40 research outputs found

    Evaluation of geospatial methods to generate subnational HIV prevalence estimates for local level planning

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    Objective: There is evidence of substantial subnational variation in the HIV epidemic. However, robust spatial HIV data are often only available at high levels of geographic aggregation and not at the finer resolution needed for decision making. Therefore, spatial analysis methods that leverage available data to provide local estimates of HIV prevalence may be useful. Such methods exist but have not been formally compared when applied to HIV. Design/methods: Six candidate methods – including those used by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS to generate maps and a Bayesian geostatistical approach applied to other diseases – were used to generate maps and subnational estimates of HIV prevalence across three countries using cluster level data from household surveys. Two approaches were used to assess the accuracy of predictions: internal validation, whereby a proportion of input data is held back (test dataset) to challenge predictions; and comparison with location-specific data from household surveys in earlier years. Results: Each of the methods can generate usefully accurate predictions of prevalence at unsampled locations, with the magnitude of the error in predictions similar across approaches. However, the Bayesian geostatistical approach consistently gave marginally the strongest statistical performance across countries and validation procedures. Conclusions: Available methods may be able to furnish estimates of HIV prevalence at finer spatial scales than the data currently allow. The subnational variation revealed can be integrated into planning to ensure responsiveness to the spatial features of the epidemic. The Bayesian geostatistical approach is a promising strategy for integrating HIV data to generate robust local estimates

    Trends in knowledge of HIV status and efficiency of HIV testing services in sub-Saharan Africa, 2000-20: a modelling study using survey and HIV testing programme data.

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    BACKGROUND: Monitoring knowledge of HIV status among people living with HIV is essential for an effective national HIV response. This study estimates progress and gaps in reaching the UNAIDS 2020 target of 90% knowledge of status, and the efficiency of HIV testing services in sub-Saharan Africa, where two thirds of all people living with HIV reside. METHODS: For this modelling study, we used data from 183 population-based surveys (including more than 2·7 million participants) and national HIV testing programme reports (315 country-years) from 40 countries in sub-Saharan Africa as inputs into a mathematical model to examine trends in knowledge of status among people living with HIV, median time from HIV infection to diagnosis, HIV testing positivity, and proportion of new diagnoses among all positive tests, adjusting for retesting. We included data from 2000 to 2019, and projected results to 2020. FINDINGS: Across sub-Saharan Africa, knowledge of status steadily increased from 5·7% (95% credible interval [CrI] 4·6-7·0) in 2000 to 84% (82-86) in 2020. 12 countries and one region, southern Africa, reached the 90% target. In 2020, knowledge of status was lower among men (79%, 95% CrI 76-81) than women (87%, 85-89) across sub-Saharan Africa. People living with HIV aged 15-24 years were the least likely to know their status (65%, 62-69), but the largest gap in terms of absolute numbers was among men aged 35-49 years, with 701 000 (95% CrI 611 000-788 000) remaining undiagnosed. As knowledge of status increased from 2000 to 2020, the median time to diagnosis decreased from 9·6 years (9·1-10) to 2·6 years (1·8-3·5), HIV testing positivity declined from 9·0% (7·7-10) to 2·8% (2·1-3·9), and the proportion of first-time diagnoses among all positive tests dropped from 89% (77-96) to 42% (30-55). INTERPRETATION: On the path towards the next UNAIDS target of 95% diagnostic coverage by 2025, and in a context of declining positivity and yield of first-time diagnoses, disparities in knowledge of status must be addressed. Increasing knowledge of status and treatment coverage among older men could be crucial to reducing HIV incidence among women in sub-Saharan Africa, and by extension, reducing mother-to-child transmission. FUNDING: Steinberg Fund for Interdisciplinary Global Health Research (McGill University); Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Fonds the recherche du Québec-Santé; UNAIDS; UK Medical Research Council; MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis; UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

    Naomi: a new modelling tool for estimating HIV epidemic indicators at the district level in sub-Saharan Africa.

