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Dive into the research topics where Lisa L. Abuogi is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa L. Abuogi.


International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2013

Impact of expanded antiretroviral use on incidence and prevalence of tuberculosis in children with HIV in Kenya.

Lisa L. Abuogi; Christina Mwachari; Hannah H. Leslie; Starley B. Shade; Otieno J; Yienya N; Sanguli L; Amukoye E; Craig R. Cohen

SETTING Antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected children. Recent ART recommendations have increased the number of children on ART. OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence and incidence of TB in HIV-infected children after the implementation of expanded ART guidelines. DESIGN A prospective cohort study including HIV-infected children aged 6 weeks to 14 years was conducted in Kenya. The primary outcome measure was clinically diagnosed TB. Study participants were screened for prevalent TB at enrollment using Kenyas national guidelines and followed at monthly intervals to detect incident TB. Predictors of TB were assessed using logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards regression. RESULTS Of 689 participants (median age 6.4 years), 509 (73.9%) were on ART at baseline. There were 51 cases of prevalent TB (7.4%) and 10 incident cases, with over 720.3 child-years of observation (incidence 1.4 per 100 child-years). Months on ART (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.91, P = 0.003; aOR 0.91, P< 0.001) and months in care before ART (aHR 0.87, P= 0.001; aOR 0.92, P < 0.001) were protective against incident and prevalent TB. CONCLUSIONS ART was protective against TB in this cohort of HIV-infected children with high levels of ART use. Optimal TB prevention strategies should emphasize early ART in children.


Health Policy and Planning | 2016

Health facility challenges to the provision of Option B+ in western Kenya: a qualitative study

Anna Helova; Eliud Akama; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Pamela Musoke; Wafula Z. Nalwa; Thomas A. Odeny; Maricianah Onono; Sydney A. Spangler; Janet M. Turan; Iris Wanga; Lisa L. Abuogi

Current WHO guidelines recommend lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all HIV-positive individuals, including pregnant and breastfeeding women (Option B+) in settings with generalized HIV epidemics. While Option B+ is scaled-up in Kenya, insufficient adherence and retention to care could undermine the expected positive impact of Option B+. To explore challenges to the provision of Option B+ at the health facility level, we conducted forty individual gender-matched in-depth interviews with HIV-positive pregnant/postpartum women and their male partners, and four focus groups with thirty health care providers at four health facilities in western Kenya between September-November 2014. Transcripts were coded with the Dedoose software using a coding framework based on the literature, topics from interview guides, and emerging themes from transcripts. Excerpts from broad codes were then fine-coded using an inductive approach. Three major themes emerged: 1) Option B+ specific challenges (same-day initiation into treatment, health care providers unconvinced of the benefits of Option B+, insufficient training); 2) facility resource constraints (staff and drug shortages, long queues, space limitations); and 3) lack of client-friendly services (scolding of patients, inconvenient operating hours, lack of integration of services, administrative requirements). This study highlights important challenges at the health facility level related to Option B+ rollout in western Kenya. Addressing these specific challenges may increase linkage, retention and adherence to life-long ART treatment for pregnant HIV-positive women in Kenya, contribute towards elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission, and improve maternal and child outcomes.


Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2017

A Text Messaging Intervention to Support Option B+ in Kenya: A Qualitative Study

Pamela Musoke; C. Ann Gakumo; Lisa L. Abuogi; Eliud Akama; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Anna Helova; Wafula Z. Nalwa; Mariciannah Onono; Sydney A. Spangler; Iris Wanga; Janet M. Turan

&NA; Key challenges in providing lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) to pregnant and breastfeeding women (Option B+) in sub‐Saharan Africa include achieving long‐term adherence and retention in care. One intervention that may help address these challenges is mobile text messaging. We evaluated the acceptability of a text messaging intervention to support womens ART adherence and retention in care in rural western Kenya. Forty in‐depth interviews with 20 pregnant/postpartum women infected with HIV, their male partners, and four focus groups with 30 health care providers were conducted during September‐November 2014. Data were coded and analyzed using thematic analysis. Findings revealed the following themes: (a) overall acceptability of the text messaging intervention; (b) proposed content of text messages; (c) format, timing, and language of text messages; and (d) potential challenges of the text messaging intervention. Findings were used to refine a text messaging intervention being evaluated at Kenyan study sites rolling out Option B+.


