Browsing by Author "Ryan G Wagner"
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Item Associations between WASH-related violence and depressive symptoms in adolescent girls and young women in South Africa (HPTN 068): a cross-sectional analysis(2022-07-05) Ruvani T Jayaweera; Dana Goin; Rhian Twine; Torsten B Neilands; Ryan G Wagner; Sheri A Lippman; Kathleen Kahn; Audrey Pettifor; Jennifer AhernObjective: There is a lack of research on experiences of WASH-related violence. This study aims to quantify the association between experience or worry of violence when using the toilet or collecting water and depressive symptoms among a cohort of young women in South Africa. Methods: Data are from visit 3 of the HPTN 068 cohort of adolescent girls in rural Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Participants (n=1798) included in this analysis were aged 13-21 at baseline. Lifetime experience of violence or fear of violence when using the toilet and collecting water was collected by self-report; depressive symptoms in the past week were measured using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). We used G-computation to calculate the prevalence difference (PD) and prevalence ratio of depression (CES-D score >15) associated with each domain of violence, controlling for baseline covariates. Findings: A total of 15.1% of respondents reported experiencing violence when using the toilet; 17.1% reported experiencing violence when collecting water and 26.7% reported depression. In adjusted models, those who reported experiencing violence when using the toilet had an 18.1% higher prevalence of depression (95% CI: 11.6% to 24.4%) than those who did not experience violence when using the toilet. Adjusted prevalence of depression was also higher among those who reported violence when collecting water (PD 11.9%, 95% CI: 6.7% to 17.2%), and who worried about violence when using the toilet (PD 12.8%, 95% CI: 7.9% to 19.8%), as compared with those who did not report these experiences. Worrying about violence when collecting water was not associated with depression after adjusting for covariates. Conclusion: Experience of WASH-related violence is common among young women in rural South Africa, and experience or worry of experiencing violence is associated with higher prevalence of depressive symptoms.Item Associations between WASH-related violence and depressive symptoms in adolescent girls and young women in South Africa (HPTN 068): a crosssectional analysis(2022-06-13) Ruvani T Jayaweera; Dana Goin; Rhian Twine; Torsten B Neilands; Ryan G Wagner; Sheri A Lippman; Kathleen Kahn; Audrey Pettifor; Jennifer AhernObjective There is a lack of research on experiences of WASH-related violence. This study aims to quantify the association between experience or worry of violence when using the toilet or collecting water and depressive symptoms among a cohort of young women in South Africa. Methods Data are from visit 3 of the HPTN 068 cohort of adolescent girls in rural Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Participants (n=1798) included in this analysis were aged 13–21 at baseline. Lifetime experience of violence or fear of violence when using the toilet and collecting water was collected by self-report; depressive symptoms in the past week were measured using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). We used G-computation to calculate the prevalence difference (PD) and prevalence ratio of depression (CES-D score >15) associated with each domain of violence, controlling for baseline covariates. Findings A total of 15.1% of respondents reported experiencing violence when using the toilet; 17.1% reported experiencing violence when collecting water and 26.7% reported depression. In adjusted models, those who reported experiencing violence when using the toilet had an 18.1% higher prevalence of depression (95% CI: 11.6% to 24.4%) than those who did not experience violence when using the toilet. Adjusted prevalence of depression was also higher among those who reported violence when collecting water (PD 11.9%, 95% CI: 6.7% to 17.2%), and who worried about violence when using the toilet (PD 12.8%, 95% CI: 7.9% to 19.8%), as compared with those who did not report these experiences. Worrying about violence when collecting water was not associated with depression after adjusting for covariates. Conclusion Experience of WASH-related violence is common among young women in rural South Africa, and experience or worry of experiencing violence is associated with higher prevalence of depressive symptoms.Item Cohort Profile Update: Cognition and dementia in the Health and Aging in Africa Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH community in South Africa (HAALSI dementia)(2022-08-10) Darina T Bassil; Meagan T Farrell; Ryan G Wagner; Adam M Brickman; M Maria Glymour; Kenneth M Langa; Jennifer J Manly; Joel Salinas; Brent Tipping; Stephen Tollman; Lisa F BerkmanThe Health and Aging in Africa Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community in South Africa (HAALSI) is a harmonized sister study to the US Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Established in 2015, it includes 5059 individuals aged 40 and over, in a rural community in Agincourt, South Africa. • In light of the projected rise of dementia burden in sub-Saharan Africa, the HAALSI Dementia study was launched in 2019 to investigate the prevalence, incidence and risk factors of cognitive decline and dementia in South Africa. • The HAALSI Dementia sample includes 635 individuals, 50 years and older, of whom 99 also participated in an ancillary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sub-study. • The HAALSI Dementia study encompasses a comprehensive, culturally sensitive cognitive battery with multidomain psychometric scales, informant interviews and neurological evaluations, and has sufficient overlap with international Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol (HCAP) and HRS studies to enable cross-calibration. • For new collaborative projects and data sharing, please contact Darina Bassil [dbassil@hsph.harvard.edu].Item Cohort Profile: Health and Ageing in Africa: A Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community in South Africa (HAALSI).