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    INTRODUCTION: HIV planning requires granular estimates for the number of people living with HIV (PLHIV), antiretroviral treatment (ART) coverage and unmet need, and new HIV infections by district, or equivalent subnational administrative level. We developed a Bayesian small-area estimation model, called Naomi, to estimate these quantities stratified by subnational administrative units, sex, and five-year age groups. METHODS: Small-area regressions for HIV prevalence, ART coverage and HIV incidence were jointly calibrated using subnational household survey data on all three indicators, routine antenatal service delivery data on HIV prevalence and ART coverage among pregnant women, and service delivery data on the number of PLHIV receiving ART. Incidence was modelled by district-level HIV prevalence and ART coverage. Model outputs of counts and rates for each indicator were aggregated to multiple geographic and demographic stratifications of interest. The model was estimated in an empirical Bayes framework, furnishing probabilistic uncertainty ranges for all output indicators. Example results were presented using data from Malawi during 2016-2018. RESULTS: Adult HIV prevalence in September 2018 ranged from 3.2% to 17.1% across Malawi's districts and was higher in southern districts and in metropolitan areas. ART coverage was more homogenous, ranging from 75% to 82%. The largest number of PLHIV was among ages 35 to 39 for both women and men, while the most untreated PLHIV were among ages 25 to 29 for women and 30 to 34 for men. Relative uncertainty was larger for the untreated PLHIV than the number on ART or total PLHIV. Among clients receiving ART at facilities in Lilongwe city, an estimated 71% (95% CI, 61% to 79%) resided in Lilongwe city, 20% (14% to 27%) in Lilongwe district outside the metropolis, and 9% (6% to 12%) in neighbouring Dowa district. Thirty-eight percent (26% to 50%) of Lilongwe rural residents and 39% (27% to 50%) of Dowa residents received treatment at facilities in Lilongwe city. CONCLUSIONS: The Naomi model synthesizes multiple subnational data sources to furnish estimates of key indicators for HIV programme planning, resource allocation, and target setting. Further model development to meet evolving HIV policy priorities and programme need should be accompanied by continued strengthening and understanding of routine health system data

    A Two-Stage Piezoelectric Resonator and Switched Capacitor DC-DC Converter

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    Power converters are used in virtually every area of our lives from electric vehicle charging stations to television screens. Presently, magnetics pose a challenge for miniaturization as they fundamentally decrease in achievable power density at small scales. Our solution to this problem is to remove magnetic components altogether and instead design power converters based on piezoelectric resonators (PRs) and capacitors as the main passive elements. In previous work, we have demonstrated that PRs have high efficiencies and power density capabilities operating as dc-dc voltage regulators, but that these advantages wane for high step down ratios. Alternatively, utilizing capacitors in a switch capacitor (SC) network can provide high step down ratios with high power densities and efficiencies, but only for specific conversion ratios. By connecting the PR and SC converters together, there is an opportunity for each stage to address the drawbacks of the other in order to create a high power density and high efficiency power converter that can provide good voltage regulation and a high step down ratio. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate, simulate, and build a two-stage converter using a piezoelectric resonator and switched capacitor converter.M.Eng

    Rest in Peace Dr Tajudeen Abdul Raheem1

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    Muthoni Wanyeki recalls the work, life and vision of Tajudeen Abdul Raheem in one of the many tributes that have poured in after his untimely death.

    Use of a dwelling-referenced geographic information system to characterize urban tuberculosis

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    Using ArcView 3.2 software, all active TB cases reported in the former city of Montreal 1996--2000 were precisely geo-coded, that is mapped to the corresponding residential address. For comparison, using a case-cohort approach control dwellings were randomly selected from the municipal dwelling GIS, with a 10:1 ratio. We identified 595 case and 5950 control dwellings. Census tract data from the 1996 Canadian Census as well as dwelling characteristics from the Montreal housing database were attributed to both case and control dwellings. Multivariate logistic regression was used with dwelling status (case vs. control) as the dependant variable, to evaluate the independent influence of crowding and other socio-demographic factors.A high-precision housing GIS complemented census data in pinpointing and characterising the occurrence of TB in Montreal. It provided a more refined assessment of the impact of local crowding, after adjustment for other important factors

    Globalization, Poverty and Women's Rights: Making the linkages

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    In examining the links among globalization, reproductive rights and health issues, L. Muthoni Wanyeki argues that Africans need to find new ways of talking about reproductive and sexual rights, from within the cultural and religious contexts within which most African women live and struggle to defend those rights. She proposes that information and services on reproductive and sexual rights need to be high on all African development agendas as a priority in economic and political planning – nationally and internationally. Development (2004) 47, 94–96. doi:10.1057/palgrave.development.1100005
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