Trials | 2018

Maximizing adherence and retention for women living with HIV and their infants in Kenya (MOTIVATE! study): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Thomas A. Odeny; Maricianah Onono; Kevin Owuor; Anna Helova; Iris Wanga; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Janet M. Turan; Lisa L. Abuogi

BackgroundSuccessful completion and retention throughout the multi-step cascade of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) remains difficult to achieve. The Mother and Infant Visit Adherence and Treatment Engagement study aims to evaluate the effect of mobile text messaging, community-based mentor mothers (cMMs), or both on increasing antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, retention in HIV care, maternal viral load suppression, and mother-to-child HIV transmission for mother-infant pairs receiving lifelong ART.Methods/designThis study is a cluster randomized, 2 × 2 factorial, controlled trial. The trial will be undertaken in the western Kenyan counties of Migori, Kisumu, and Homa Bay. Study sites will be randomized into one of four groups: six sites will implement both text messaging and cMM, six sites will implement cMM only, six sites will implement text messaging only, and six sites will implement the existing standard of care. The primary analysis will be based on the intention-to-treat principle and will compare maternal ART adherence and maternal retention in care.DiscussionThis study will determine the impact of long-term (up to 12 months postpartum) text messaging and cMMs on retention in and adherence to ART among pregnant and breastfeeding women living with HIV in Kenya. It will address key gaps in our understanding of what interventions may successfully promote long-term retention in the PMTCT cascade of care.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02491177. Registered on 11 March 2015.


International Journal of Std & Aids | 2017

Factors associated with mother to child transmission of HIV despite overall low transmission rates in HIV-exposed infants in rural Kenya

Nicollate A Okoko; Kevin Owuor; Jayne Lewis Kulzer; George Owino; Irene A Ogolla; Ronald W Wandera; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Craig R. Cohen; Lisa L. Abuogi

Despite the availability of efficacious prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) interventions and improved access to preventive services in many developing countries, vertical HIV transmission persists. A matched case–control study of HIV-exposed infants between January and June 2012 was conducted at 20 clinics in Kenya. Cases were HIV-infected infants and controls were exposed, uninfected infants. Conditional logistic regression analysis was conducted to determine characteristics associated with HIV infection. Forty-five cases and 45 controls were compared. Characteristics associated with HIV-infection included poor PMTCT service uptake such as late infant enrollment (odds ratio [OR]: 7.1, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.6–16.7) and poor adherence to infant prophylaxis (OR: 8.3, 95%CI: 3.2–21.4). Maternal characteristics associated with MTCT included lack of awareness of HIV status (OR: 5.6, 95%CI: 2.2–14.5), failure to access antiretroviral prophylaxis (OR: 22.2, 95%CI: 5.8–84.6), and poor adherence (OR: 8.1, 95%CI: 3.7–17.8). Lack of clinic-based HIV education (OR: 7.7, 95%CI: 2.0–25.0) and counseling (OR: 8.3, 95%CI: 2.2–33.3) were reported by mothers of cases. Poor uptake of PMTCT services and a reported absence of HIV education and counseling at the clinic were associated with MTCT. More emphasis on high-quality, comprehensive PMTCT service provision are urgently needed to minimize HIV transmission to children.


