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Featured researches published by Joanna Schellenberg.


The Lancet | 2003

Applying an equity lens to child health and mortality: more of the same is not enough

Cesar G. Victora; Adam Wagstaff; Joanna Schellenberg; Davidson R. Gwatkin; Mariam Claeson; Jean-Pierre Habicht

Gaps in child mortality between rich and poor countries are unacceptably wide and in some areas are becoming wider, as are the gaps between wealthy and poor children within most countries. Poor children are more likely than their better-off peers to be exposed to health risks, and they have less resistance to disease because of undernutrition and other hazards typical in poor communities. These inequities are compounded by reduced access to preventive and curative interventions. Even public subsidies for health frequently benefit rich people more than poor people. Experience and evidence about how to reach poor populations are growing, albeit largely through small-scale case studies. Successful approaches include those that improve geographic access to health interventions in poor communities, subsidized health care and health inputs, and social marketing. Targeting of health interventions to poor people and ensuring universal coverage are promising approaches for improvement of equity, but both have limitations that necessitate planning for child survival and effective delivery at national level and below. Regular monitoring of inequities and use of the resulting information for education, advocacy, and increased accountability among the general public and decision makers is urgently needed, but will not be sufficient. Equity must be a priority in the design of child survival interventions and delivery strategies, and mechanisms to ensure accountability at national and international levels must be developed.


The Lancet | 2001

Effect of large-scale social marketing of insecticide-treated nets on child survival in rural Tanzania.

Joanna Schellenberg; Salim Abdulla; Rose Nathan; Oscar Mukasa; Tanya Marchant; Nassor Kikumbih; Adiel K Mushi; Haji Mponda; Happiness Minja; Hassan Mshinda; Marcel Tanner; Christian Lengeler

BACKGROUND Insecticide-treated nets have proven efficacy as a malaria-control tool in Africa. However, the transition from efficacy to effectiveness cannot be taken for granted. We assessed coverage and the effect on child survival of a large-scale social marketing programme for insecticide-treated nets in two rural districts of southern Tanzania with high perennial malaria transmission. METHODS Socially marketed insecticide-treated nets were introduced step-wise over a 2-year period from May, 1997, in a population of 480000 people. Cross-sectional coverage surveys were done at baseline and after 1, 2, and 3 years. A demographic surveillance system (DSS) was set up in an area of 60000 people to record population, births, and deaths. Within the DSS area, the effect of insecticide-treated nets on child survival was assessed by a case-control approach. Cases were deaths in children aged between 1 month and 4 years. Four controls for each case were chosen from the DSS database. Use of insecticide-treated nets and potential confounding factors were assessed by questionnaire. Individual effectiveness estimates from the case-control study were combined with coverage to estimate community effectiveness. FINDINGS Insecticide-treated net coverage of infants in the DSS area rose from less than 10% at baseline to more than 50% 3 years later. Insecticide-treated nets were associated with a 27% increase in survival in children aged 1 month to 4 years (95% CI 3-45). Coverage in such children was higher in areas with longer access to the programme. The modest average coverage achieved by 1999 in the two districts (18% in children younger than 5 years) suggests that insecticide-treated nets prevented 1 in 20 child deaths at that time. INTERPRETATION Social marketing of insecticide-treated nets has great potential for effective malaria control in rural African settings.


The Lancet | 2004

Effectiveness and cost of facility-based Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) in Tanzania

Joanna Schellenberg; Taghreed Adam; Hassan Mshinda; Honorati Masanja; Gregory S Kabadi; Oscar Mukasa; Theopista John; Sosthenes Charles; Rose Nathan; Katarzyna Wilczynska; Leslie Mgalula; Conrad Mbuya; Robert Mswia; Fatuma Manzi; Don de Savigny; David Schellenberg; Cesar G. Victora

BACKGROUND The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy is designed to address major causes of child mortality at the levels of community, health facility, and health system. We assessed the effectiveness of facility-based IMCI in rural Tanzania. METHODS We compared two districts with facility-based IMCI and two neighbouring comparison districts without IMCI, from 1997 to 2002, in a non-randomised study. We assessed quality of case-management for childrens illness, drug and vaccine availability, and supervision involving case-management, through a health-facility survey in 2000. Household surveys were used to assess child-health indicators in 1999 and 2002. Survival of children was tracked through demographic surveillance over a predefined 2-year period from mid 2000. Further information on contextual factors was gathered through interviews and record review. The economic cost of health care for children in IMCI and comparison districts was estimated through interviews and record review at national, district, facility, and household levels. FINDINGS During the IMCI phase-in period, mortality rates in children under 5 years old were almost identical in IMCI and comparison districts. Over the next 2 years, the mortality rate was 13% lower in IMCI than in comparison districts (95% CI -7 to 30 or 5 to 21, depending on how adjustment is made for district-level clustering), with a rate difference of 3.8 fewer deaths per 1000 child-years. Contextual factors, such as use of mosquito nets, all favoured the comparison districts. Costs of childrens health care with IMCI were similar to or lower than those for case-management without IMCI. INTERPRETATION Our findings indicate that facility-based IMCI is good value for money, and support widespread implementation in the context of health-sector reform, basket funding, good facility access, and high utilisation of health facilities.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2007

