Khem Bahadur Karki
Kathmandu
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Publication
Featured researches published by Khem Bahadur Karki.
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2015
Dhirendra N Sinha; Sa Rizwan; Krishna Kumar Aryal; Khem Bahadur Karki; M. Mostafa Zaman; Prakash C. Gupta
BACKGROUND Smokeless tobacco (SLT) has long been realized as an important component of the fight for global tobacco control. It still remains a major problem in countries like India, Bangladesh and Nepal. The objective of this study was to estimate the trends of SLT use in three countries of the SEARO WHO office. MATERIALS AND METHODS We used data from national surveys in three countries (Bangladesh, India and Nepal) to estimate trends in prevalence of current SLT use. All available nationally representative data sources were used. Estimates were weighted, age standardized and given along with 95% confidence intervals. Significance of linear trend in prevalence over time was tested using the Cochrane-Armitage test for trend. A p value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS We identified three surveys for Bangladesh, three for India and four for Nepal that met the selection criteria (such as Demographic and Health Surveys, WHO-STEPwise approach to Surveillance and Global Adult Tobacco Surveys). A significantly increasing trend was noticed in the prevalence of current SLT use among Bangladeshi men (20.2% to 23%, p=0.03). In India, a similar significantly increasing trend was seen among men (27.1% to 33.4%, p<0.001) and women (10.1% to 15.7%, p<0.001). In Nepal, there was a no significant trend among both men (39.1% to 31.6%, p=0.11) and women (5.6% to 4.7%, p=0.49). CONCLUSIONS In the study countries SLT use has remained at alarmingly high levels. Usage trends do not show any signs of decline in spite of control efforts. Tobacco control measures should focus more on controlling SLT use.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Meghnath Dhimal; Khem Bahadur Karki; Krishna Kumar Aryal; Bimala Dhimal; Hari Datt Joshi; Sajan Puri; Achyut Raj Pandey; Purushotam Dhakal; Arun K. Sharma; Ganendra Bhakta Raya; Imran Ansari; David A. Groneberg; Ruth Müller; Ulrich Kuch
Young children are at greatest risk of exposure to lead and its effects. Although lead is one of the most widely used elements with known health hazard, there is little data on the blood lead level (BLL) of children in the Kathmandu Valley. Thus, this study aimed to assess factors associated with high BLL in children who were 6–36 months of age and resided in the Kathmandu Valley. In this hospital-based cross-sectional study 6–36 month-old children visiting the Paediatrics Outpatient Department of Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, Patan Hospital, and Siddhi Memorial Hospital were enrolled. All three hospitals are located in different areas inside the Kathmandu Valley. Written informed consent was obtained from the parents, and exposure data were collected using a structured questionnaire. Portable Anodic Stripping Voltammetry (ASV) was used to determine BLLs in children. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 16. Of 312 children enrolled in the study, 64.4% had BLLs ≥5μg/dl. A significant association was found between BLL and exposure to enamel paints in the household in the form of painting materials used in different parts of the house like walls, windows and doors (p = 0.001). Furthermore, multivariate analyses showed that BLLs were 4.5 times higher in children playing with dirt and dust (p = 0.006) and that children belonging to the community of lower caste/ethnicity groups had significantly higher BLLs compared to those from the upper caste groups (p = 0.02). Our study demonstrated that children living in households that have used enamel paints, children belonging to lower caste/ethnic groups, and children frequently playing with dirt and dust had significantly higher BLLs. The results of this study highlight the importance of policy decisions to limit environmental lead contamination, and to roll out awareness building measures designed to limit lead exposure and break the poverty cycle associated with chronic lead poisoning.
Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2017
Rizwan Abdulkader Suliankatchi; Dhirendra N Sinha; Ramashankar Rath; Krishna Kumar Aryal; M. Mostafa Zaman; Prakash C. Gupta; Khem Bahadur Karki; Deneshkumar Venugopal
Background The sustained anti-tobacco campaign initiated in response to the mounting evidence against tobacco smoking has driven tobacco companies and smokers to look for alternative choices, such as smokeless tobacco (SLT) products. If this strategy advances, it could undermine several gains made by the campaign over the years. Our objective was to examine the trends in the prevalence of different tobacco types in three countries (Bangladesh, India, and Nepal) of South-East Asia. Methods Data from national surveys were used to estimate the trends of weighted and age-standardized prevalence (along with 95% CI) of different tobacco products. The share of each tobacco type was then calculated as a percentage of total tobacco use for each time point and country. Results In all the three countries, smoking prevalence declined (by 6% in Bangladesh, 3% in India, and 7% in Nepal) but SLT use increased (by 3% in Bangladesh, 6% in India, and 4% in Nepal) over the study period. SLT use increased irrespective of whether the total tobacco use increased or decreased. The share of SLT as a percentage of total tobacco use increased from 15% to 19% among Bangladeshi men, from 46% to 61% in India, and from 29% to 41% in Nepal. Conclusions In South-East Asia, a clear shift in the product preference from smoking to SLT was noted. Misleading advertising by tobacco companies may be responsible for the increase in the SLT prevalence, which is as harmful as smoking. Countries should strengthen policies to restrict SLT usage and prevent the rise of its use. Implications It has been documented that the smoking prevalence has been declining in most countries of the South-East Asia region where effective anti-tobacco laws have been implemented. But, due to a number of factors, the prevalence of smokeless tobacco has been increasing steadily, making the entire anti-tobacco movement less effective in terms of reducing the tobacco-attributable disease burden. In this context, this study has provided a detailed comparative analysis of the prevalence of smokeless tobacco use and smoking in three countries of the SEAR where such data were available. It can be clearly seen that the preference for smoking has shifted towards the smokeless tobacco in all the three study countries. This study recommends that tobacco control interventions should be aligned with the changing dynamics of the tobacco epidemic, and the need of the hour is placing restrictions of smokeless tobacco use so as to drive forward the gains of the anti-tobacco movement.
Global Health Action | 2017
David Citrin; Stephen Mehanni; Bibhav Acharya; Lena Wong; Isha Nirola; Rekha Sherchan; Bikash Gauchan; Khem Bahadur Karki; Dipendra Raman Singh; Sriram Shamasunder; Phuoc V. Le; Dan Schwarz; Ryan Schwarz; Binod Dangal; Santosh Kumar Dhungana; Sheela Maru; Ramesh Mahar; Poshan Thapa; Anant Raut; Mukesh Adhikari; Indira Basnett; Shankar Prasad Kaluanee; Grace Deukmedjian; Scott Halliday; Duncan Smith-Rohrberg Maru
ABSTRACT Background: Global health academic partnerships are centered around a core tension: they often mirror or reproduce the very cross-national inequities they seek to alleviate. On the one hand, they risk worsening power dynamics that perpetuate health disparities; on the other, they form an essential response to the need for healthcare resources to reach marginalized populations across the globe. Objectives: This study characterizes the broader landscape of global health academic partnerships, including challenges to developing ethical, equitable, and sustainable models. It then lays out guiding principles of the specific partnership approach, and considers how lessons learned might be applied in other resource-limited settings. Methods: The experience of a partnership between the Ministry of Health in Nepal, the non-profit healthcare provider Possible, and the Health Equity Action and Leadership Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine was reviewed. The quality and effectiveness of the partnership was assessed using the Tropical Health and Education Trust Principles of Partnership framework. Results: Various strategies can be taken by partnerships to better align the perspectives of patients and public sector providers with those of expatriate physicians. Actions can also be taken to bring greater equity to the wealth and power gaps inherent within global health academic partnerships. Conclusions: This study provides recommendations gleaned from the analysis, with an aim towards both future refinement of the partnership and broader applications of its lessons and principles. It specifically highlights the importance of targeted engagements with academic medical centers and the need for efficient organizational work-flow practices. It considers how to both prioritize national and host institution goals, and meet the career development needs of global health clinicians.
