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Dive into the research topics where Muhammad Jami Husain is active.

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Featured researches published by Muhammad Jami Husain.


Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2012

No Increased Rate of Acute Myocardial Infarction or Stroke Among Patients with Ankylosing Spondylitis—A Retrospective Cohort Study Using Routine Data

Sinead Brophy; Roxanne Cooksey; Mark D. Atkinson; Shang-Ming Zhou; Muhammad Jami Husain; Steven Michael Macey; Muhammad A. Rahman; Stefan Siebert

OBJECTIVES To examine if people with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) are at higher risk of acute myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke compared to those without AS. METHODS Primary care records were linked with all hospital admissions and deaths caused by MI or stroke in Wales for the years 1999-2010. The linked data were then stratified by AS diagnosis and survival analysis was used to obtain the incidence rate of MI and separately cerebrovascular disease (CVD)/stroke. Cox regression was used to adjust for gender and age. Logistic regression was used to examine prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia for those with AS compared to those without. RESULTS There were 1686 AS patients (75.9% male, average age 46.1 years) compared to 1,206,621 controls (48.9% male, average age 35.9 years). Age- and gender-adjusted hazard ratios for MI were 1.28 (95% CI: 0.93 to 1.74) P = 0.12, and for CVD/stroke 1.0 (95% CI: 0.73 to 1.39) P = 0.9, in AS compared to controls. The prevalence of diabetes and hypertension, but not hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia, was higher in AS. CONCLUSIONS There is no increase in the MI or CVD/stroke rates in patients with AS compared to those without AS, despite higher rates of hypertension, which may be related to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use.


BMJ Open | 2014

Obesity in pregnancy: a retrospective prevalence-based study on health service utilisation and costs on the NHS.

Kelly Morgan; Muhammad A. Rahman; Steven Michael Macey; Mark D. Atkinson; Rebecca A. Hill; Ashrafunnesa Khanom; Shantini Paranjothy; Muhammad Jami Husain; Sinead Brophy

Objective To estimate the direct healthcare cost of being overweight or obese throughout pregnancy to the National Health Service in Wales. Design Retrospective prevalence-based study. Setting Combined linked anonymised electronic datasets gathered on a cohort of women enrolled on the Growing Up in Wales: Environments for Healthy Living (EHL) study. Women were categorised into two groups: normal body mass index (BMI; n=260) and overweight/obese (BMI>25; n=224). Participants 484 singleton pregnancies with available health service records and an antenatal BMI. Primary outcome measure Total health service utilisation (comprising all general practitioner visits and prescribed medications, inpatient admissions and outpatient visits) and direct healthcare costs for providing these services in the year 2011–2012. Costs are calculated as cost of mother (no infant costs are included) and are related to health service usage throughout pregnancy and 2 months following delivery. Results There was a strong association between healthcare usage cost and BMI (p<0.001). Adjusting for maternal age, parity, ethnicity and comorbidity, mean total costs were 23% higher among overweight women (rate ratios (RR) 1.23, 95% CI 1.230 to 1.233) and 37% higher among obese women (RR 1.39, 95% CI 1.38 to 1.39) compared with women with normal weight. Adjusting for smoking, consumption of alcohol, or the presence of any comorbidities did not materially affect the results. The total mean cost estimates were £3546.3 for normal weight, £4244.4 for overweight and £4717.64 for obese women. Conclusions Increased health service usage and healthcare costs during pregnancy are associated with increasing maternal BMI; this was apparent across all health services considered within this study. Interventions costing less than £1171.34 per person could be cost-effective if they reduce healthcare usage among obese pregnant women to levels equivalent to that of normal weight women.


BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2012

The information needs of people living with ankylosing spondylitis: a questionnaire survey.

Roxanne Cooksey; Sinead Brophy; Muhammad Jami Husain; Elizabeth Irvine; Helen Davies; Stefan Siebert

BackgroundToday, health care is patient-centred with patients more involved in medical decision making and taking an active role in managing their disease. It is important that patients are appropriately informed about their condition and that their health care needs are met. We examine the information utilisation, sources and needs of people with Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS).MethodsParticipants in an existing AS cohort study were asked to complete a postal or online questionnaire containing closed and open-ended questions, regarding their information access and needs. Participants were stratified by age and descriptive statistics were performed using STATA 11, while thematic analysis was performed on open-ended question narratives. Qualitative data was handled in Microsoft Access and explored for emerging themes and patterns of experiences.ResultsDespite 73% of respondents having internet access, only 49% used the internet to access information regarding AS. Even then, this was only infrequently. Only 50% of respondents reported accessing written information about AS, which was obtained mainly in specialist clinics. Women were more likely than men to access information (63% (women) 46% (men)) regardless of the source, while younger patients were more likely to use online sources. The main source of non-written information was the rheumatologist. Overall, the respondents felt there was sufficient information available, but there was a perception that the tone was often too negative. The majority (95%) of people would like to receive a regular newsletter about AS, containing positive practical and local information. Suggestions were also made for more information about AS to be made available to non-specialist medical professionals and the general public.ConclusionsThere appears to be sufficient information available for people with AS in the UK and this is mostly accessed by younger AS patients. Many patients, particularly men, choose not to access AS information and concerns were raised about its negative tone. Patients still rely on written and verbal information from their specialists. Future initiatives should focus on the delivery of more positive information, targeting younger participants in particular and increasing the awareness in the general population and wider non-specialist medical community.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The crowding-out effect of tobacco expenditure on household spending patterns in Bangladesh

