies traveling for a short-duration mission (about 4 mo) in sub-Saharan Africa from February 2004 to February 2006 were enrolled in a prospective longitudinal cohort study. Incidence rate of clinical malaria attacks occurring during or after the mission was analyzed according to individual characteristics, compliance with antimalaria prophylactic measures, and environmental information obtained from earth observation satellites for all the locations visited during the missions. RESULTS Age, the lack of compliance with the chemoprophylaxis, and staying in areas with an average Normalized Difference Vegetation Index higher than 0.35 were risk factors for clinical malaria. CONCLUSIONS Remotely sensed environmental data can provide important planning information on the likely level of malaria risk among nonimmune travelers who could be briefly exposed to malaria transmission and could be used to standardize for the risk of malaria transmission when evaluating the efficacy of antimalaria prophylactic measures.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2011

Plasmodium vivax Malaria among Military Personnel, French Guiana, 1998–2008

Benjamin Queyriaux; Gaëtan Texier; Lénaïck Ollivier; Laurent Galoisy-Guibal; Rémy Michel; Jean-Baptiste Meynard; C. Decam; Catherine Verret; Vincent Pommier de Santi; André Spiegel; Jean-Paul Boutin; René Migliani; Xavier Deparis

We obtained health surveillance epidemiologic data on malaria among French military personnel deployed to French Guiana during 1998–2008. Incidence of Plasmodium vivax malaria increased and that of P. falciparum remained stable. This new epidemiologic situation has led to modification of malaria treatment for deployed military personnel.


Malaria Journal | 2013

Environmental determinant of malaria cases among travellers

Gaëtan Texier; Vanessa Machault; Meili Barragti; Jean-Paul Boutin; Christophe Rogier

BackgroundApproximately 125 million travellers visit malaria-endemic countries annually and about 10,000 cases of malaria are reported after returning home. Due to the fact that malaria is insect vector transmitted, the environment is a key determinant of the spread of infection. Geo-climatic factors (such as temperature, moisture, water quality) determine the presence of Anopheles breeding sites, vector densities, adult mosquito survival rate, longevity and vector capacity. Several studies have shown the association between environmental factors and malaria incidence in autochthonous population. The association between the incidence of clinical malaria cases among non-immune travellers and environmental factors is yet to be evaluated. The objective of the present study was to identify, at a country scale (Ivory Coast), the environmental factors that are associated with clinical malaria among non-immune travellers, opening the way for a remote sensing-based counselling for malaria risk prevention among travellers.MethodsThe study sample consisted in 87 cohorts, including 4,531 French soldiers who travelled to Ivory Coast, during approximately four months, between September 2002 and December 2006. Their daily locations were recorded during the entire trip. The association between the incidence of clinical malaria and other factors (including individual, collective and environmental factors evaluated by remote sensing methods) was analysed in a random effect mixed Poisson regression model to take into account the sampling design.ResultsOne hundred and forty clinical malaria cases were recorded during 572,363 person-days of survey, corresponding to an incidence density of 7.4 clinical malaria episodes per 1,000 person-months under survey. The risk of clinical malaria was significantly associated with the cumulative time spent in areas with NDVI > 0.35 (RR = 2,42), a mean temperature higher than 27°C (RR = 2,4), a longer period of dryness during the preceding month (RR = 0,275) and the cumulative time spent in urban areas (RR = 0,52).ConclusionsThe present results suggest that remotely-sensed environmental data could be used as good predictors of the risk of clinical malaria among vulnerable individuals travelling through African endemic areas.

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Gaëtan Texier

Aix-Marseille University

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Rémy Michel

Ministère de la Défense

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Rémy Michel

Ministère de la Défense

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Hervé Chaudet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Catherine Verret

École Normale Supérieure

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