Factors affecting home delivery in rural Tanzania

Mwifadhi Mrisho; Joanna Schellenberg; Adiel K Mushi; Brigit Obrist; Hassan Mshinda; Marcel Tanner; David Schellenberg

Background  Studies of factors affecting place of delivery have rarely considered the influence of gender roles and relations within the household. This study combines an understanding of gender issues relating to health and help‐seeking behaviour with epidemiological knowledge concerning place of delivery.


The Lancet | 2009

Effect of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy on childhood mortality and nutrition in a rural area in Bangladesh: a cluster randomised trial

Shams El Arifeen; D. M. Emdadul Hoque; Tasnima Akter; Muntasirur Rahman; Mohammad Enamul Hoque; Khadija Begum; Enayet Karim Chowdhury; Rasheda Khan; Lauren S. Blum; Shakil Ahmed; M. Altaf Hossain; Ashraf Siddik; Nazma Begum; Qazi Sadeq-ur Rahman; Twaha Mansurun Haque; Sk Masum Billah; M. Mainul Islam; Reza Ali Rumi; Erin Law; Za Motin Al-Helal; Abdullah H. Baqui; Joanna Schellenberg; Taghreed Adam; Lawrence H. Moulton; Jean Pierre Habicht; Robert Scherpbier; Cesar G. Victora; Jennifer Bryce; Robert E. Black

BACKGROUND WHO and UNICEF launched the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy in the mid-1990s to reduce deaths from diarrhoea, pneumonia, malaria, measles, and malnutrition in children younger than 5 years. We assessed the effect of IMCI on health and nutrition of children younger than 5 years in Bangladesh. METHODS In this cluster randomised trial, 20 first-level government health facilities in the Matlab subdistrict of Bangladesh and their catchment areas (total population about 350 000) were paired and randomly assigned to either IMCI (intervention; ten clusters) or usual services (comparison; ten clusters). All three components of IMCI-health-worker training, health-systems improvements, and family and community activities-were implemented beginning in February, 2002. Assessment included household and health facility surveys tracking intermediate outputs and outcomes, and nutrition and mortality changes in intervention and comparison areas. Primary endpoint was mortality in children aged between 7 days and 59 months. Analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered, number ISRCTN52793850. FINDINGS The yearly rate of mortality reduction in children younger than 5 years (excluding deaths in first week of life) was similar in IMCI and comparison areas (8.6%vs 7.8%). In the last 2 years of the study, the mortality rate was 13.4% lower in IMCI than in comparison areas (95% CI -14.2 to 34.3), corresponding to 4.2 fewer deaths per 1000 livebirths (95% CI -4.1 to 12.4; p=0.30). Implementation of IMCI led to improved health-worker skills, health-system support, and family and community practices, translating into increased care-seeking for illnesses. In IMCI areas, more children younger than 6 months were exclusively breastfed (76%vs 65%, difference of differences 10.1%, 95% CI 2.65-17.62), and prevalence of stunting in children aged 24-59 months decreased more rapidly (difference of differences -7.33, 95% CI -13.83 to -0.83) than in comparison areas. INTERPRETATION IMCI was associated with positive changes in all input, output, and outcome indicators, including increased exclusive breastfeeding and decreased stunting. However, IMCI implementation had no effect on mortality within the timeframe of the assessment. FUNDING Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, WHOs Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, and US Agency for International Development.


BMJ | 2001

Impact on malaria morbidity of a programme supplying insecticide treated nets in children aged under 2 years in Tanzania: community cross sectional study

Salim Abdulla; Joanna Schellenberg; Rose Nathan; Oscar Mukasa; Tanya Marchant; Thomas Smith; Marcel Tanner; Christian Lengeler

Abstract Objective: To assess the impact of a social marketing programme for distributing nets treated with insecticide on malarial parasitaemia and anaemia in very young children in an area of high malaria transmission. Design: Community cross sectional study. Annual, cross sectional data were collected at the beginning of the social marketing campaign (1997) and the subsequent two years. Net ownership and other risk and confounding factors were assessed with a questionnaire. Blood samples were taken from the children to assess prevalence of parasitaemia and haemoglobin levels. Setting: 18 villages in the Kilombero and Ulanga districts of southwestern Tanzania. Participants: A random sample of children aged under 2 years. Main outcome measures: The presence of any parasitaemia in the peripheral blood sample and the presence of anaemia (classified as a haemoglobin level of ≤80 g/l). Results: Ownership of nets increased rapidly (treated or not treated nets: from 58% to 83%; treated nets: from 10% to 61%). The mean haemoglobin level rose from 80 g/l to 89 g/l in the study children in the successive surveys. Overall, the prevalence of anaemia in the study population decreased from 49% to 26% in the two years studied. Treated nets had a protective efficacy of 62% (95% confidence interval 38% to 77%) on the prevalence of parasitaemia and of 63% (27% to 82%) on anaemia. Conclusions: These results show that nets treated with insecticide have a substantial impact on morbidity when distributed in a public health setting.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2009

The use of antenatal and postnatal care: perspectives and experiences of women and health care providers in rural southern Tanzania.

Mwifadhi Mrisho; Brigit Obrist; Joanna Schellenberg; Rachel A Haws; Adiel K Mushi; Hassan Mshinda; Marcel Tanner; David Schellenberg

BackgroundAlthough antenatal care coverage in Tanzania is high, worrying gaps exist in terms of its quality and ability to prevent, diagnose or treat complications. Moreover, much less is known about the utilisation of postnatal care, by which we mean the care of mother and baby that begins one hour after the delivery until six weeks after childbirth. We describe the perspectives and experiences of women and health care providers on the use of antenatal and postnatal services.MethodsFrom March 2007 to January 2008, we conducted in-depth interviews with health care providers and village based informants in 8 villages of Lindi Rural and Tandahimba districts in southern Tanzania. Eight focus group discussions were also conducted with women who had babies younger than one year and pregnant women. The discussion guide included information about timing of antenatal and postnatal services, perceptions of the rationale and importance of antenatal and postnatal care, barriers to utilisation and suggestions for improvement.ResultsWomen were generally positive about both antenatal and postnatal care. Among common reasons mentioned for late initiation of antenatal care was to avoid having to make several visits to the clinic. Other concerns included fear of encountering wild animals on the way to the clinic as well as lack of money. Fear of caesarean section was reported as a factor hindering intrapartum care-seeking from hospitals. Despite the perceived benefits of postnatal care for children, there was a total lack of postnatal care for the mothers. Shortages of staff, equipment and supplies were common complaints in the community.ConclusionEfforts to improve antenatal and postnatal care should focus on addressing geographical and economic access while striving to make services more culturally sensitive. Antenatal and postnatal care can offer important opportunities for linking the health system and the community by encouraging women to deliver with a skilled attendant. Addressing staff shortages through expanding training opportunities and incentives to health care providers and developing postnatal care guidelines are key steps to improve maternal and newborn health.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Age-Patterns of Malaria Vary with Severity, Transmission Intensity and Seasonality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review and Pooled Analysis

Ilona Carneiro; Arantxa Roca-Feltrer; Jamie T. Griffin; Lucy T Smith; Marcel Tanner; Joanna Schellenberg; Brian Greenwood; David Schellenberg

Background There is evidence that the age-pattern of Plasmodium falciparum malaria varies with transmission intensity. A better understanding of how this varies with the severity of outcome and across a range of transmission settings could enable locally appropriate targeting of interventions to those most at risk. We have, therefore, undertaken a pooled analysis of existing data from multiple sites to enable a comprehensive overview of the age-patterns of malaria outcomes under different epidemiological conditions in sub-Saharan Africa. Methodology/Principal Findings A systematic review using PubMed and CAB Abstracts (1980–2005), contacts with experts and searching bibliographies identified epidemiological studies with data on the age distribution of children with P. falciparum clinical malaria, hospital admissions with malaria and malaria-diagnosed mortality. Studies were allocated to a 3×2 matrix of intensity and seasonality of malaria transmission. Maximum likelihood methods were used to fit five continuous probability distributions to the percentage of each outcome by age for each of the six transmission scenarios. The best-fitting distributions are presented graphically, together with the estimated median age for each outcome. Clinical malaria incidence was relatively evenly distributed across the first 10 years of life for all transmission scenarios. Hospital admissions with malaria were more concentrated in younger children, with this effect being even more pronounced for malaria-diagnosed deaths. For all outcomes, the burden of malaria shifted towards younger ages with increasing transmission intensity, although marked seasonality moderated this effect. Conclusions The most severe consequences of P. falciparum malaria were concentrated in the youngest age groups across all settings. Despite recently observed declines in malaria transmission in several countries, which will shift the burden of malaria cases towards older children, it is still appropriate to target strategies for preventing malaria mortality and severe morbidity at very young children who will continue to bear the brunt of malaria deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa.


The Lancet | 2008

Child survival gains in Tanzania: Analysis of data from demographic and health surveys.

Honorati Masanja; Don de Savigny; Paul Smithson; Joanna Schellenberg; Theopista John; Conrad Mbuya; Gabriel Upunda; Ties Boerma; Cesar G. Victora; Thomas Smith; Hassan Mshinda

BACKGROUND A recent national survey in Tanzania reported that mortality in children younger than 5 years dropped by 24% over the 5 years between 2000 and 2004. We aimed to investigate yearly changes to identify what might have contributed to this reduction and to investigate the prospects for meeting the Millennium Development Goal for child survival (MDG 4). METHODS We analysed data from the four demographic and health surveys done in Tanzania since 1990 to generate estimates of mortality in children younger than 5 years for every 1-year period before each survey back to 1990. We estimated trends in mortality between 1990 and 2004 by fitting Lowess regression, and forecasted trends in mortality in 2005 to 2015. We aimed to investigate contextual factors, whether part of Tanzanias health system or not, that could have affected child mortality. FINDINGS Disaggregated estimates of mortality showed a sharp acceleration in the reduction in mortality in children younger than 5 years in Tanzania between 2000 and 2004. In 1990, the point estimate of mortality was 141.5 (95% CI 141.5-141.5) deaths per 1000 livebirths. This was reduced by 40%, to reach a point estimate of 83.2 (95% CI 70.1-96.3) deaths per 1000 livebirths in 2004. The change in absolute risk was 58.4 (95% CI 32.7-83.8; p<0.0001). Between 1999 and 2004 we noted important improvements in Tanzanias health system, including doubled public expenditure on health; decentralisation and sector-wide basket funding; and increased coverage of key child-survival interventions, such as integrated management of childhood illness, insecticide-treated nets, vitamin A supplementation, immunisation, and exclusive breastfeeding. Other determinants of child survival that are not related to the health system did not change between 1999 and 2004, except for a slow increase in the HIV/AIDS burden. INTERPRETATION Tanzania could attain MDG 4 if this trend of improved child survival were to be sustained. Investment in health systems and scaling up interventions can produce rapid gains in child survival.


The Lancet | 2005

Gaps in policy-relevant information on burden of disease in children: a systematic review

Igor Rudan; Joy E Lawn; Simon Cousens; Alexander K. Rowe; Cynthia Boschi-Pinto; Lana Tomaskovic; Walter Mendoza; Claudio F. Lanata; Arantxa Roca-Feltrer; Ilona Carneiro; Joanna Schellenberg; Ozren Polašek; Mareen Weber; Jennifer Bryce; Saul S. Morris; Robert E. Black; Harry Campbell

BACKGROUND Valid information about cause-specific child mortality and morbidity is an essential foundation for national and international health policy. We undertook a systematic review to investigate the geographical dispersion of and time trends in publication for policy-relevant information about childrens health and to assess associations between the availability of reliable data and poverty. METHODS We identified data available on Jan 1, 2001, and published since 1980, for the major causes of morbidity and mortality in young children. Studies with relevant data were assessed against a set of inclusion criteria to identify those likely to provide unbiased estimates of the burden of childhood disease in the community. FINDINGS Only 308 information units from more than 17,000 papers identified were regarded as possible unbiased sources for estimates of childhood disease burden. The geographical distribution of these information units revealed a pattern of small well-researched populations surrounded by large areas with little available information. No reliable population-based data were identified from many of the worlds poorest countries, which account for about a third of all deaths of children worldwide. The number of new studies diminished over the last 10 years investigated. INTERPRETATION The number of population-based studies yielding estimates of burden of childhood disease from less developed countries was low. The decreasing trend over time suggests reductions in research investment in this sphere. Data are especially sparse from the worlds least developed countries with the highest child mortality. Guidelines are needed for the conduct of burden-of-disease studies together with an international research policy that gives increased emphasis to global equity and coverage so that knowledge can be generated from all regions of the world.

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Bi Avan

University of London

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