Publications by authors named "Jimmy Namangale"

Article Synopsis
  • AIDS is an incurable disease prevalent in Africa, where patients with low CD4 counts (less than 240) are treated with ARV drugs that can cause serious side effects; understanding the circumstances around these side effects is crucial for effective management.* -
  • A study reviewed hospital records from 2011-2014, analyzing the link between ARV treatment regimens (1A, 2A, 5A) and social/demographic factors; results indicated that side effects were more common in women aged 31-40 and that certain regimens had varying side effects.* -
  • Age, gender, and occupation significantly impacted the occurrence of side effects; older individuals experienced fewer skin rashes, while certain
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The close proximity of Liwonde National Park to Liwonde town creates a unique situation of a large human population adjacent to a natural undisturbed animal reserve. The closeness of the two ecosystems has an impact on biology of mosquitoes of the area, such as susceptibility to insecticides. Susceptibility to insecticide was determined using knockdown bioassays.

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We conducted a study on the control of mosquitos on Chisi Island in Lake Chilwa from August to November, 2006. The aim was to compare the cost and efficacy of deltamethrin, a pyrethroid based insecticide, when used in insecticide treated nets (ITN) and when used in indoor residual spray (IRS). Thirty village huts were enrolled in the study.

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Background: Malaria is a major public health problem in Malawi, however, quantifying its burden in a population is a challenge. Routine hospital data provide a proxy for measuring the incidence of severe malaria and for crudely estimating morbidity rates. Using such data, this paper proposes a method to describe trends, patterns and factors associated with in-hospital mortality attributed to the disease.

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Children in less developed countries die from relatively small number of infectious disease, some of which epidemiologically overlap. Using self-reported illness data from the 2000 Malawi Demographic and Health Survey, we applied a random effects multinomial model to assess risk factors of childhood co-morbidity of fever, diarrhoea and pneumonia, and quantify area-specific spatial effects. The spatial structure was modelled using the conditional autoregressive prior.

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