Merrin E. Rutherford
University of Otago
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Featured researches published by Merrin E. Rutherford.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2010
Merrin E. Rutherford; Kim Mulholland; Philip C. Hill
An estimated 9.7 million children under the age of five die every year worldwide, approximately 41% of them in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA). Access to adequate health care is among the factors suggested to be associated with child mortality; improved access holds great potential for a significant reduction in under‐five death in developing countries. Theory and corresponding frameworks indicate a wide range of factors affecting access to health care, such as traditionally measured variables (distance to a health provider and cost of obtaining health care) and additional variables (social support, time availability and caregiver autonomy). Few analytical studies of traditional variables have been conducted in SSA, and they have significant limitations and inconclusive results. The importance of additional factors has been suggested by qualitative and recent quantitative studies. We propose that access to health care is multidimensional; factors other than distance and cost need to be considered by those planning health care provision if child mortality rates are to be reduced through improved access. Analytical studies that comprehensively evaluate both traditional and additional variables in developing countries are required.
PLOS Medicine | 2011
Philip C. Hill; Merrin E. Rutherford; Rick Audas; Reinout van Crevel; Stephen M. Graham
Philip Campbell Hill and colleagues propose using a health needs assessment framework, research tools, and a strategy for clinical evaluation to help better manage child contacts of adult TB cases.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2012
Merrin E. Rutherford; Philip C. Hill; Rina Triasih; Rebecca Sinfield; Reinout van Crevel; Stephen M. Graham
Young children living with a tuberculosis patient are at high risk of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and disease. WHO guidelines promote active screening and isoniazid (INH) preventive therapy (PT) for such children under 5 years, yet this well‐established intervention is seldom used in endemic countries. We review the literature regarding barriers to implementation of PT and find that they are multifactorial, including difficulties in screening, poor adherence, fear of increasing INH resistance and poor acceptability among primary caregivers and healthcare workers. These barriers are largely resolvable, and proposed solutions such as the adoption of symptom‐based screening and shorter drug regimens are discussed. Integrated multicomponent and site‐specific solutions need to be developed and evaluated within a public health framework to overcome the policy–practice gap and provide functional PT programmes for children in endemic settings.
BMC Research Notes | 2012
Merrin E. Rutherford; Rovina Ruslami; Winni Maharani; Indria Yulita; Sarah Lovell; Reinout van Crevel; Bachti Alisjahbana; Philip C. Hill
BackgroundIt is recommended that young child contacts of sputum smear positive tuberculosis cases receive isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) but reported adherence is low and risk factors for poor adherence in children are largely unknown.MethodsWe prospectively determined rates of IPT adherence in children < 5 yrs in an Indonesian lung clinic. Possible risk factors for poor adherence, defined as ≤3 months prescription collection, were calculated using logistic regression. To further investigate adherence barriers in-depth interviews were conducted with caregivers of children with good and poor adherence.ResultsEighty-two children eligible for IPT were included, 61 (74.4%) of which had poor adherence. High transport costs (OR 3.3, 95% CI 1.1-10.2) and medication costs (OR 20.0, 95% CI 2.7-414.5) were significantly associated with poor adherence in univariate analysis. Access, medication barriers, disease and health service experience and caregiver TB and IPT knowledge and beliefs were found to be important determinants of adherence in qualitative analysis.ConclusionAdherence to IPT in this setting in Indonesia is extremely low and may result from a combination of financial, knowledge, health service and medication related barriers. Successful reduction of childhood TB urgently requires evidence-based interventions that address poor adherence to IPT.
Nephrology | 2010
Sarah Derrett; Maryann Darmody; Sheila Williams; Merrin E. Rutherford; John Schollum; Robert J. Walker
Background: The proportion of older people receiving dialysis is rapidly increasing. The typical choice for older patients is between home‐based peritoneal dialysis (PD) and clinic‐based haemodialysis (HD). Some centres have been successful in encouraging all patients – including older patients – to have home‐based self‐administered PD or HD.
Journal of Tropical Medicine | 2012
Rina Triasih; Merrin E. Rutherford; Trisasi Lestari; Adi Utarini; Colin F. Robertson; Stephen M. Graham
Background. Screening of children who are household contacts of tuberculosis (TB) cases is universally recommended but rarely implemented in TB endemic setting. This paper aims to summarise published data of the prevalence of TB infection and disease among child contacts in South East Asia. Methods. Search strategies were developed to identify all published studies from South East Asia of household contact investigation that included children (0–15 years). Results. Eleven studies were eligible for review. There was heterogeneity across the studies. TB infection was common among child contacts under 15 years of age (24.4–69.2%) and was higher than the prevalence of TB disease, which varied from 3.3% to 5.5%. Conclusion. TB infection is common among children that are household contacts of TB cases in South East Asia. Novel approaches to child contact screening and management that improve implementation in South East Asia need to be further evaluated.
Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2013
Merrin E. Rutherford; Rovina Ruslami; Melissa Anselmo; Bachti Alisjahbana; Neti Yulianti; Hedy Sampurno; Reinout van Crevel; Philip C. Hill
OBJECTIVE To investigate qualitatively and quantitatively the performance of a programme for managing the child contacts of adult tuberculosis patients in Indonesia. METHODS A public health evaluation framework was used to assess gaps in a child contact management programme at a lung clinic. Targets for programme performance indicators were derived from established programme indicator targets, the scientific literature and expert opinion. Compliance with tuberculosis screening, the initiation of isoniazid preventive therapy in children younger than 5 years, the accuracy of tuberculosis diagnosis and adherence to preventive therapy were assessed in 755 child contacts in two cohorts. In addition, 22 primary caregivers and 34 clinic staff were interviewed to evaluate knowledge and acceptance of child contact management. The cost to caregivers was recorded. Gaps between observed and target indicator values were quantified. FINDINGS THE GAPS BETWEEN OBSERVED AND TARGET PERFORMANCE INDICATORS WERE: 82% for screening compliance; 64 to 100% for diagnostic accuracy, 50% for the initiation of preventive therapy, 54% for adherence to therapy and 50% for costs. Many staff did not have adequate knowledge of, or an appropriate attitude towards, child contact management, especially regarding isoniazid preventive therapy. Caregivers had good knowledge of screening but not of preventive therapy and had difficulty travelling to the clinic and paying costs. CONCLUSION The study identified widespread gaps in the performance of a child contact management system in Indonesia, all of which appear amenable to intervention. The public health evaluation framework used could be applied in other settings where child contact management is failing.
International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2012
Merrin E. Rutherford; Philip C. Hill; Winni Maharani; Lika Apriani; Hedy Sampurno; R. van Crevel; Rovina Ruslami
SETTING AND OBJECTIVES Young children living with infectious tuberculosis (TB) cases are at high risk of infection and disease, and screening is recommended. This is rarely conducted in resource-limited settings. Identifying children most at risk of infection may be useful for setting practical screening policies. DESIGN Child contacts of smear-positive adult TB patients were invited for Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and disease screening by symptoms, tuberculin skin test (TST), QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube assay (QFT-GIT) and chest X-ray. Risk factors for infection were collected using a questionnaire and were calculated separately for TST, for QFT-GIT and for both tests combined. RESULTS Of 304 screened children 145/302 (48%) were positive using TST, 152/299 (51%) by QFT-GIT and 180/304 (59%) were positive using either or both tests. Positivity for both tests was associated with index case infectivity (acid-fast bacilli [AFB] 3+ vs. AFB 1+: TST OR 2.93, 95%CI 1.59-5.39; QFT-GIT OR 2.28, 95%CI 1.06-4.90) and exposure (child contacts parent is the index case: TST OR 7.04, 95%CI 2.23-22.28; QFT-GIT OR 4.30, 95%CI 1.48-12.45). CONCLUSION M. tuberculosis infection according to either test was high, supporting screening and preventive treatment. Children of smear-positive TB cases who accompany their parents to the clinic should be prioritised for immediate screening.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Merrin E. Rutherford; Bachti Alisjahbana; Winni Maharani; Hedy Sampurno; Reinout van Crevel; Philip C. Hill
Background As part of a formal evaluation of the Quantiferon-Gold in-tube assay (QFT-IT) for latent TB infection we compared its sensitivity to the tuberculin skin test (TST) in confirmed adult TB cases in Indonesia. Smear-positive TB disease was used as a proxy gold standard for latent TB infection. Methods and Findings We compared the sensitivity of QFT-IT and TST in 98 sputum smear and chest x-ray positive TB cases and investigated risk factors for negative and discordant results in both tests. Both tests showed high sensitivity; (QFT-IT; 88.7%: TST; 94.9%), not significantly different from each other (p value 0.11). Very high sensitivity was seen when tests were combined (98.9%). There were no variables significantly associated with discordant results or with a negative TST. For QFT-IT which particular staff member collected blood was significantly associated with test positivity (p value 0.01). Study limitations include small sample size and lack of culture confirmation or HIV test results. Conclusions The QFT-IT has similar sensitivity in Indonesian TB cases as in other locations. However, QFT-IT, like the TST cannot distinguish active TB disease from LTBI. In countries such as Indonesia, with high background rates of LTBI, test specificity for TB disease will likely be low. While our study was not designed to evaluate the QFT-IT in the diagnosis of active TB disease in TB suspects, the data suggest that a combination of TST and QFT-IT may prove useful for ruling out TB disease. Further research is required to explore the clinical role of QFT-IT in combination with other TB diagnostic tests.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2009
Merrin E. Rutherford; John D. Dockerty; Momodou Jasseh; Stephen R. C. Howie; Peter Herbison; David Jeffries; Kim Mulholland; Richard A. Adegbola; Philip C. Hill
Objective To investigate the relationship between child mortality and common preventive interventions: vaccination, trained birthing attendants, tetanus toxoid during pregnancy, breastfeeding and vitamin A supplementation.