Publications by authors named "Y Gebre"

Article Synopsis
  • The study in Bouaké, Côte d'Ivoire, assessed how common asymptomatic and subpatent P. falciparum infections are and compared the effectiveness of three diagnostic tests (light microscopy, rapid diagnostic tests, and quantitative PCR).
  • Out of 2313 participants, 97.2% were asymptomatic, with high prevalence rates found; particularly in school-age children, while subpatent infections were more common in older individuals (≥15 years).
  • The findings suggest that traditional tests only detect high-density infections, and none of the tested samples showed deletions in the pfhrp2 gene, indicating a need for focused malaria reduction strategies in urban areas.
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Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are a key tool for the diagnosis of malaria infections among clinical and subclinical individuals. Low-density infections, and deletions of the P. falciparum hrp2/3 genes (encoding the HRP2 and HRP3 proteins detected by many RDTs) present challenges for RDT-based diagnosis.

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Background: The World Health Organization recommends parasitological confirmation of all suspected malaria cases by microscopy or rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) before treatment. These conventional tools are widely used for point-of-care diagnosis in spite of their poor sensitivity at low parasite density. Previous studies in Ghana have compared microscopy and RDT using standard 18S rRNA PCR as reference with varying outcomes.

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Objective: To improve blood pressure control and hypertension registry coverage at six demonstration sites in St Lucia.

Methods: From January 2020 to December 2021, St Lucia's Ministry of Health, with support of the Pan American Health Organization, implemented the HEARTS Technical Package in six primary health care facilities with six-monthly monitoring of blood pressure control and hypertension registry coverage. The modules included healthy-lifestyle counselling, evidence-based treatment protocols, access to essential medicines and technology, risk-based cardiovascular management, team-based care and systems for monitoring.

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Background: Birth asphyxia is the major public health problem in the world. It is estimated that around 23% of all newborn deaths are caused by birth asphyxia worldwide. Birth asphyxia is the top three causes of newborn deaths in sub-Saharan Africa and more than one-third of deaths in Ethiopia.

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