Last data update: Apr 22, 2024. (Total: 46599 publications since 2009)
Records 1-7 (of 7 Records) |
Query Trace: Trinies V [original query] |
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How can global guidelines support sustainable hygiene systems?
Esteves Mills J , Thomas A , Abdalla N , El-Alam R , Al-Shabi K , Ashinyo ME , Bangoura FO , Charles K , Chipungu J , Cole AO , Engebretson B , Goyol K , Grasham CF , Grossi V , Hickling S , Kalandarov S , Ababu AK , Kholmuhammad K , Klaesener-Metzner N , Kugedera Z , Kwakye A , Lee-Llacer A , Maani PP , Makhafola B , Mohamed A , Monirul Alam M , Monse B , Northover H , Palomares A , Patabendi N , Paynter N , Prasad-Gautam O , Panthi SR , Rudge L , Saha S , Salaru I , Saltiel G , Sax L , Shahid MA , Gafur MS , Shrestha S , Szeberényi K , Tidwell JB , Trinies V , Yiha O , Ziganshin R , Gordon B , Cumming O . BMJ Glob Health 2023 8 (10) Hand hygiene is a cost-effective preventive measure to reduce transmission of infectious diseases. Yet, a quarter of the global population lack access to even a basic handwashing facility. | Forthcoming WHO and UNICEF guidelines on hand hygiene in community settings will provide evidence-based recommendations to guide action. | According to consulted future guideline end-users, sustainable implementation of such recommendations to improve hand hygiene requires government-led system-strengthening approaches that build sustainable and resilient national systems. | System-strengthening plans should be underpinned by a comprehensive situational analysis and needs assessment, and monitored on an ongoing basis for course correction where necessary. | Execution of system-strengthening plans should be integrated with existing programmes. | Health sector leadership is required to drive this agenda. |
Access to and use of hand hygiene resources during the COVID-19 pandemic in two districts in Uganda, January-April 2021
Pratt C , Kesande M , Tusabe F , Medley A , Prentice-Mott G , Lozier M , Trinies V , Yapswale S , Nabatyanga S , Isabirye H , Lamorde M , Berendes D . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2023 109 (4) 881-889 To understand access to and use of hand hygiene in healthcare facilities (HCFs) and community locations during the COVID-19 pandemic, we evaluated factors associated with hand hygiene in 60 priority HCFs and community locations in two border districts in Uganda. We assessed water and hand hygiene resource availability and observed hand hygiene practice by staff or patrons. Regression modeling estimated factors associated with the availability or use of hand hygiene. In HCFs, most inpatient (61%), outpatient (71%), and laboratory or staff (90%) rooms contained hand hygiene materials. Only 38% of community locations had hand hygiene materials at all entrances and exits, 35% of congregation areas had hand hygiene materials. Overall, 38% of healthcare staff, 48% of patrons post-latrine use, and 21% of patrons entering or exiting community locations practiced hand hygiene. HCF hand hygiene access was lower in inpatient rooms (odds ratio [OR] = 0.17, 95% CI: 0.06-0.45) and outpatient rooms (OR = 0.23, 95% CI: 0.07-0.70) compared with laboratory/staff rooms. HCF hand hygiene practice was higher for doctors than nurses (OR = 3.58, 95% CI: 1.15-11.14) and with new versus existing patient encounters (OR = 2.27, 95% CI: 1.20-4.27); it was lower before versus after patient contact for both invasive (OR = 0.03, 95% CI: 0.00-0.20) and noninvasive (OR = 0.66, 95% CI: 0.45-0.95) procedures. In community settings, hand hygiene practice after using the latrine was higher than at an entrances/exits (OR = 3.39, 95% CI: 2.08-5.52). Hand hygiene rates were relatively low in healthcare and community settings. Greater emphasis on hand hygiene before patient interactions (at HCFs) and at community entrances/exits for patrons is also needed. |
Improving water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), with a focus on hand hygiene, globally for community mitigation of COVID-19
Berendes D , Martinsen A , Lozier M , Rajasingham A , Medley A , Osborne T , Trinies V , Schweitzer R , Prentice-Mott G , Pratt C , Murphy J , Craig C , Lamorde M , Kesande M , Tusabe F , Mwaki A , Eleveld A , Odhiambo A , Ngere I , Kariuki Njenga M , Cordon-Rosales C , Contreras APG , Call D , Ramay BM , Ramm RES , Paulino CJT , Schnorr CD , Aubin M , Dumas D , Murray KO , Bivens N , Ly A , Hawes E , Maliga A , Morazan GH , Manzanero R , Morey F , Maes P , Diallo Y , Ilboudo M , Richemond D , Hattab OE , Oger PY , Matsuhashi A , Nsambi G , Antoine J , Ayebare R , Nakubulwa T , Vosburgh W , Boore A , Herman-Roloff A , Zielinski-Gutierrez E , Handzel T . PLOS Water 2022 1 (6) Continuity of key water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure and WASH practices-for example, hand hygiene-are among several critical community preventive and mitigation measures to reduce transmission of infectious diseases, including COVID-19 and other respiratory diseases. WASH guidance for COVID-19 prevention may combine existing WASH standards and new COVID-19 guidance. Many existing WASH tools can also be modified for targeted WASH assessments during the COVID-19 pandemic. We partnered with local organizations to develop and deploy tools to assess WASH conditions and practices and subsequently implement, monitor, and evaluate WASH interventions to mitigate COVID-19 in low- and middle-income countries in Latin America and the Caribbean and Africa, focusing on healthcare, community institution, and household settings and hand hygiene specifically. Employing mixed-methods assessments, we observed gaps in access to hand hygiene materials specifically despite most of those settings having access to improved, often onsite, water supplies. Across countries, adherence to hand hygiene among healthcare providers was about twice as high after patient contact compared to before patient contact. Poor or non-existent management of handwashing stations and alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) was common, especially in community institutions. Markets and points of entry (internal or external border crossings) represent congregation spaces, critical for COVID-19 mitigation, where globally-recognized WASH standards are needed. Development, evaluation, deployment, and refinement of new and existing standards can help ensure WASH aspects of community mitigation efforts that remain accessible and functional to enable inclusive preventive behaviors. |
The impact of school water, sanitation, and hygiene improvements on infectious disease using serum antibody detection
Chard AN , Trinies V , Moss DM , Chang HH , Doumbia S , Lammie PJ , Freeman MC . PLoS Negl Trop Dis 2018 12 (4) e0006418 BACKGROUND: Evidence from recent studies assessing the impact of school water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions on child health has been mixed. Self-reports of disease are subject to bias, and few WASH impact evaluations employ objective health measures to assess reductions in disease and exposure to pathogens. We utilized antibody responses from dried blood spots (DBS) to measure the impact of a school WASH intervention on infectious disease among pupils in Mali. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We randomly selected 21 beneficiary primary schools and their 21 matched comparison schools participating in a matched-control trial of a comprehensive school-based WASH intervention in Mali. DBS were collected from 20 randomly selected pupils in each school (n = 807). We analyzed eluted IgG from the DBS using a Luminex multiplex bead assay to 28 antigens from 17 different pathogens. Factor analysis identified three distinct latent variables representing vector-transmitted disease (driven primarily by dengue), food/water-transmitted enteric disease (driven primarily by Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae), and person-to-person transmitted enteric disease (driven primarily by norovirus). Data were analyzed using a linear latent variable model. Antibody evidence of food/water-transmitted enteric disease (change in latent variable mean (beta) = -0.24; 95% CI: -0.53, -0.13) and person-to-person transmitted enteric disease (beta = -0.17; 95% CI: -0.42, -0.04) was lower among pupils attending beneficiary schools. There was no difference in antibody evidence of vector-transmitted disease (beta = 0.11; 95% CI: -0.05, 0.33). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Evidence of enteric disease was lower among pupils attending schools benefitting from school WASH improvements than students attending comparison schools. These findings support results from the parent study, which also found reduced incidence of self-reported diarrhea among pupils of beneficiary schools. DBS collection was feasible in this resource-poor field setting and provided objective evidence of disease at a low cost per antigen analyzed, making it an effective measurement tool for the WASH field. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01787058). |
Detection of immunoglobulin G antibodies to Taenia solium cysticercosis antigen glutathione-S-transferase-rT24H in Malian children using multiplex bead assay
Moss DM , Handali S , Chard AN , Trinies V , Bullard S , Wiegand RE , Doumbia S , Freeman MC , Lammie PJ . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2018 98 (5) 1408-1412 Blood samples from 805 students attending 42 elementary schools in Mopti, Sikasso, and Koulikoro regions, and Bamako district in Mali participated in a school water, sanitation, and hygiene intervention. Immunoglobulin (Ig) G responses to several antigens/pathogens were assessed by a multiplex bead assay (MBA), and the recombinant Taenia solium T24H antigen was included. Of all students tested, 8.0% were positive to rT24H, but in some schools 25-30%. A cluster of 12 widespread school locations showed not only a relative risk of 3.23 for T. solium exposure and significantly higher IgG responses (P < 0.001) but also significantly lower elevation (P = 0.04) (m, above sea level) compared with schools outside the cluster. All schools at elevations < 425 m showed significantly higher IgG responses (P = 0.017) than schools at elevations >/= 425 m. The MBA is an excellent serological platform that provides cost-effective opportunities to expand testing in serosurveys. |
Evaluation of immunoglobulin g responses to Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax in Malian school children using multiplex bead assay
Rogier E , Moss DM , Chard AN , Trinies V , Doumbia S , Freeman MC , Lammie PJ . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2016 96 (2) 312-318 Malaria serology through assaying for IgG against Plasmodium spp. antigens provides evidence into the infection history for an individual. The multiplex bead assay (MBA) allows for detection of IgG against multiple Plasmodium spp., and can be especially useful in many regions where Plasmodium falciparum is of primary clinical focus, but other species are co-endemic. Dried blood spots were collected from 805 Malian children attending 42 elementary schools in the regions of Mopti, Sikasso, Koulikoro, and Bamako capital district, and IgG assayed by MBA. As southern Mali is known to be holoendemic for P. falciparum, merozoite surface protein 1 19-kDa subunit (MSP-142) and apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA-1) antigens were included for serology against this parasite. Responses to these antigens both provided high estimates for lifetime exposure, with 730 (90%) children with IgG antibodies for MSP-142, 737 (91%) for AMA-1, and 773 (96%) positive for either or both. Also included was the antigen Plasmodium vivax MSP-119, against which 140 (17.4%) children were found to have antibodies. Increases in antibody titers with older age were clearly seen with the P. falciparum antigens, but not with the P. vivax antigen, likely indicating more of a sporadic, rather than sustained transmission for this species. The MBA provides effective opportunities to evaluate malaria transmission through serological analysis for multiple Plasmodium species. |
Serological responses to filarial antigens in Malian children attending elementary schools
Moss DM , Chard AN , Trinies V , Doumbia S , Freeman MC , Lammie PJ . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2016 96 (1) 229-232 Dried blood spots (DBS) were collected from 805 children attending 42 elementary schools in the regions of Mopti, Sikasso, Koulikoro, and the regional capital of Bamako in Mali as part of an evaluation of a school health intervention. Eluted immunoglobulin (Ig) G from the DBS was assessed by a multiplex bead assay (MBA) for two filariasis antigens, Wuchereria bancrofti, Wb123, and Brugia malayi, Bm14, to determine the effectiveness of mass drug administration (MDA) programs to eliminate lymphatic filariasis (LF). The prevalence of positive IgG responses in the children to each antigen was less than 1%, indicating effectiveness of the MDA against LF. The MBA is an excellent serological platform that provides cost-effective opportunities to evaluate public health activities beyond the survey targets. |
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