Roger Teck
Médecins Sans Frontières
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roger Teck.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2005
M. Manzi; Rony Zachariah; Roger Teck; L. Buhendwa; J. Kazima; E. Bakali; P. Firmenich; P. Humblet
Setting Thyolo District Hospital, rural Malawi.
PLOS ONE | 2006
Rony Zachariah; Anthony D. Harries; M. Manzi; P. Gomani; Roger Teck; Mit Phillips; Peter Firmenich
Background A study was conducted among newly registered HIV-positive tuberculosis (TB) patients systematically offered anti-retroviral treatment (ART) in a district hospital in rural Malawi in order to a) determine the acceptance of ART b) conduct a geographic mapping of those placed on ART and c) examine the association between “cost of transport” and ART acceptance. Methodology/Principal Findings A retrospective cross-sectional analysis was performed on routine program data for the period of February 2003 to July 2004. Standardized registers and patient cards were used to gather data. The place of residence was used to determine road distances to the Thyolo district hospital. Cost of transport from different parts of the district was based on the known cost for public transport to the road-stop closest to the patients residence. Of 1,290 newly registered TB patients, 1,003(78%) underwent HIV-testing of whom 770 (77%) were HIV-positive. 742 of these individuals (pulmonary TB = 607; extra-pulmonary TB = 135) were considered eligible for ART of whom only 101(13.6%) accepted ART. Cost of transport to the hospital ART site was significantly associated with ART acceptance and there was a linear trend in association between cost and ART acceptance (X2 for trend = 25.4, P<0.001). Individuals who had to pay 50 Malawi Kwacha (1 United States Dollar = 100 Malawi Kwacha, MW) or less for a one-way trip to the Thyolo hospital were four times more likely to accept ART than those who had to pay over 100 MW (Adjusted Odds ratio = 4.0, 95% confidence interval: 2.0–8.1, P<0.001). Conclusions/Significance ART acceptance among TB patients in a rural district in Malawi is low and associated with cost of transport to the centralized hospital based ART site. Decentralizing the ART offer from the hospital to health centers that are closer to home communities would be an essential step towards reducing the overall cost and burden of travel.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Kiran Jobanputra; Lucy Anne Parker; Charles Azih; Velephi Okello; Gugu Maphalala; Bernard Kershberger; Mohammed Khogali; Johnny Lujan; Annick Antierens; Roger Teck; Tom Ellman; Rose Kosgei; Tony Reid
Introduction This study explores factors associated with virological detectability, and viral re-suppression after enhanced adherence counselling, in adults and children on antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Swaziland. Methods This descriptive study used laboratory data from 7/5/2012 to 30/9/2013, which were linked with the national ART database to provide information on time on ART and CD4 count; information on enhanced adherence counselling was obtained from file review in health facilities. Multivariable logistic regression was used to explore the relationship between viral load, gender, age, time on ART, CD4 count and receiving (or not receiving) enhanced adherence counselling. Results From 12,063 patients undergoing routine viral load monitoring, 1941 (16%) had detectable viral loads. Children were more likely to have detectable viral loads (AOR 2.6, 95%CI 1.5–4.5), as were adolescents (AOR 3.2, 95%CI 2.2–4.8), patients with last CD4<350 cells/µl (AOR 2.2, 95%CI 1.7–2.9) or WHO Stage 3/4 disease (AOR 1.3, 95%CI 1.1–1.6), and patients on ART for longer (AOR 1.1, 95%CI 1.1–1.2). At retesting, 450 (54% of those tested) showed viral re-suppression. Children were less likely to re-suppress (AOR 0.2, 95%CI 0.1–0.7), as were adolescents (AOR 0.3, 95%CI 0.2–0.8), those with initial viral load> 1000 copies/ml (AOR 0.3, 95%CI 0.1–0.7), and those with last CD4<350 cells/µl (AOR 0.4, 95%CI 0.2–0.7). Receiving (or not receiving) enhanced adherence counselling was not associated with likelihood of re-suppression. Conclusions Children, adolescents and those with advanced disease were most likely to have high viral loads and least likely to achieve viral suppression at retesting; receiving adherence counselling was not associated with higher likelihood of viral suppression. Although the level of viral resistance was not quantified, this study suggests the need for ART treatment support that addresses the adherence problems of younger people; and to define the elements of optimal enhanced adherence support for patients of all ages with detectable viral loads.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2015