Culture, Health & Sexuality | 2018

From ‘half-dead’ to being ‘free’: resistance to HIV stigma, self-disclosure and support for PMTCT/HIV care among couples living with HIV in Kenya

Sydney A. Spangler; Lisa L. Abuogi; Eliud Akama; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Anna Helova; Pamela Musoke; Wafula Z. Nalwa; Thomas A. Odeny; Maricianah Onono; Iris Wanga; Janet M. Turan

Abstract In sub-Saharan Africa, self-disclosure of HIV-positive status may be a pivotal action for improving access to prevention of mother-to-child transmission services. However, understanding of HIV stigma and disclosure, and their effects on demand for care remains incomplete – particularly in the current context of new antiretroviral therapy guidelines. The purpose of this study was to explore these issues among self-disclosed couples living in southwest Kenya. We conducted 38 in-depth interviews with HIV-positive pregnant or postpartum women and their male partners. Of the 19 couples, 10 were HIV seroconcordant and 9 were serodiscordant. The textual analysis showed that HIV stigma continues to restrict full participation in community life and limit access to care by promoting fear, isolation and self-censorship. Against this backdrop, however, participants’ narratives revealed varying forms and degrees of resistance to HIV stigma, which appeared to both produce and emerge from acts of self-disclosure. Such disclosure enabled participants to overcome fears and gain critical support for engaging in HIV care while further resisting HIV stigma. These findings suggest that programme interventions designed explicitly to stimulate and support processes of HIV stigma resistance and safe self-disclosure may be key to improving demand for and retention in HIV services.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2018

Retention and viral suppression of newly diagnosed and known HIV positive pregnant women on Option B+ in Western Kenya

Eliud Akama; Abigail Nimz; Cinthia Blat; Michelle Moghadassi; Patrick Oyaro; May Maloba; Craig R. Cohen; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Lisa L. Abuogi

ABSTRACT Kenya introduced universal antiretroviral treatment (ART) for pregnant and breastfeeding women living with HIV (Option B+) in 2014. A retrospective study was conducted to review consecutive records for HIV positive pregnant women presenting for antenatal care (ANC) at five clinics in western Kenya. Known positive women (KP :HIV diagnosis prior to current pregnancy) were compared to newly positive (NP) women regarding virologic suppression and retention in care. Among 165 women included, 71 (43%) NP and 94 (57%) KP, NP were younger (24.5 years (SD 4.6) vs. 28.1 years (SD 5.6) compared to KP (p < .001). Almost all NP (97%) were initiated on Option B+ while over half of KP (59%) started ART for clinical/immunological criteria (p < .0001). KPs were more likely than NPs to have a VL performed following Kenyan guidelines (64% vs. 31%; p < .001). Among those tested, virologic suppression was high in both groups (92% KP vs. 100% NP; p = .31). More KPs (82%) vs. NPs (66%) remained active in care at 15–18 months of follow-up (p = .02). Women newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy show poorer uptake of VL testing and worse retention in care than those diagnosed prior to pregnancy.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2014

Efficacy of isoniazid prophylactic therapy in prevention of tuberculosis in children: a meta-analysis

James Ayieko; Lisa L. Abuogi; Brett Simchowitz; Elizabeth A. Bukusi; Allan H. Smith; Arthur Reingold


Aids Research and Therapy | 2017

Barriers to uptake of early infant HIV testing in Zambia: the role of intimate partner violence and HIV status disclosure within couples

Karen Hampanda; Abigail Nimz; Lisa L. Abuogi


International Journal of MCH and AIDS | 2013

Evaluation and Utility of a Family Information Table to Identify and Test Children at Risk for HIV in Kenya

Ba Michelle Meyer; Ba Molly Elmer-DeWitt; Mph Cinthia Blat; Starley B. Shade; MBChB Ijaa Kapule; MBChB Elizabeth Bukusi; Craig R. Cohen; Lisa L. Abuogi

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Elizabeth A. Bukusi

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Eliud Akama

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Iris Wanga

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Anna Helova

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Craig R. Cohen

University of California

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Janet M. Turan

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Maricianah Onono

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Thomas A. Odeny

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Pamela Musoke

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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