135 research outputs found

    Donor-substituted phosphanes – surprisingly weak Lewis donors for phosphenium cation stabilisation

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    Paradoxically, N- and O- donor substituted tri-arylphosphanes are shown to be weaker donors than PPh3_3 when binding the soft Lewis acid moiety [PPh2_2]+^+. This arises from internal solvation and rehybridisation at phosphorus, precluding chelation and increasing steric demand, in direct contrast to coordination modes observed for metal complexes

    The costs of preventing and treating chagas disease in Colombia

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    Background: The objective of this study is to report the costs of Chagas disease in Colombia, in terms of vector disease control programmes and the costs of providing care to chronic Chagas disease patients with cardiomyopathy. Methods: Data were collected from Colombia in 2004. A retrospective review of costs for vector control programmes carried out in rural areas included 3,084 houses surveyed for infestation with triatomine bugs and 3,305 houses sprayed with insecticide. A total of 63 patient records from 3 different hospitals were selected for a retrospective review of resource use. Consensus methodology with local experts was used to estimate care seeking behaviour and to complement observed data on utilisation. Findings: The mean cost per house per entomological survey was 4.4(inUS4.4 (in US of 2004), whereas the mean cost of spraying a house with insecticide was 27.Themaincostdriverofsprayingwasthepriceoftheinsecticide,whichvariedgreatly.TreatmentofachronicChagasdiseasepatientcostsbetween27. The main cost driver of spraying was the price of the insecticide, which varied greatly. Treatment of a chronic Chagas disease patient costs between 46.4 and 7,981peryearinColombia,dependingonseverityandthelevelofcareused.Combiningcostandutilisationestimatestheexpectedcostoftreatmentperpatientyearis7,981 per year in Colombia, depending on severity and the level of care used. Combining cost and utilisation estimates the expected cost of treatment per patient-year is 1,028, whereas lifetime costs averaged $11,619 per patient. Chronic Chagas disease patients have limited access to healthcare, with an estimated 22% of patients never seeking care. Conclusion: Chagas disease is a preventable condition that affects mostly poor populations living in rural areas. The mean costs of surveying houses for infestation and spraying infested houses were low in comparison to other studies and in line with treatment costs. Care seeking behaviour and the type of insurance affiliation seem to play a role in the facilities and type of care that patients use, thus raising concerns about equitable access to care. Preventing Chagas disease in Colombia would be cost-effective and could contribute to prevent inequalities in health and healthcare.Wellcome Trus

    Cost-Effectiveness of Chagas Disease Vector Control Strategies in Northwestern Argentina

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    Despite decreasing rates of prevalence and incidence, Chagas disease remains a serious problem in Latin America, especially for the rural poor. Without vaccines, control and prevention rely mostly on residual spraying of insecticides. Under the aegis of the Southern Cone Initiative, and in agreement with global trends in decentralization of the health systems, in 1992 the Argentinean vector control launched a new vector control program based on community participation. The present study represents the first thorough evaluation of the overall performance of such vector control program and the first comparative assessment of the cost-effectiveness of different vector control strategies in a highly endemic rural area of northwestern Argentina. Supported by results of independent studies, the present work shows that in rural, poor and dispersed areas of the Gran Chaco region, the implementation of a mixed (i.e., vertical attack phase followed by horizontal surveillance) strategy constantly supervised and supported by national or local vector control programs would be the most cost-effective option to interrupt vector-borne transmission of Chagas disease

    Small-scale field trial of a sensing device for detecting peridomestic populations of Triatoma infestans (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) in northwestern Argentina

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    Fil: De Marco, R J. Laboratorio de Ecología General, Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Ciudad Universitaria (1428), Buenos Aires; Argentina.Fil: Gürtler, Ricardo E. ANLIS Dr.C.G.Malbrán; Argentina.Fil: Salomón, Oscar Daniel. ANLIS Dr.C.G.Malbrán. Centro Nacional de Diagnóstico e Investigación en Endemo-Epidemias; Argentina.Fil: Chuit, Roberto. Laboratorio de Ecología General, Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Ciudad Universitaria (1428), Buenos Aires; Argentina.Two prototypes of sensing devices for detecting peridomestic populations of Triatoma infestans Klug were tested in paired trials with bamboo canes in Amamá and nearby rural villages under triatomine surveillance. In infested peridomestic structures housing domestic animals, 1-2 pairs of numbered devices were placed per test site, left for 3-9 nights, and inspected for evidence of infestation. Prototype A was a black plastic cylinder 19 cm high and 10 cm diameter, with a screw cap on the top, 2 openings in the bottom, and a removable central structure made of resistant plastic coated with leather. Prototype B had square leather pieces rolled into cylinders instead of the central structure. Prototype A was significantly more sensitive than the bamboo cane with pleated paper inside in 13 test sites in which 20 pairs were tried. In a smaller series involving 7 pairs, prototype B also detected infestations more frequently than the cane. Triatomine feces were the signs most frequently recorded by both prototypes, whereas the bamboo canes recorded no feces. Ten T. infestans and 1 Triatoma guasayana Wygodzinsky & Avalos were collected from the prototypes placed on the ground or walls, not beneath the thatched roofs of the animal shelters, whereas only 3 T. infestans were collected from the canes. This study describes an effective sensing device for detecting T. infestans populations in outdoor animal shelters and provides quantitative field data on its performance
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