Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nathan Ford is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nathan Ford.


The Lancet | 2006

Scaling up of highly active antiretroviral therapy in a rural district of Malawi: an effectiveness assessment

Laurent Ferradini; Arnaud Jeannin; Loretxu Pinoges; Jacques Izopet; Didakus Odhiambo; Limangeni Mankhambo; Gloria Karungi; Elisabeth Szumilin; Serge Balandine; Gaëlle Fedida; M. Patrizia Carrieri; Bruno Spire; Nathan Ford; Jean-Michel Tassie; Philippe J Guerin; Chris Brasher

BACKGROUND The recording of outcomes from large-scale, simplified HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy) programmes in sub-Saharan Africa is critical. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of such a programme held by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in the Chiradzulu district, Malawi. METHODS We scaled up and simplified HAART in this programme since August, 2002. We analysed survival indicators, CD4 count evolution, virological response, and adherence to treatment. We included adults who all started HAART 6 months or more before the analysis. HIV-1 RNA plasma viral load and self-reported adherence were assessed on a subsample of patients, and antiretroviral resistance mutations were analysed in plasma with viral loads greater than 1000 copies per mL. Analysis was by intention to treat. FINDINGS Of the 1308 patients who were eligible, 827 (64%) were female, the median age was 34.9 years (IQR 29.9-41.0), and 1023 (78%) received d4T/3TC/NVP (stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine) as a fixed-dose combination. At baseline, 1266 individuals (97%) were HAART-naive, 357 (27%) were at WHO stage IV, 311 (33%) had a body-mass index of less than 18.5 kg/m2, and 208 (21%) had a CD4 count lower than 50 cells per muL. At follow-up (median 8.3 months, IQR 5.5-13.1), 967 (74%) were still on HAART, 243 (19%) had died, 91 (7%) were lost to follow-up, and seven (0.5%) discontinued treatment. Low body-mass index, WHO stage IV, male sex, and baseline CD4 count lower than 50 cells per muL were independent determinants of death in the first 6 months. At 12 months, the probability of individuals still in care was 0.76 (95% CI 0.73-0.78) and the median CD4 gain was 165 (IQR 67-259) cells per muL. In the cross-sectional survey (n=398), 334 (84%) had a viral load of less than 400 copies per mL. Of several indicators measuring adherence, self-reported poor adherence (<80%) in the past 4 days was the best predictor of detectable viral load (odds ratio 5.4, 95% CI 1.9-15.6). INTERPRETATION These data show that large numbers of people can rapidly benefit from antiretroviral therapy in rural resource-poor settings and strongly supports the implementation of such large-scale simplified programmes in Africa.


Human Resources for Health | 2010

A systematic review of task- shifting for HIV treatment and care in Africa

Mike Callaghan; Nathan Ford; Helen Schneider

BackgroundShortages of human resources for health (HRH) have severely hampered the rollout of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in sub-Saharan Africa. Current rollout models are hospital- and physician-intensive. Task shifting, or delegating tasks performed by physicians to staff with lower-level qualifications, is considered a means of expanding rollout in resource-poor or HRH-limited settings.MethodsWe conducted a systematic literature review. Medline, the Cochrane library, the Social Science Citation Index, and the South African National Health Research Database were searched with the following terms: task shift*, balance of care, non-physician clinicians, substitute health care worker, community care givers, primary healthcare teams, cadres, and nurs* HIV. We mined bibliographies and corresponded with authors for further results. Grey literature was searched online, and conference proceedings searched for abstracts.ResultsWe found 2960 articles, of which 84 were included in the core review. 51 reported outcomes, including research from 10 countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The most common intervention studied was the delegation of tasks (especially initiating and monitoring HAART) from doctors to nurses and other non-physician clinicians. Five studies showed increased access to HAART through expanded clinical capacity; two concluded task shifting is cost effective; 9 showed staff equal or better quality of care; studies on non-physician clinician agreement with physician decisions was mixed, with the majority showing good agreement.ConclusionsTask shifting is an effective strategy for addressing shortages of HRH in HIV treatment and care. Task shifting offers high-quality, cost-effective care to more patients than a physician-centered model. The main challenges to implementation include adequate and sustainable training, support and pay for staff in new roles, the integration of new members into healthcare teams, and the compliance of regulatory bodies. Task shifting should be considered for careful implementation where HRH shortages threaten rollout programmes.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2002

