4 results match your criteria: "and LUMSA University[Affiliation]"

Cost-Effectiveness and Quality of Care of a Comprehensive ART Program in Malawi.

Medicine (Baltimore)

May 2016

From the Dream programme - Community of Sant'Egidio (SO), Clinton Health Access Initiative (SD, LSZ), Department of Public Health, University of Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy (LP, SM, GL), Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (MS), and LUMSA University, Rome, Italy (MCM).

The aim of this study is to assess the cost-effectiveness of a holistic, comprehensive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment Program in Malawi.Comprehensive cost data for the year 2010 have been collected at 30 facilities from the public network of health centers providing antiretroviral treatment (ART) throughout the country; two of these facilities were operated by the Disease Relief through Excellent and Advanced Means (DREAM) program.The outcomes analysis was carried out over five years comparing two cohorts of patients on treatment: 1) 2387 patients who started ART in the two DREAM centers during 2008, 2) patients who started ART in Malawi in the same year under the Ministry of Health program.

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Laboratory confirmation of clinically diagnosed malaria in a cohort of HIV-infected mothers and their children in Malawi.

J Trop Pediatr

June 2015

Department of Therapeutic Research and Medicines Evaluation, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy, Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy, DREAM Program, Community of S. Egidio, Blantyre, Malawi and LUMSA University, Rome, Italy.

To avoid overdiagnosis, accuracy in the identification of true malaria cases is of critical importance. Samples (either whole blood, dried blood spots or plasma/serum) collected at the time of clinically diagnosed malaria episodes in a cohort of Malawian HIV-infected mothers and their children were retrospectively tested with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for HRP-2 (histidine-rich protein 2) detection. There were 55 and 56 clinically diagnosed cases of malaria in mothers and children, respectively, with samples available for testing.

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Implicit memory is independent from IQ and age but not from etiology: evidence from Down and Williams syndromes.

J Intellect Disabil Res

December 2007

I.R.C.C.S. Ospedale Pediatrico Bambino Gesù, S. Marinella, Roma, and LUMSA University, Roma, Italy.

Background: In the last few years, experimental data have been reported on differences in implicit memory processes of genetically distinct groups of individuals with Intellectual Disability (ID). These evidences are relevant for the more general debate on supposed asynchrony of cognitive maturation in children with abnormal brain development. This study, comparing implicit memory processes in individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) and Down syndrome (DS), was planned to verify the 'etiological specificity' hypotheses pertaining to the skill learning abilities of individuals with ID.

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A large number of brain-damaged patients with heterogeneous category-specific deficits have been reported in literature. This has given rise to different theories concerning the processing of semantic knowledge. In this paper we report the case of K.

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