Muhammad Jami Husain; Biplab Kumar Datta; Mandeep K. Virk-Baker; Mark Parascandola; Bazlul Haque Khondker

Background Tobacco consumption constitutes a sizable portion of household consumption expenditure, which can lead to reduced expenditures on other basic commodities. This is known as the crowding-out effect. This study analyzes the crowding-out effect of tobacco consumption in Bangladesh, and the research findings have relevance for strengthening the tobacco control for improving health and well-being. Methods We analyzed data from the Bangladesh Household Income and Expenditure Survey 2010 to examine the differences in consumption expenditure pattern between tobacco user and non-user households. We further categorize tobacco user households in three mutually exclusive groups of smoking-only, smokeless-only, and dual (both smoking and smokeless); and investigated the crowding-out effects for these subgroups. We compared the mean expenditure shares of different types of households, and then estimated the conditional Engel curves for various expenditure categories using Seemingly Unrelated Regression (SUR) method. Crowding-out was considered to have occurred if estimated coefficient of the tobacco use indicator was negative and statistically significant. Results We find that tobacco user households on average allocated less in clothing, housing, education, energy, and transportation and communication compared to tobacco non-user households. The SUR estimates also confirmed crowding-out in these consumption categories. Mean expenditure share of food and medical expenditure of tobacco user households, however, are greater than those of tobacco non-user households. Albeit similar patterns observed for different tobacco user households, there were differences in magnitudes depending on the type of tobacco-use, rural-urban locations and economic status. Conclusion Policy measures that reduce tobacco use could reduce displacement of commodities by households with tobacco users, including those commodities that can contribute to human capital investments.


Margin: The Journal of Applied Economic Research | 2013

Life Expectancy and Economic Well-being: A Within-country Regional-level Analysis Using the Micro-data of Bangladesh

Muhammad Jami Husain

A frequent empirical approach toward examining the impact of health on economic growth has been to focus on data for a cross-section of countries and to regress the income indicator on the health indicator controlling for the initial level of income and for other factors believed to influence steady-state income levels. From the methodological perspective, such a growth regression approach has mainly offered evidence for the relationship between health and income, using cross-country macro-level data. This article contributes to existing empirical research by introducing within-country regional-level analysis using three rounds of the Demographic and Health Surveys of Bangladesh, combined with corresponding geo-referenced global positioning system (GPS) data, to estimate the contribution of life expectancy to economic well-being. The joint evolution of the regional-level longevity and wealth indicator obtained from the micro-data corroborates Preston’s cross-country macro-level findings. Also, the finding that a 1 per cent increase in life expectancy leads to about 3 per cent increase in the wealth index corroborates the findings of several macro-regression studies and promotes the concept of direct investments in health. JEL Classification: I10, O40, R10


Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2013

Fatigue in Ankylosing Spondylitis: Treatment should focus on pain management

Sinead Brophy; Helen Davies; Michael Dennis; Roxanne Cooksey; Muhammad Jami Husain; Elizabeth Irvine; Stefan Siebert


BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2012

HERALD (health economics using routine anonymised linked data).

Muhammad Jami Husain; Sinead Brophy; Steven Michael Macey; Leila M. Pinder; Mark D. Atkinson; Roxanne Cooksey; Ceri Phillips; Stefan Siebert


Trials | 2011

HERALD (Health Economics using Routine Anonymised Linked Data)

Muhammad Jami Husain; Sinead Brophy; Steven Michael Macey; Leila M. Pinder; Mark D. Atkinson; Roxanne Cooksey; Ceri Phillips; Stefan Siebert


Economics : the Open-Access, Open-Assessment e-Journal | 2010

Contribution of Health to Economic Development: A Survey and Overview

Muhammad Jami Husain


Farmeconomia. Health economics and therapeutic pathways | 2013

Linked routine data to enhance health-economics analysis

Muhammad Jami Husain; Sinead Brophy; Stefan Siebert; Ceri Phillips

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