Malaria: current status of control, diagnosis, treatment, and a proposed agenda for research and development

Philippe J Guerin; Piero Olliaro; François Nosten; Pierre Druilhe; Ramanan Laxminarayan; Fred Binka; Wen L Kilama; Nathan Ford; Nicholas J. White

Rolling back malaria is possible. Tools are available but they are not used. Several countries deploy, as their national malaria control treatment policy, drugs that are no longer effective. New and innovative methods of vector control, diagnosis, and treatment should be developed, and work towards development of new drugs and a vaccine should receive much greater support. But the pressing need, in the face of increasing global mortality and general lack of progress in malaria control, is research into the best methods of deploying and using existing approaches, particularly insecticide-treated mosquito nets, rapid methods of diagnosis, and artemisinin-based combination treatments. Evidence on these approaches should provide national governments and international donors with the cost-benefit information that would justify much-needed increases in global support for appropriate and effective malaria control.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2011

Life Expectancy of Persons Receiving Combination Antiretroviral Therapy in Low-Income Countries: A Cohort Analysis From Uganda

Edward J Mills; Celestin Bakanda; Josephine Birungi; Keith C. C. Chan; Nathan Ford; Curtis Cooper; Jean B. Nachega; Mark Dybul; Robert S. Hogg

BACKGROUND Little is known about the effect of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) on life expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa. OBJECTIVE To estimate life expectancy of patients once they initiate cART in Uganda. DESIGN Prospective cohort study. SETTING Public sector HIV and AIDS disease-management program in Uganda. PATIENTS 22 315 eligible patients initiated cART during the study period, of whom 1943 were considered to have died. MEASUREMENTS All-cause mortality rates were calculated and abridged life tables were constructed and stratified by sex and baseline CD4 cell count status to estimate life expectancies for patients receiving cART. The average number of years remaining to be lived by patients who received cART at varying age categories was estimated. RESULTS After adjustment for loss to follow-up, crude mortality rates (deaths per 1000 person-years) ranged from 26.9 (95% CI, 25.4 to 28.5) in women to 43.9 (CI, 40.7 to 47.0) in men. For patients with a baseline CD4 cell count less than 0.050 × 10(9) cells/L, the mortality rate was 67.3 (CI, 62.1 to 72.9) deaths per 1000 person-years, whereas among persons with a baseline CD4 cell count of 0.250 × 10(9) cells/L or more, the mortality rate was 19.1 (CI, 16.0 to 22.7) deaths per 1000 person-years. Life expectancy at age 20 years for the overall cohort was 26.7 (CI, 25.0 to 28.4) additional years and at age 35 years was 27.9 (CI, 26.7 to 29.1) additional years. Life expectancy increased substantially with increasing baseline CD4 cell count. Similar trends are observed for older age groups. LIMITATIONS A small (6.4%) proportion of patients were lost to follow-up, and it was imputed that 30% of these patients had died. Few patients with a CD4 cell count greater than 0.250 × 10(9) cells/L initiated cART. CONCLUSION Ugandan patients receiving cART can expect an almost normal life expectancy, although there is considerable variability among subgroups of patients. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE Canadian Institutes of Health Research.