Lucy Anne Parker; Kiran Jobanputra; Lorraine Rusike; Sikhathele Mazibuko; Velephi Okello; Bernhard Kerschberger; Guillaume Jouquet; Joanne Cyr; Roger Teck
To evaluate the feasibility (population reached, costs) and effectiveness (positivity rates, linkage to care) of two strategies of community‐based HIV testing and counselling (HTC) in rural Swaziland.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2014
Kiran Jobanputra; Lucy Anne Parker; Charles Azih; Velephi Okello; Gugu Maphalala; Guillaume Jouquet; Bernhard Kerschberger; Calorine Mekeidje; Joanne Cyr; Arnold Mafikudze; Win Han; Johnny Lujan; Roger Teck; Annick Antierens; Johan van Griensven; Tony Reid
Objective:To assess the programmatic quality (coverage of testing, counseling, and retesting), cost, and outcomes (viral suppression, treatment decisions) of routine viral load (VL) monitoring in Swaziland. Design:Retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing routine VL monitoring in Swaziland (October 1, 2012 to March 31, 2013). Results:Of 5563 patients eligible for routine VL testing monitoring in the period of study, an estimated 4767 patients (86%) underwent testing that year. Of 288 patients with detectable VL, 210 (73%) underwent enhanced adherence counseling and 202 (70%) had a follow-up VL within 6 months. Testing coverage was slightly lower in children, but coverage of retesting was similar between and age groups and sexes. Of those with a follow-up test, 126 (62%) showed viral suppression. The remaining 78 patients had World Health Organization–defined virologic failure; 41 (53%) were referred by the doctor for more adherence counseling, and 13 (15%) were changed to second-line therapy, equating to an estimated rate of 1.2 switches per 100 patient-years. Twenty-four patients (32%) were transferred out, lost to follow-up, or not reviewed by doctor. The “fully loaded” cost of VL monitoring was
Tropical Doctor | 2008
L. Buhendwa; Rony Zachariah; Roger Teck; M. Massaquoi; J Kazima; Peter Firmenich; Anthony D. Harries
35 per patient-year. Conclusions:Achieving good quality VL monitoring is feasible and affordable in resource-limited settings, although close supervision is needed to ensure good coverage of testing and counseling. The low rate of switch to second-line therapy in patients with World Health Organization–defined virologic failure seems to reflect clinician suspicion of ongoing adherence problems. In our study, the main impact of routine VL monitoring was reinforcing adherence rather than increasing use of second-line therapy.
Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2018
David Etoori; Iza Ciglenecki; Mpumelelo Ndlangamandla; Celeste G. Edwards; Kiran Jobanputra; Munyaradzi Pasipamire; Gugu Maphalala; Chunfu Yang; Inoussa Zabsonre; Serge Mathurin Kabore; Javier Goiri; Roger Teck; Bernhard Kerschberger
This study shows that cabergoline (single oral-dose) is an acceptable, safe and effective drug for suppressing puerperal lactation. It could be of operational benefit not only for artificial feeding, but also for weaning in those that breast-feed within preventive mother-to-child HIV transmission programmes in resource-limited settings.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2007
Rony Zachariah; Roger Teck; L. Buhendwa; M. Fitzerland; S. Labana; C. Chinji; P. Humblet; Anthony D. Harries
As antiretroviral therapy (ART) is scaled up, more patients become eligible for routine viral load (VL) monitoring, the most important tool for monitoring ART efficacy. For HIV programmes to become effective, leakages along the VL cascade need to be minimized and treatment switching needs to be optimized. However, many HIV programmes in resource‐constrained settings report significant shortfalls.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2006
Rony Zachariah; Roger Teck; L. Buhendwa; S. Labana; C. Chinji; P. Humblet; Anthony D. Harries
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2004
Anthony D. Harries; P. Gomani; Roger Teck; Olga Ascurra de Teck; Edwin Bakali; Rony Zachariah; Edwin Libamba; Andrina Mwansambo; Felix M Salaniponi; Rex Mpazanje
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International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease
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