Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Katharine D. Shelley is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Katharine D. Shelley.


Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2010

Elevated HIV Prevalence Despite Lower Rates of Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Black Men in the District of Columbia Who Have Sex with Men

Manya Magnus; Irene Kuo; Gregory Phillips; Katharine D. Shelley; Anthony Rawls; Luz Montanez; James Peterson; Shannon Hader; Alan E. Greenberg

The District of Columbia (DC) has among the highest HIV/AIDS rates in the United States, with 3.2% of the population and 7.1% of black men living with HIV/AIDS. The purpose of this study was to examine HIV risk behaviors in a community-based sample of men who have sex with men (MSM) in DC. Data were from the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance system. MSM who were 18 years were recruited via venue-based sampling between July 2008 and December 2008. Behavioral surveys and rapid oral HIV screening with OraQuick ADVANCE ½ (OraSure Technologies, Inc., Bethlehem, PA) with Western blot confirmation on positives were collected. Factors associated with HIV positivity and unprotected anal intercourse were identified. Of 500 MSM, 35.6% were black. Of all men, 14.1% were confirmed HIV positive; 41.8% of these were newly identified HIV positive. Black men (26.0%) were more likely to be HIV positive than white (7.9%) or Latino/Asian/other (6.5%) men (p<0.001). Black men had fewer male sex partners than non-black, fewer had ever engaged in intentional unprotected anal sex, and more used condoms at last anal sex. Black men were less likely to have health insurance, have been tested for HIV, and disclose MSM status to health care providers. Despite significantly higher HIV/AIDS rates, black MSM in DC reported fewer sexual risks than non-black. These findings suggest that among black MSM, the primary risk of HIV infection results from nontraditional sexual risk factors, and may include barriers to disclosing MSM status and HIV testing. There remains a critical need for more information regarding reasons for elevated HIV among black MSM in order to inform prevention programming.


AIDS | 2009

Risk factors driving the emergence of a generalized heterosexual HIV epidemic in Washington, District of Columbia networks at risk

Manya Magnus; Irene Kuo; Katharine D. Shelley; Anthony Rawls; James Peterson; Luz Montanez; Shannon Hader; Flora Hamilton; Alan E. Greenberg

Objectives:Washington, District of Columbia has the highest HIV/AIDS rate in the United States, with heterosexual transmission a leading mode of acquisition and African–American women disproportionately affected. The purpose of this study was to examine risk factors driving the emergence of the local epidemic using National HIV Behavioral Surveillance data from the District of Columbia. Design:The design of the study is cross-sectional. Methods:Individuals at high risk for HIV based on connection to areas with elevated AIDS and poverty were collected from December 2006 to October 2007. Analyses characterized participants from a respondent-driven, nonclinic-based sample; factors associated with preliminary HIV positivity were assessed with logistic regression. Results:Of 750 participants, 61.4% were more than 30 years of age, 92.3% African–American, and 60.0% with an annual household income of less than


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2012

Introduction of rapid syphilis testing within prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV programs in Uganda and Zambia: a field acceptability and feasibility study.

Susan Strasser; Edward Bitarakwate; Michelle M. Gill; Heather J. Hoffman; Othiniel Musana; Anne Phiri; Katharine D. Shelley; Tabitha Sripipatana; Alexander Tshaka Ncube; Namwinga Chintu

10 000; 5.2% (95% confidence interval, 2.9–7.2%) screened HIV positive; women were more likely to screen positive than men (6.3 versus 3.9%). Of those, 47.4% (95% confidence interval, 30.9–78.7%) did not know their status prior to the study. Last vaginal sex was unprotected for 71.2% of respondents; 44.9% reported concurrent sex partners, and 45.9% suspected concurrency in their partners. Correlates of screening HIV positive were identified. Conclusion:This study suggests that a generalized heterosexual HIV epidemic among African–Americans in communities at risk may be emerging in the nations capital alongside concentrated epidemics among men who have sex with men and injecting drug users. Innovation of prevention strategies is necessary in order to slow the epidemic in District of Columbia.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Introduction of Syphilis Point-of-Care Tests, from Pilot Study to National Programme Implementation in Zambia: A Qualitative Study of Healthcare Workers' Perspectives on Testing, Training and Quality Assurance.