AIDS | 2010

Seven-year experience of a primary care antiretroviral treatment programme in Khayelitsha, South Africa

Andrew Boulle; Gilles van Cutsem; Katherine Hilderbrand; Carol Cragg; Musaed Abrahams; Shaheed Mathee; Nathan Ford; Louise Knight; Meg Osler; Jonny Myers; Eric Goemaere; David Coetzee; Gary Maartens

Objectives:We report on outcomes after 7 years of a community-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme in Khayelitsha, South Africa, with death registry linkages to correct for mortality under-ascertainment. Design:This is an observational cohort study. Methods:Since inception, patient-level clinical data have been prospectively captured on-site into an electronic patient information system. Patients with available civil identification numbers who were lost to follow-up were matched with the national death registry to ascertain their vital status. Corrected mortality estimates weighted these patients to represent all patients lost to follow-up. CD4 cell count outcomes were reported conditioned on continuous virological suppression. Results:Seven thousand, three hundred and twenty-three treatment-naive adults (68% women) started ART between 2001 and 2007, with annual enrolment increasing from 80 in 2001 to 2087 in 2006. Of 9.8% of patients lost to follow-up for at least 6 months, 32.8% had died. Corrected mortality was 20.9% at 5 years (95% confidence interval 17.9–24.3). Mortality fell over time as patients accessed care earlier (median CD4 cell count at enrolment increased from 43 cells/μl in 2001 to 131 cells/μl in 2006). Patients who remained virologically suppressed continued to gain CD4 cells at 5 years (median 22 cells/μl per 6 months). By 5 years, 14.0% of patients had failed virologically and 12.2% had been switched to second-line therapy. Conclusion:At a time of considerable debate about future global funding of ART programmes in resource-poor settings, this study has demonstrated substantial and durable clinical benefits for those able to access ART throughout this period, in spite of increasing loss to follow-up.


AIDS | 2012

Risk factors, barriers and facilitators for linkage to antiretroviral therapy care: a systematic review

Darshini Govindasamy; Nathan Ford; Katharina Kranzer

Objective:To characterize patient and programmatic factors associated with retention in care during the pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) period and linkage to ART care. Design:Systematic literature review. Methods:An electronic search was conducted on MEDLINE, Global Health, Google Scholar and conference databases to identify studies reporting on predictors, barriers and facilitators of retention in care in the pre-ART period, and linkage to care at three steps: ART-eligibility assessment, pre-ART care and ART initiation. Factors associated with attrition were then divided into areas for intervention. Results:Seven hundred and sixty-eight citations were identified. Forty-two studies from 12 countries were included for review, with the majority from South Africa (16). The most commonly cited category of factors was transport costs and distance. Stigma and fear of disclosure comprised the second most commonly cited category of factors followed by staff shortages, long waiting times, fear of drug side effects, male sex, younger age and the need to take time off work. Conclusion:This review highlights the importance of investigating interventions that could reduce transport difficulties. Decentralization, task-shifting and integration of services need to be expedited to alleviate health system barriers. Patient support groups and strategic posttest counselling are essential to assist patients deal with stigma and disclosure. Moreover, well tolerated first-line drugs and treatment literacy programmes are needed to improve acceptance of ART. This review suggests a combination of interventions to retain specific groups at risk for attrition such as workplace programmes for employed patients, dedicated clinic and support programmes for men and younger individuals.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Implementing Antiretroviral Therapy in Rural Communities: The Lusikisiki Model of Decentralized HIV/AIDS Care

Martha Bedelu; Nathan Ford; Katherine Hilderbrand; Hermann Reuter

Health worker shortages are a major bottleneck to scaling up antiretroviral therapy (ART), particularly in rural areas. In Lusikisiki, a rural area of South Africa with a population of 150,000 serviced by 1 hospital and 12 clinics, Médecins Sans Frontières has been supporting a program to deliver human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) services through decentralization to primary health care clinics, task shifting (including nurse-initiated as opposed to physician-initiated treatment), and community support. This approach has allowed for a rapid scale-up of treatment with satisfactory outcomes. Although the general approach in South Africa is to provide ART through hospitals-which seriously limits access for many people, if not the majority of people-1-year outcomes in Lusikisiki are comparable in the clinics and hospital. The greater proximity and acceptability of services at the clinic level has led to a faster enrollment of people into treatment and better retention of patients in treatment (2% vs. 19% lost to follow-up). In all, 2200 people were receiving ART in Lusikisiki in 2006, which represents 95% coverage. Maintaining quality and coverage will require increased resource input from the public sector and full acceptance of creative approaches to implementation, including task shifting and community involvement.