(2018) F Xavier Go´ mez-Olive´; Livia Montana; Ryan G Wagner; Chodziwadziwa W Kabudula; Julia K Rohr; Kathleen Kahn; Till Ba¨rnighausen; Mark Collinson; David Canning; Thomas Gaziano; Joshua A Salomon; Collin F Payne; Alisha Wad; Stephen M Tollman; Lisa BerkmanItem Pregnancy-related healthcare utilisation in Agincourt, South Africa, 1993–2018: a longitudinal surveillance study of rural mothers(2021-10-01) Sack, Daniel; Ryan G Wagner; Daniel Ohene-Kwofie; Chodziwadziwa W Kabudula; Jessica Price; Carren Ginsburg; Carolyn M Audetntroduction Pregnancy-related health services, an important mediator of global health priorities, require robust health infrastructure. We described pregnancy-related healthcare utilisation among rural South African women from 1993 to 2018, a period of social, political and economic transition. Methods We included participants enrolled in the Agincourt Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance System in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa, a population-based longitudinal cohort, who reported pregnancy between 1993 and 2018. We assessed age, antenatal visits, years of education, pregnancy intention, nationality, residency status, previous pregnancies, prepregnancy and postpregnancy contraceptive use, and student status over the study period and modelled predictors of antenatal care utilisation (ordinal), skilled birth attendant presence (logistic) and delivery at a health facility (logistic).Item Short- and long-read metagenomics of urban and rural South African gut microbiomes reveal a transitional composition and undescribed taxa(2022-02-22) Fiona B Tamburini; Dylan Maghini; Ovokeraye H Oduaran; Ryan Brewster; Michaella R Hulley; Venesa Sahibdeen; Shane A Norris; Stephen Tollman; Kathleen Kahn; Ryan G Wagner; Alisha N Wade; Floidy Wafawanaka; F Xavier Gómez-Olivé; Rhian Twine; Zané Lombard; H3Africa AWI-Gen Collaborative Centre; Scott Hazelhurst; Ami S BhattHuman gut microbiome research focuses on populations living in high-income countries and to a lesser extent, non-urban agriculturalist and hunter-gatherer societies. The scarcity of research between these extremes limits our understanding of how the gut microbiota relates to health and disease in the majority of the world's population. Here, we evaluate gut microbiome composition in transitioning South African populations using short- and long-read sequencing. We analyze stool from adult females living in rural Bushbuckridge (n = 118) or urban Soweto (n = 51) and find that these microbiomes are taxonomically intermediate between those of individuals living in high-income countries and traditional communities. We demonstrate that reference collections are incomplete for characterizing microbiomes of individuals living outside high-income countries, yielding artificially low beta diversity measurements, and generate complete genomes of undescribed taxa, including Treponema, Lentisphaerae, and Succinatimonas. Our results suggest that the gut microbiome of South Africans does not conform to a simple "western-nonwestern" axis and contains undescribed microbial diversity.Item Subjective social position and cognitive function in a longitudinal cohort of older, rural South African adults, 2014–2019(2021-09-23) Lindsay C Kobayashi; Emily P Morris; Guy Harling; Meagan T Farrell; Mohammed U Kabeto; Ryan G Wagner; Lisa F BerkmanBackground The relationship between subjective social position (SSP) and cognitive ageing unclear, especially in low-income settings. We aimed to investigate the relationship between SSP and cognitive function over time among older adults in rural South Africa. Methods Data were from 3771 adults aged ≥40 in the population-representative ’Health and Ageing in Africa: A Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community in South Africa’ from 2014/2015 (baseline) to 2018/2019 (followup). SSP was assessed at baseline with the 10-rung MacArthur Network social position ladder. Outcomes were composite orientation and episodic memory scores at baseline and follow-up (range: 0–24). Mortality- and attrition-weighted linear regression estimated the associations between baseline SSP with cognitive scores at each of the baseline and follow-up. Models were adjusted for age, age2 , sex, country of birth, father’s occupation, education, employment, household assets, literacy, marital status and health-related covariates. Results SSP responses ranged from 0 (bottom ladder rung/lowest social position) to 10 (top ladder rung/ highest social position), with a mean of 6.6 (SD: 2.3). SSP was positively associated with baseline cognitive score (adjusted β=0.198 points per ladder rung increase; 95%CI 0.145 to 0.253) and follow-up cognitive score (adjusted β=0.078 points per ladder rung increase; 95%CI 0.021 to 0.136). Conclusion Independent of objective socioeconomic position measures, SSP is associated with orientation and episodic memory scores over two time points approximately 3 years apart among older rural South Africans. Future research is needed to establish the causality of the observed relationships, whether they persist over longer follow-up periods and their consistency in other populations.Item The adolescent HIV executive function and drumming (AHEAD) study, afeasibility trial of a group drumming intervention amongst adolescents with HIV(2023-04-11) Kirsten Rowe; Julia Ruiz Pozuelo; Alecia Nickless; Absolum David Nkosi; Andeline Dos Santos; Kathleen Kahn; Stephen Tollman; Ryan G Wagner; Gaia Scerif; Alan SteinAHEAD feasibility trial assessed the feasibility and acceptability of an 8-session group drummingprogramme aiming to improve executive function, depression and anxiety symptoms, andperceived social support in adolescents living with HIV in a rural low-income South Africansetting. Sixty-eight 12- to 19-year-old adolescents participated. They were individuallyrandomised. The intervention arm (n= 34) received weekly hour-long group drumming sessions.Controls (n= 34) received no intervention. Feasibility and acceptability were assessed usingrates of: enrolment; retention; attendance; logistical problems; adolescent-reportedacceptability. Secondary measures included:five Oxford Cognitive Screen-Executive Function(OCS-EF) tasks; two Rapid Assessment of Cognitive and Emotional Regulation (RACER) tasks; theSelf-Reporting Questionnaire-20 (SRQ-20) measuring depression and anxiety symptoms; theMultidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS). All feasibility criteria were withingreen progression limits. Enrolment, retention, and acceptability were high. There was a positiveeffect on adolescent depressed mood with signal for a working memory effect. There were nosignificant effects on executive function or socio-emotional scales. Qualitativefindingssuggested socio-emotional benefits including: group belonging; decreased internalised stigma;improved mood; decreased anxiety. Group drumming is a feasible and acceptable interventionamongst adolescents living with HIV in rural South Africa. A full-scale trial is recommended.