Publications by authors named "Julia B Halder"

Article Synopsis
  • - Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is a serious neglected tropical disease with ongoing global efforts to eliminate it as a public health problem, yet nearly 900 million people still need treatment despite over 9 billion treatments distributed since 2000.
  • - A systematic literature review was conducted to gather individual participant data (IPD) related to LF treatment effectiveness and morbidity management by analyzing studies from various databases between 2000 and 2023.
  • - From 138 eligible studies across 23 countries, researchers identified nearly 15,000 IPD related to infection indicators and approximately 6,100 IPD concerning clinical morbidity, revealing significant gaps in understanding treatment responses.
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Our current economic and political structures have an increasingly devastating impact on the Earth's climate and ecosystems: we are facing a biospheric emergency, with catastrophic consequences for both humans and the natural world on which we depend. Life scientists - including biologists, medical scientists, psychologists and public health experts - have had a crucial role in documenting the impacts of this emergency, but they have failed to drive governments to take action in order to prevent the situation from getting worse. Here we, as members of the movement Scientist Rebellion, call on life scientists to re-embrace advocacy and activism - which were once hallmarks of academia - in order to highlight the urgency and necessity of systemic change across our societies.

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Article Synopsis
  • * This initiative encourages data-sharing and collaborative analysis to build strong evidence on the effectiveness and safety of treatments for these diseases.
  • * A Research Agenda has been developed to engage researchers and highlight important questions, with an emphasis on ethical data sharing as a means to help eliminate NTDs in the future.
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Background: Preventive chemotherapy and transmission control (PCT) by mass drug administration is the cornerstone of the World Health Organization (WHO)'s policy to control soil-transmitted helminthiases (STHs) caused by Ascaris lumbricoides (roundworm), Trichuris trichiura (whipworm) and hookworm species (Necator americanus and Ancylostama duodenale) which affect over 1 billion people globally. Despite consensus that drug efficacies should be monitored for signs of decline that could jeopardise the effectiveness of PCT, systematic monitoring and evaluation is seldom implemented. Drug trials mostly report aggregate efficacies in groups of participants, but heterogeneities in design complicate classical meta-analyses of these data.

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Changes in the timings of seasonality as a result of anthropogenic climate change are predicted to occur over the coming decades. While this is expected to have widespread impacts on the dynamics of infectious disease through environmental forcing, empirical data are lacking. Here, we investigated whether seasonality, specifically the timing of spring ice-thaw, affected susceptibility to infection by the emerging pathogenic fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) across a montane community of amphibians that are suffering declines and extirpations as a consequence of this infection.

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