Infectious Diseases of Poverty | 2018
Meghnath Dhimal; Sushma Dahal; Mandira Lamichhane Dhimal; Shiva Raj Mishra; Khem Bahadur Karki; Krishna Kumar Aryal; Ubydul Haque; Iqbal Kabir; Pradeep Guin; Azeem Mehmood Butt; Harapan Harapan; Qiyong Liu; Cordia Ming-Yeuk Chu; Doreen Montag; David A. Groneberg; Basu Dev Pandey; Ulrich Kuch; Ruth Müller
Asia and its Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) region is particularly vulnerable to environmental change, especially climate and land use changes further influenced by rapid population growth, high level of poverty and unsustainable development. Asia has been a hotspot of dengue fever and chikungunya mainly due to its dense human population, unplanned urbanization and poverty. In an urban cycle, dengue virus (DENV) and chikungunya virus (CHIKV) are transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus mosquitoes which are also competent vectors of Zika virus (ZIKV). Over the last decade, DENV and CHIKV transmissions by Ae. aegypti have extended to the Himalayan countries of Bhutan and Nepal and ZIKV could follow in the footsteps of these viruses in the HKH region. The already established distribution of human-biting Aedes mosquito vectors and a naïve population with lack of immunity against ZIKV places the HKH region at a higher risk of ZIKV. Some of the countries in the HKH region have already reported ZIKV cases. We have documented an increasing threat of ZIKV in Asia and its HKH region because of the high abundance and wide distribution of human-biting mosquito vectors, climate change, poverty, report of indigenous cases in the region, increasing numbers of imported cases and a naïve population with lack of immunity against ZIKV. An outbreak anywhere is potentially a threat everywhere. Therefore, in order to ensure international health security, all efforts to prevent, detect, and respond to ZIKV ought to be intensified now in Asia and its HKH region. To prepare for possible ZIKV outbreaks, Asia and the HKH region can also learn from the success stories and strategies adopted by other regions and countries in preventing ZIKV and associated complications. The future control strategies for DENV, CHIKV and ZIKV should be considered in tandem with the threat to human well-being that is posed by other emerging and re-emerging vector-borne and zoonotic diseases, and by the continuing urgent need to strengthen public primary healthcare systems in the region.
Healthcare | 2018
David Citrin; Poshan Thapa; Isha Nirola; Sachit Pandey; Lal Bahadur Kunwar; Jasmine Tenpa; Bibhav Acharya; Hari Rayamazi; Aradhana Thapa; Sheela Maru; Anant Raut; Sanjaya Poudel; Diwash Timilsina; Santosh Kumar Dhungana; Mukesh Adhikari; Mukti Nath Khanal; Naresh Pratap Kc; Bhim Acharya; Khem Bahadur Karki; Dipendra Raman Singh; Alex Harsha Bangura; Jeremy Wacksman; Daniel Storisteanu; Scott Halliday; Ryan Schwarz; Dan Schwarz; Nandini Choudhury; Anirudh Kumar; Wan-Ju Wu; S.P. Kalaunee
Integrating care at the home and facility level is a critical yet neglected function of healthcare delivery systems. There are few examples in practice or in the academic literature of affordable, digitally-enabled integrated care approaches embedded within healthcare delivery systems in low- and middle-income countries. Simultaneous advances in affordable digital technologies and community healthcare workers offer an opportunity to address this challenge. We describe the development of an integrated care system involving community healthcare worker networks that utilize a home-to-facility electronic health record platform for rural municipalities in Nepal. Key aspects of our approach of relevance to a global audience include: community healthcare workers continuously engaging with populations through household visits every three months; community healthcare workers using digital tools during the routine course of clinical care; individual and population-level data generated routinely being utilized for program improvement; and being responsive to privacy, security, and human rights concerns. We discuss implementation, lessons learned, challenges, and opportunities for future directions in integrated care delivery systems.
Journal of Nepal Health Research Council | 2016
P Gyanwali; B R Humagain; K K Aryal; A Pandit; T Acharya; Bihungum Bista; Meghnath Dhimal; Khem Bahadur Karki
BMC Oral Health | 2016
P Thapa; Krishna Kumar Aryal; Suresh Mehata; Abhinav Vaidya; Bijay Kumar Jha; Meghnath Dhimal; Shaili Pradhan; Purushottam Dhakal; Arpana Pandit; Achyut Raj Pandey; Bihungum Bista; Ava Upadhyay Pokhrel; Khem Bahadur Karki
Journal of Nepal Health Research Council | 2015
Achyut Raj Pandey; Khem Bahadur Karki; Suresh Mehata; K K Aryal; P Thapa; A Pandit; Bihungum Bista; P Dhakal; Meghnath Dhimal
Journal of Nepal Health Research Council | 2015
K K Aryal; P Thapa; Suresh Mehata; Abhinav Vaidya; Achyut Raj Pandey; Bihungum Bista; A Pandit; P Dhakal; Meghnath Dhimal; Khem Bahadur Karki