Éimhín M. Ansbro; Michelle M. Gill; Joanna Reynolds; Katharine D. Shelley; Susan Strasser; Tabitha Sripipatana; Alexander Tshaka Ncube; Grace Tembo Mumba; Fern Terris-Prestholt; Rosanna W. Peeling; David Mabey

Background:Given that integration of syphilis testing into prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) programs can prevent adverse pregnancy outcomes, this study assessed feasibility and acceptability of introducing rapid syphilis testing (RST) into PMTCT services. Methods:RST was introduced into PMTCT programs in Zambia and Uganda. Using a pre–post intervention design, HIV and syphilis testing and treatment rates during the intervention were compared with baseline. Results:In Zambia, comparing baseline and intervention, 12,761 of 15,967 (79.9%) and 11,460 of 11,985 (95.6%) first-time antenatal care (ANC) attendees were tested for syphilis (P < 0.0001), 523 of 12,761 (4.1%) and 1050 of 11,460 (9.2%) women tested positive (P < 0.0001); and 267 of 523 (51.1%) and 1000 of 1050 (95.2%) syphilis-positive women were treated (P < 0.0001), respectively. Comparing baseline and intervention, 7479 of 7830 (95.5%) and 11,151 of 11,409 (97.7%) of ANC attendees were tested for HIV (P < 0.0001) and 1303 of 1326 (98.3%) and 2036 of 2034 (100.1%) of those testing positive received combination antiretroviral drugs or single-dose nevirapine prophylaxis (P < 0.0001). In Uganda, 13,131 of 14,540 (90.3%) women were tested for syphilis during intervention, with 690 of 13,131 (5.3%) positive and 715 of 690 (103.6%) treated. Syphilis baseline data were collected, but not included in analysis, as ANC syphilis testing before the study was not consistently practiced. Comparing baseline and intervention, 6479 of 6776 (95.6%) and 11,192 of 11,610 (96.4%) ANC attendees were tested for HIV (P = 0.0009) and 570 of 726 (78.5%) and 964 of 1153 (83.6%) received combination or single-dose prophylaxis (P = 0.007). In Zambia, 254 of 1050 (24.2%) syphilis-positive pregnant women were HIV-positive and 99 of 690 (14.3%) in Uganda. Conclusions:Integrating RST in PMTCT programs increases screening and treatment for syphilis among HIV-positive pregnant women and does not compromise HIV services.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2015

The cost-effectiveness of 10 antenatal syphilis screening and treatment approaches in Peru, Tanzania, and Zambia.

Fern Terris-Prestholt; Peter Vickerman; Sergio Torres-Rueda; Nancy Santesso; Sedona Sweeney; Patricia Mallma; Katharine D. Shelley; Patricia Garcia; Rachel N. Bronzan; Michelle M. Gill; Nathalie Broutet; Teodora Wi; Charlotte Watts; David Mabey; Rosanna W. Peeling; Lori M. Newman

Syphilis affects 1.4 million pregnant women globally each year. Maternal syphilis causes congenital syphilis in over half of affected pregnancies, leading to early foetal loss, pregnancy complications, stillbirth and neonatal death. Syphilis is under-diagnosed in pregnant women. Point-of-care rapid syphilis tests (RST) allow for same-day treatment and address logistical barriers to testing encountered with standard Rapid Plasma Reagin testing. Recent literature emphasises successful introduction of new health technologies requires healthcare worker (HCW) acceptance, effective training, quality monitoring and robust health systems. Following a successful pilot, the Zambian Ministry of Health (MoH) adopted RST into policy, integrating them into prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV clinics in four underserved Zambian districts. We compare HCW experiences, including challenges encountered in scaling up from a highly supported NGO-led pilot to a large-scale MoH-led national programme. Questionnaires were administered through structured interviews of 16 HCWs in two pilot districts and 24 HCWs in two different rollout districts. Supplementary data were gathered via stakeholder interviews, clinic registers and supervisory visits. Using a conceptual framework adapted from health technology literature, we explored RST acceptance and usability. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics. Key themes in qualitative data were explored using template analysis. Overall, HCWs accepted RST as learnable, suitable, effective tools to improve antenatal services, which were usable in diverse clinical settings. Changes in training, supervision and quality monitoring models between pilot and rollout may have influenced rollout HCW acceptance and compromised testing quality. While quality monitoring was integrated into national policy and training, implementation was limited during rollout despite financial support and mentorship. We illustrate that new health technology pilot research can rapidly translate into policy change and scale-up. However, training, supervision and quality assurance models should be reviewed and strengthened as rollout of the Zambian RST programme continues.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2013

Correlates of frequency of HIV testing among men who have sex with men in Washington, DC

Gregory Phillips; Manya Magnus; Irene Kuo; Katharine D. Shelley; Anthony Rawls; Yujiang Jia; Jenevieve Opoku; Alan E. Greenberg

Rapid plasma reagin (RPR) is frequently used to test women for maternal syphilis. Rapid syphilis immunochromatographic strip tests detecting only Treponema pallidum antibodies (single RSTs) or both treponemal and non‐treponemal antibodies (dual RSTs) are now available. This study assessed the cost‐effectiveness of algorithms using these tests to screen pregnant women.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Scaling Down to Scale Up: A Health Economic Analysis of Integrating Point-of-Care Syphilis Testing into Antenatal Care in Zambia during Pilot and National Rollout Implementation.