The Lancet | 2012

Technologies for global health

Peter Howitt; Ara Darzi; Guang-Zhong Yang; Hutan Ashrafian; Rifat Atun; James Barlow; Alex Blakemore; Anthony M. J. Bull; Josip Car; Lesong Conteh; Graham S. Cooke; Nathan Ford; Simon Gregson; Karen Kerr; Dominic King; Myutan Kulendran; Robert A. Malkin; Azeem Majeed; Stephen A. Matlin; Robert Merrifield; Hugh A Penfold; Steven D Reid; Peter C. Smith; Molly M. Stevens; Michael R. Templeton; Charles Vincent; Elizabeth Wilson

Institute for Global Health Innovation (L Conteh PhD, Prof A Darzi FRCS, P Howitt MA, K Kerr PhD, Prof S Matlin DSc, R Merrifi eld PhD, Prof G-Z Yang PhD), Centre for Environmental Policy (E Wilson MSc), Centre for Health Policy (D King MRCS, M Kulendran MRCS, Prof P C Smith BA), Department of Bioengineering (Prof A M J Bull PhD, Prof R A Malkin PhD, Prof M M Stevens PhD), Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (M R Templeton PhD), Department of Infectious Diseases (G S Cooke PhD, N Ford PhD, S D Reid PhD), Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology (S A J Gregson PhD), Department of Materials (Prof M M Stevens), Department of Medicine (A Blakemore PhD), Department of Primary Care & Public Health (Prof A Majeed MD), Department of Surgery and Cancer (H Ashrafi an MRCS, Prof C Vincent PhD), Faculty of Medicine (Prof R Atun FRCP), Global eHealth Unit (J Car PhD), Imperial College Business School (Prof R Atun FRCP, Prof J Barlow PhD), and Imperial Innovations (HA Penfold PhD), Imperial College London, London, UK Technologies for global health


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007

HIV Viral Load Monitoring in Resource-Limited Regions: Optional or Necessary?

Alexandra Calmy; Nathan Ford; Bernard Hirschel; Steven J. Reynolds; Lut Lynen; Eric Goemaere; Felipe Garcia de la Vega; Luc Perrin; William Rodriguez

Although it is a standard practice in high-income countries, determination of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) load is not recommended in developing countries because of the costs and technical constraints. As more and more countries establish capacity to provide second-line therapy, and as costs and technological constraints associated with viral load testing decrease, the question of whether determination of the viral load is necessary deserves attention. Viral load testing could increase in importance as a guide for clinical decisions on when to switch to second-line treatment and on how to optimize the duration of the first-line treatment regimen. In addition, the viral load is a particularly useful tool for monitoring adherence to treatment, performing sentinel surveillance, and diagnosing HIV infection in children aged <18 months. Rather than considering viral load data to be an unaffordable luxury, efforts should be made to ensure that viral load testing becomes affordable, simple, and easy to use in resource-limited settings.


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2012

Quantifying and addressing losses along the continuum of care for people living with HIV infection in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review

Katharina Kranzer; Darshini Govindasamy; Nathan Ford; Victoria Johnston; Stephen D. Lawn

Recent years have seen an increasing recognition of the need to improve access and retention in care for people living with HIV/AIDS. This review aims to quantify patients along the continuum of care in sub‐Saharan Africa and review possible interventions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Nathan Ford's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco Vitoria

World Health Organization

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Meg Doherty

World Health Organization

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Goemaere

Médecins Sans Frontières

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kathryn Chu

Médecins Sans Frontières

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zara Shubber

Imperial College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steve Kanters

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge