58 research outputs found
A prospective survey study on premenstrual syndrome in young and middle aged women with an emphasis on its management
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is defined as the recurrence of psychological and physical symptoms in the luteal phase, which remit in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Symptoms of which fall in three domains: emotional, physical and behavioural e.g. irritability, anger, headache, fatigue, food cravings etc. The survey study of was conducted among 50 young & 50 middle aged women of S.B.K.S Medical Institute and Research Centre to find the prevalence of premenstrual syndrome with an emphasis on its management. Responses to a feedback questionnaire covering various aspects related PMS were obtained from 50 participants belonging to each group. The participants belonged to different range of literacy. It was found that 42% faced PMS regularly, while 58% occasionally. Of the 100 participants 68% suffered with backache, 64% leg cramps, 62% fatigue, breast tenderness and anger whereas 58% suffered with anxiety and generalized body ache. Of all the sufferers only 34% had received the treatment for PMS. Irrespective of the age PMS is common problem faced by women. With our study we observed that literacy has not mattered in the management of this health problem. Since there are reports stating that the severity of PMS can hamper the daily routine and even lead to suicidal tendency, it is essential that awareness programs need to be conducted to address the importance of managing the issue by pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods
Enrolling HIV-positive adolescents in mental health research: A case study reflecting on legal and ethical complexities
Background. Adolescents living with HIV are an emerging group in the global HIV/AIDS epidemic. Mental health in this population affects HIV care, treatment, consequential morbidity and secondary transmission. There is a paucity of research regarding these youth in South Africa (SA), partly because section 71 of the National Health Act of 2003 (NHA) requires parental or guardianâs consent.
Objective. To explore legal and ethical issues related to conducting adolescent mental health research in SA.
Methods. After obtaining a High Court order permitting research on minors aged <18 years without prior parental or guardianâs consent, we used qualitative and quantitative methods to interview adolescents in five clinics serving HIV-positive adolescents in Johannesburg.
Results. Our study enrolled 343 participants; 74% were orphaned and did not have legal guardians, 27% were symptomatic for depression, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder, 24% were suicidal, and almost 90% did not feel that they belonged in the family with which they lived. Without court intervention, most of the participants could not have participated in this research because parental consent was impossible to obtain. This case study argues for exceptions to the parental consent requirement, which excludes orphaned and vulnerable children and youth from research.
Conclusions. Recommendations are made to promote ethical integrity in conducting mental health research with adolescents. A balance is needed between protecting adolescents from exploitation and permitting access to benefits of research. Requiring parental consent for all research does not necessarily give effect to policy. For the vast majority of SA HIV-positive adolescents, parental consent is not possible. Section 71 of the NHA ought to be amended to facilitate valuable and necessary research concerning HIV-positive orphan children and adolescents
A prospective study on the use of magnesium sulfate in prevention and management of eclampsia with emphasis on adverse drug reactions
Introduction: The hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are the leading causes of maternal and perinatal mortality. Management of preeclampsia and eclampsia remains controversial even today. Several drugs with different regimens are available at present. As a consequence; women are treated in various ways by different regimens.Aim: Our work aimed to study the use of various magnesium sulfate regimens used in management of eclampsia in a tertiary care teaching rural hospital.Methods: A prospective, observational, non-interventional study was carried out among the eclamptic patients admitted to obstetrics ward. After explaining the purpose and method of study, through the patient information sheet, patients willing to sign the informed consent form were enrolled for the study. Relevant data was gathered from their case files and by direct interview with the patients that were recorded in the case record form.Results: Of the 35 cases of eclampsia recorded during the study period, we observed that all the patients were treated with Pritchardâs regimen of Magnesium Sulfate. It was noticed that there was improvement in all the patients with no adverse drug reactions recorded during the time of management.Conclusion: Maternal and perinatal mortality can be reduced to major extent by prevention of eclampsia. Prompt diagnosis and institution of therapy by selecting an ideal anticonvulsant is essential as the maternal and perinatal mortality progressively rises with increase no of convulsions. Magnesium Sulfate is a potent anticonvulsant with mild antihypertensive activity with less adverse effects.
Cash transfer interventions for sexual health : meanings and experiences of adolescent males and females in inner-city Johannesburg
Abstract: Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, there is growing interest in the use of cash transfer (CT) programs for HIV treatment and prevention. However, there is limited evidence of the consequences related to CT provision to adolescents in low-resourced urban settings. We explored the experiences of adolescents receiving CTs to assess the acceptability and unintended consequences of CT strategies in urban Johannesburg, South Africa. Methods: We collected qualitative data during a pilot randomized controlled trial of three CT strategies (monthly payments unconditional vs. conditional on school attendance vs. a once-off payment conditional on a clinic visit) involving 120 adolescents aged 16â18 years old in the inner city of Johannesburg. Interviews were conducted in isiZulu, Sesotho or English with a sub-sample of 49 participants who adhered to study conditions, 6 months after receiving CT (280 ZAR/ 20 USD) and up to 12 months after the program had ended. Interviews were transcribed and translated by three fieldworkers. Codes were generated using an inductive approach; transcripts were initially coded based on emerging issues and subsequently coded deductively using Atlas.ti 7.4. Results: CTs promoted a sense of independence and an adult social identity amongst recipients. CTs were used to purchase personal and household items; however, there were gender differences in spending and saving behaviours. Male participantsâ spending reflected their preoccupation with maintaining a public social status through which they asserted an image of the responsible adult. In contrast, female participantsâ expenditure reflected assumption of domestic responsibilities and independence from older men, with the latter highlighting CTsâ potential to reduce transactional sexual partnerships. Cash benefits were short-lived, as adolescents reverted to previous behavior after the programâs cessation. Conclusion: CT programs offer adolescent males and females in low-income urban settings a sense of agency, which is vital for their transition to adulthood. However, gender differences in the expenditure of CTs and the effects of ending CT programs must be noted, as these may present potential unintended risks
Does biological relatedness affect child survival?
Objective: We studied child survival in Rakai, Uganda where many children are fostered out or orphaned. Methods: Biological relatedness is measured as the average of the Wrightâs coefficients between each household member and the child. Instrumental variables for fostering include proportion of adult males in household, age and gender of household head. Control variables include SES, religion, polygyny, household size, child age, child birth size, and child HIV status. Results: Presence of both parents in the household increased the odds of survival by 28%. After controlling for the endogeneity of child placement decisions in a multivariate model we found that lower biological relatedness of a child was associated with statistically significant reductions in child survival. The effects of biological relatedness on child survival tend to be stronger for both HIV- and HIV+ children of HIV+ mothers. Conclusions: Reductions in the numbers of close relatives caring for children of HIV+ mothers reduce child survival.AIDS/HIV, child survival, fostering, orphans, Uganda
A prospective study on drug utilization pattern & rationality in treatment of type II diabetes mellitus: a population based analysis
Background: Diabetes a chronic disease is associated with significant morbidity, complications with poor glycemic control. Hence, meticulous management is necessary. Comorbid conditions increase chances of polypharmacy and irrational prescriptions in diabetic patients. This prospective non interventional study aimed to gather and study the drug utilization pattern in diabetic patients.Methods: The study was conducted in 50 diabetic patients admitted in medicine ward. Patients were included in the study only after obtaining written informed consent form; all relevant data were collected from case record forms and were analyzed.Results:Diabetes mellitus was observed to be highest in patients with the age group of 60-70 years, affecting 66% males and 34% females. Among the participants 42 (84%) were already on treatment for diabetes while 8 (16%) were diagnosed at the time of admission. We observed that 27 (54%) patients were treated with insulin + oral hypoglycemic agents, 13 (26%) were treated with only Insulin while 10 (20%) patients were prescribed only oral hypoglycemic agents. The most common comorbid conditions observed by us were hypertension, chronic renal disease, diabetic foot, septicemia, urinary tract infections and other susceptible infections.Conclusion:To conclude, the study reveals that Metformin continues to be the choice of oral hypoglycemic agents with least adverse effects and insulin was used to treat uncontrolled state, where physicians have greatly considered the socio-economic status while prescribing which is obvious with least use of costly insulin preparations.
The impact of intimate partner violence on women's contraceptive use: Evidence from the Rakai Community Cohort Study in Rakai, Uganda.
A systematic review of longitudinal studies suggests that intimate partner violence (IPV) is associated with reduced contraceptive use, but most included studies were limited to two time points. We used seven waves of data from the Rakai Community Cohort Study in Rakai, Uganda to estimate the effect of prior year IPV at one visit on women's current contraceptive use at the following visit. We used inverse probability of treatment-weighted marginal structural models (MSMs) to estimate the relative risk of current contraceptive use comparing women who were exposed to emotional, physical, and/or sexual IPV during the year prior to interview to those who were not. We accounted for time-fixed and time-varying confounders and prior IPV and adjusted standard errors for repeated measures within individuals. The analysis included 7923 women interviewed between 2001 and 2013. In the weighted MSMs, women who experienced any form of prior year IPV were 20% less likely to use condoms at last sex than women who had not (95% CI: 0.12, 0.26). We did not find evidence that IPV affects current use of modern contraception (RR: 0.99; 95% CI: 0.95, 1.03); however, current use of a partner-dependent method was 27% lower among women who reported any form of prior-year IPV compared to women who had not (95% CI: 0.20, 0.33). Women who experienced prior-year IPV were less likely to use condoms and other forms of contraception that required negotiation with their male partners and more likely to use contraception that they could hide from their male partners. Longitudinal studies in Rakai and elsewhere have found that women who experience IPV have a higher rate of HIV than women who do not. Our finding that women who experience IPV are less likely to use condoms may help explain the relation between IPV and HIV
Eff ectiveness of an integrated intimate partner violence and HIV prevention intervention in Rakai, Uganda: analysis of an intervention in an existing cluster randomised cohort
Background Intimate partner violence (IPV) is associated with HIV infection. We aimed to assess whether provision
of a combination of IPV prevention and HIV services would reduce IPV and HIV incidence in individuals enrolled in
the Rakai Community Cohort Study (RCCS), Rakai, Uganda.
Methods We used pre-existing clusters of communities randomised as part of a previous family planning trial in this
cohort. Four intervention group clusters from the previous trial were provided standard of care HIV services plus a
community-level mobilisation intervention to change attitudes, social norms, and behaviours related to IPV, and a
screening and brief intervention to promote safe HIV disclosure and risk reduction in women seeking HIV
counselling and testing services (the Safe Homes and Respect for Everyone [SHARE] Project). Seven control group
clusters (including two intervention groups from the original trial) received only standard of care HIV services.
Investigators for the RCCS did a baseline survey between February, 2005, and June, 2006, and two follow-up surveys
between August, 2006, and April, 2008, and June, 2008, and December, 2009. Our primary endpoints were selfreported
experience and perpetration of past year IPV (emotional, physical, and sexual) and laboratory-based diagnosis
of HIV incidence in the study population. We used Poisson multivariable regression to estimate adjusted prevalence
risk ratios (aPRR) of IPV, and adjusted incidence rate ratios (aIRR) of HIV acquisition. This study was registered with
ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02050763.
Findings Between Feb 15, 2005, and June 30, 2006, we enrolled 11 448 individuals aged 15â49 years. 5337 individuals
(in four intervention clusters) were allocated into the SHARE plus HIV services group and 6111 individuals (in seven
control clusters) were allocated into the HIV services only group. Compared with control groups, individuals in the
SHARE intervention groups had fewer self-reports of past-year physical IPV (346 [16%] of 2127 responders in control
groups vs 217 [12%] of 1812 responders in intervention groups; aPRR 0¡79, 95% CI 0¡67â0¡92) and sexual IPV
(261 [13%] of 2038 vs 167 [10%] of 1737; 0¡80, 0¡67â0¡97). Incidence of emotional IPV did not diff er (409 [20%] of
2039 vs 311 [18%] of 1737; 0¡91, 0¡79â1¡04). SHARE had no eff ect on male-reported IPV perpetration. At follow-up 2
(after about 35 months) the intervention was associated with a reduction in HIV incidence (1¡15 cases per 100 personyears
in control vs 0¡87 cases per 100 person-years in intervention group; aIRR 0¡67, 95% CI 0¡46â0¡97, p=0¡0362).
Interpretation SHARE could reduce some forms of IPV towards women and overall HIV incidence, possibly through
a reduction in forced sex and increased disclosure of HIV results. Findings from this study should inform future
work toward HIV prevention, treatment, and care, and SHAREâs ecological approach could be adopted, at least partly,
as a standard of care for other HIV programmes in sub-Saharan Africa.
Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, US National Institutes of Health, WHO, Presidentâs Emergency Plan for
AIDS Relief, Fogarty International Center
How to Integrate HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health Services in Namibia, the Epako Clinic Case Study
Introduction: During the past two decades, HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health services in Namibia have been provided in silos, with high fragmentation. As a consequence of this, quality and efficiency of services in Primary Health Care has been compromised. Methods: We conducted an operational research (observational pre-post study) in a public health facility in Namibia. A health facility assessment was conducted before and after the integration of health services. A person-centred integrated model was implemented to integrate all health services provided at the health facility in addition to HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health services. Comprehensive services are provided by each health worker to the same patients over time (longitudinality), on a daily basis (accessibility) and with a good external referral system (coordination). Prevalence rates of time flows and productivity were done. Results: Integrated services improved accessibility, stigma and quality of antenatal care services by improving the provider-patient communication, reducing the time that patients stay in the clinic in 16% and reducing the waiting times in 14%. In addition, nurse productivity improved 85% and the expected time in the health facility was reduced 24% without compromising the uptake of TB, HIV, outpatient, antenatal care or first visit family planning services. Given the success on many indicators resulting from integration of services, the goal of this paper was to describe âhowâ health services have been integrated, the âprocessâ followed and presenting some âresultsâ from the integrated clinic. Conclusions: Our study shows that HIV and SRH services can be effectively integrated by following the person-centred integrated model. Based on the Namibian experience on âhowâ to integrate health services and the âprocessâ to achieve it, other African countries can replicate the model to move away from the silo approach and contribute to the achievement of Universal Health Coverage
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