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Featured researches published by Sally Theobald.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2004

Vulnerability to malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS infection and disease. Part 1: determinants operating at individual and household level

Imelda Bates; Caroline Fenton; Janet Gruber; David G. Lalloo; Antonieta Medina Lara; S. Bertel Squire; Sally Theobald; Rachael Thomson; Rachel Tolhurst

A high burden of malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV infection contributes to national and individual poverty. We have reviewed a broad range of evidence detailing factors at individual, household, and community levels that influence vulnerability to malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV infection and used this evidence to identify strategies that could improve resilience to these diseases. This first part of the review explores the concept of vulnerability to infectious diseases and examines how age, sex, and genetics can influence the biological response to malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV infection. We highlight factors that influence processes such as poverty, livelihoods, gender discrepancies, and knowledge acquisition and provide examples of how approaches to altering these processes may have a simultaneous effect on all three diseases.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2004

Vulnerability to malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS infection and disease. Part II: determinants operating at environmental and institutional level

Imelda Bates; Caroline Fenton; Janet Gruber; David G. Lalloo; Antonieta Medina Lara; S. Bertel Squire; Sally Theobald; Rachael Thomson; Rachel Tolhurst

This review summarises a wide range of evidence about environmental and institutional factors that influence vulnerability to malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV infection. By combining this information with that obtained on factors operating at individual, household, and community level, we have identified potential common strategies for improving resilience to all three diseases simultaneously. These strategies depend on collaborations with non-health sectors and include progress in rapid access to funds, provision of education about disease transmission and management, reduction of the burden on carers (predominantly women), and improvement in the quality of health services.


Health Research Policy and Systems | 2015

How does context influence performance of community health workers in low- and middle-income countries? Evidence from the literature

Maryse C. Kok; Sumit Kane; Olivia Tulloch; Hermen Ormel; Sally Theobald; Marjolein Dieleman; Miriam Taegtmeyer; Jacqueline Ew Broerse; Korrie de Koning

BackgroundCommunity health workers (CHWs) are increasingly recognized as an integral component of the health workforce needed to achieve public health goals in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Many factors intersect to influence CHW performance. A systematic review with a narrative analysis was conducted to identify contextual factors influencing performance of CHWs.MethodsWe searched six databases for quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods studies that included CHWs working in promotional, preventive or curative primary health care services in LMICs. We differentiated CHW performance outcome measures at two levels: CHW level and end-user level. Ninety-four studies met the inclusion criteria and were double read to extract data relevant to the context of CHW programmes. Thematic coding was conducted and evidence on five main categories of contextual factors influencing CHW performance was synthesized.ResultsFew studies had the influence of contextual factors on CHW performance as their primary research focus. Contextual factors related to community (most prominently), economy, environment, and health system policy and practice were found to influence CHW performance. Socio-cultural factors (including gender norms and values and disease related stigma), safety and security and education and knowledge level of the target group were community factors that influenced CHW performance. Existence of a CHW policy, human resource policy legislation related to CHWs and political commitment were found to be influencing factors within the health system policy context. Health system practice factors included health service functionality, human resources provisions, level of decision-making, costs of health services, and the governance and coordination structure. All contextual factors can interact to shape CHW performance and affect the performance of CHW interventions or programmes.ConclusionsResearch on CHW programmes often does not capture or explicitly discuss the context in which CHW interventions take place. This synthesis situates and discusses the influence of context on CHW and programme performance. Future health policy and systems research should better address the complexity of contextual influences on programmes. This insight can help policy makers and programme managers to develop CHW interventions that adequately address and respond to context to optimise performance.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Innovative Community-Based Approaches Doubled Tuberculosis Case Notification and Improve Treatment Outcome in Southern Ethiopia

Mohammed A. Yassin; Daniel Gemechu Datiko; Olivia Tulloch; Paulos Markos; Melkamsew Aschalew; Estifanos Biru Shargie; Mesay Hailu Dangisso; Ryuichi Komatsu; Suvanand Sahu; Lucie Blok; Luis E. Cuevas; Sally Theobald

Background TB Control Programmes rely on passive case-finding to detect cases. TB notification remains low in Ethiopia despite major expansion of health services. Poor rural communities face many barriers to service access. Methods and Findings A community-based intervention package was implemented in Sidama zone, Ethiopia. The package included advocacy, training, engaging stakeholders and communities and active case-finding by female Health Extension Workers (HEWs) at village level. HEWs conducted house-to-house visits, identified individuals with a cough for two or more weeks, with or without other symptoms, collected sputum, prepared smears and supervised treatment. Supervisors transported smears for microscopy, started treatment, screened contacts and initiated Isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) for children. Outcomes were compared with the pre-implementation period and a control zone. Qualitative research was conducted to understand community and provider perceptions and experiences. HEWs screened 49,857 symptomatic individuals (60% women) from October 2010 to December 2011. 2,262 (4·5%) had smear-positive TB (53% women). Case notification increased from 64 to 127/100,000 population/year resulting in 5,090 PTB+ and 7,071 cases of all forms of TB. Of 8,005 contacts visited, 1,949 were symptomatic, 1,290 symptomatic were tested and 69 diagnosed with TB. 1,080 children received IPT. Treatment success for smear-positive TB increased from 77% to 93% and treatment default decreased from 11% to 3%. Service users and providers found the intervention package highly acceptable. Conclusions Community-based interventions made TB diagnostic and treatment services more accessible to the poor, women, elderly and children, doubling the notification rate and improving treatment outcome. This approach could improve TB diagnosis and treatment in other high burden settings.


Social Science & Medicine | 2013

Going beyond the surface: Gendered intra-household bargaining as a social determinant of child health and nutrition in low and middle income countries

Esther Richards; Sally Theobald; Asha George; Julia C. Kim; Christiane Rudert; Kate Jehan; Rachel Tolhurst

A growing body of research highlights the importance of gendered social determinants of child health, such as maternal education and womens status, for mediating child survival. This narrative review of evidence from diverse low and middle-income contexts (covering the period 1970-May 2012) examines the significance of intra-household bargaining power and process as gendered dimensions of child health and nutrition. The findings focus on two main elements of bargaining: the role of womens decision-making power and access to and control over resources; and the importance of household headship, structure and composition. The paper discusses the implications of these findings in the light of lifecycle and intersectional approaches to gender and health. The relative lack of published intervention studies that explicitly consider gendered intra-household bargaining is highlighted. Given the complex mechanisms through which intra-household bargaining shapes child health and nutrition it is critical that efforts to address gender in health and nutrition programming are thoroughly documented and widely shared to promote further learning and action. There is scope to develop links between gender equity initiatives in areas of adult and adolescent health, and child health and nutrition programming. Child health and nutrition interventions will be more effective, equitable and sustainable if they are designed based on gender-sensitive information and continually evaluated from a gender perspective.


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2012

Transactional sex and HIV: understanding the gendered structural drivers of HIV in fishing communities in Southern Malawi

Eleanor MacPherson; John Sadalaki; Macdonald Njoloma; Victoria Nyongopa; Lawrence Nkhwazi; Victor Mwapasa; David G. Lalloo; Nicola Desmond; Janet Seeley; Sally Theobald

In Southern Malawi, the fishing industry is highly gendered, with men carrying out the fishing and women processing, drying and selling the fish. Research has shown that individuals living in fishing communities in low‐income countries are particularly vulnerable to HIV infection. One of the key drivers of HIV in fishing communities is transactional sex. In the fishing industry this takes the form of “fish‐for‐sex” networks where female fish traders exchange sex with fishermen for access to or more favourable prices of fish. By controlling the means of production, the power dynamics in these exchanges favour men and can make it more difficult for women to negotiate safe sex.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2004

Household and family characteristics of street children in Aracaju, Brazil

S. Abdelgalil; R. G. Gurgel; Sally Theobald; Luis E. Cuevas

Aims: To describe the family background of street children in Aracaju, Brazil, their parents’ perception of street life, and the reasons for the high prevalence of males observed among street children. Methods: Cross sectional study using semi-structured interviews and qualitative focus group discussions with parents of purposively selected index street children. Results: Fifty eight families were enrolled. Most participants were single parent, female headed families living in slums or low cost housing, with high levels of illiteracy, drug use, unemployment, and a history of migration. Most parents reported receiving financial support from their children and were aware of the dangers of the street. Many parents had lived in the street, worked from an early age, and had been adolescent parents themselves. Parents perceived that the street was more dangerous for girls than for boys. Besides economic reasons, parents highlighted the role of peers and drug use in pulling their children to the street. A total of 187 siblings were identified. Siblings had poor school performance with high school drop out rates. Twenty per cent of the adolescent girl siblings were not living at home. Gender determined the type of work undertaken by children and adolescents. Males worked in the streets and females worked as housemaids, shop assistants, and in restaurants and bars. Conclusion: Family disintegration, poverty, drug use, adolescent pregnancy, peer pressure, and socially constructed gender roles determine the characteristics of children in the street. There is an urgent need for increased social support in this area.


PLOS Medicine | 2011

LED Fluorescence Microscopy for the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis: A Multi-Country Cross-Sectional Evaluation

Luis E. Cuevas; Najla Al-Sonboli; Lovett Lawson; Mohammed A. Yassin; Isabel Arbide; Nasher Al-Aghbari; Jeevan B. Sherchand; Amin Al-Absi; Emmanuel Nnamdi Emenyonu; Yared Merid; Mosis Ifenyi Okobi; Juliana Olubunmi Onuoha; Melkamsew Aschalew; Abraham Aseffa; Greg Harper; Rachel Anderson de Cuevas; Sally Theobald; Carl-Michael Nathanson; Jean Joly; Brian Faragher; Stephen Bertel Squire; Andrew Ramsay

This study, nested within a clinical trial, by Luis Cuevas and colleagues finds that LED-FM microscopy has higher sensitivity but lower specificity than Zn microscopy for detecting tuberculosis in sputum samples.


Health Research Policy and Systems | 2011

Indicators of sustainable capacity building for health research: analysis of four African case studies.

Imelda Bates; Miriam Taegtmeyer; S. Bertel Squire; Daniel Ansong; Bertha Nhlema-Simwaka; Amuda Baba; Sally Theobald

AbstractBackgroundDespite substantial investment in health capacity building in developing countries, evaluations of capacity building effectiveness are scarce. By analysing projects in Africa that had successfully built sustainable capacity, we aimed to identify evidence that could indicate that capacity building was likely to be sustainable.MethodsFour projects were selected as case studies using pre-determined criteria, including the achievement of sustainable capacity. By mapping the capacity building activities in each case study onto a framework previously used for evaluating health research capacity in Ghana, we were able to identify activities that were common to all projects. We used these activities to derive indicators which could be used in other projects to monitor progress towards building sustainable research capacity.ResultsIndicators of sustainable capacity building increased in complexity as projects matured and included- early engagement of stakeholders; explicit plans for scale up; strategies for influencing policies; quality assessments (awareness and experiential stages) - improved resources; institutionalisation of activities; innovation (expansion stage) - funding for core activities secured; management and decision-making led by southern partners (consolidation stage).Projects became sustainable after a median of 66 months. The main challenges to achieving sustainability were high turnover of staff and stakeholders, and difficulties in embedding new activities into existing systems, securing funding and influencing policy development.ConclusionsOur indicators of sustainable capacity building need to be tested prospectively in a variety of projects to assess their usefulness. For each project the evidence required to show that indicators have been achieved should evolve with the project and they should be determined prospectively in collaboration with stakeholders.


Aids and Behavior | 2014

Factors Shaping Initial Decision-Making to Self-test Amongst Cohabiting Couples in Urban Blantyre, Malawi

Moses Kumwenda; Alister Munthali; Mackwellings Phiri; Daniel Mwale; Tore Jarl Gutteberg; Eleanor MacPherson; Sally Theobald; Liz Corbett; Nicola Desmond

In sub-Saharan Africa, most new HIV infections occur in stable relationships, making couples testing an important intervention for HIV prevention. We explored factors shaping the decision-making of cohabiting couples who opted to self-test in Blantyre, Malawi. Thirty-four self-tested participants (17 couples) were interviewed. Motivators for HIV self-testing (HIVST) emerged at three main levels. Individual motivations included perceived benefits of access to treatment, and self-checking of serostatus in the hope of having been cured by prolonged treatment or faith-healing. HIVST was considered convenient, confidential, reassuring and an enabling new way to test with one’s partner. Partnership motivations included both positive (mutual encouragement) and negative (suspected infidelity) aspects. For women, long-term health and togetherness were important goals that reinforced motivations for couples testing, whereas men often needed persuasion despite finding HIVST more flexible and less onerous than facility-based testing. Internal conflict prompted some partners to use HIVST as a way of disclosing their previously concealed HIV positive serostatus. Thus, the implementation of community-based HIVST should acknowledge and appropriately respond to decision-making processes within couples, which are shaped by gender roles and relationship dynamics.

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Miriam Taegtmeyer

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Rachel Tolhurst

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Olivia Tulloch

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Joanna Raven

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Luis E. Cuevas

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Daniel Gemechu Datiko

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Eleanor MacPherson

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Tim Martineau

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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David G. Lalloo

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Esther Richards

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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