Katharine D. Shelley; Éimhín M. Ansbro; Alexander Tshaka Ncube; Sedona Sweeney; Colette Fleischer; Grace Tembo Mumba; Michelle M. Gill; Susan Strasser; Rosanna W. Peeling; Fern Terris-Prestholt

In Washington, DC, the leading mode of HIV transmission is through men who have sex with men (MSM) behavior. This study explored differences between frequent HIV testers (men testing at least twice a year) and annual or less frequent testers (men testing once a year or less) in DC. Nearly, one-third of MSM reported testing for HIV at least four times in the prior two years. In the multivariable model, frequent testers had significantly higher odds of being aged 18–34 (aOR =1.94), knowing their last partners HIV status (aOR=1.86), having 5+ partners in the last year (aOR=1.52), and having seen a health-care provider in the last year (aOR=2.28). Conversely, frequent testers had significantly lower odds of being newly HIV positive (aOR=0.27), and having a main partner at last sex (vs. casual/exchange partner; aOR=0.59). Medical providers need to be encouraged to consistently offer an HIV test to their patients, especially those who are sexually active and who have not tested recently.


The International Quarterly of Community Health Education | 2017

Community Involvement in Health Systems Strengthening to Improve Global Health Outcomes: A Review of Guidelines and Potential Roles

Emma Sacks; Robert Chad Swanson; Jean J. Schensul; Anna Gleave; Katharine D. Shelley; Miriam Were; A Mushtaque R Chowdhury; Karen LeBan; Henry Perry

Maternal syphilis results in an estimated 500,000 stillbirths and neonatal deaths annually in Sub-Saharan Africa. Despite the existence of national guidelines for antenatal syphilis screening, syphilis testing is often limited by inadequate laboratory and staff services. Recent availability of inexpensive rapid point-of-care syphilis tests (RST) can improve access to antenatal syphilis screening. A 2010 pilot in Zambia explored the feasibility of integrating RST within prevention of mother-to-child-transmission of HIV services. Following successful demonstration, the Zambian Ministry of Health adopted RSTs into national policy in 2011. Cost data from the pilot and 2012 preliminary national rollout were extracted from project records, antenatal registers, clinic staff interviews, and facility observations, with the aim of assessing the cost and quality implications of scaling up a successful pilot into a national rollout. Start-up, capital, and recurrent cost inputs were collected, including costs of extensive supervision and quality monitoring during the pilot. Costs were analysed from a provider’s perspective, incremental to existing antenatal services. Total and unit costs were calculated and a multivariate sensitivity analysis was performed. Our accompanying qualitative study by Ansbro et al. (2015) elucidated quality assurance and supervisory system challenges experienced during rollout, which helped explain key cost drivers. The average unit cost per woman screened during rollout (


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2012

Oral versus anal sex at last encounter – behavioral differences among men who have sex with men in the District of Columbia

Gregory Phillips; Manya Magnus; Irene Kuo; Katharine D. Shelley; Anthony Rawls; Alan E. Greenberg

11.16) was more than triple the pilot unit cost (


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2011

S4.2 Introduction of rapid syphilis testing strengthens health systems and health worker capacity to provide integrated PMTCT services

Susan Strasser; Namwinga Chintu; T Sripipatana; Katharine D. Shelley; O Musana; A Phiri; Alexander Tshaka Ncube; M Gill; Heather J. Hoffman; E Bitarakwate

3.19). While quality assurance costs were much lower during rollout, the increased unit costs can be attributed to several factors, including higher RST prices and lower RST coverage during rollout, which reduced economies of scale. Pilot and rollout cost drivers differed due to implementation decisions related to training, supervision, and quality assurance. This study explored the cost of integrating RST into antenatal care in pilot and national rollout settings, and highlighted important differences in costs that may be observed when moving from pilot to scale-up.

Collaboration


Dive into the Katharine D. Shelley's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan E. Greenberg

George Washington University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander Tshaka Ncube

Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anthony Rawls

George Washington University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irene Kuo

George Washington University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manya Magnus

George Washington University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michelle M. Gill

Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susan Strasser

Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge