A
Alistair Story
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 102
Citations - 3528
Alistair Story is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Tuberculosis. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 95 publications receiving 2724 citations. Previous affiliations of Alistair Story include University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust & University College Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Towards tuberculosis elimination: an action framework for low-incidence countries
Knut Lönnroth,Giovanni Battista Migliori,Ibrahim Abubakar,Lia D'Ambrosio,Gerard De Vries,Roland Diel,Paul Douglas,Dennis Falzon,Marc Andre Gaudreau,Delia Goletti,Edilberto R. González Ochoa,Philip A. LoBue,Alberto Matteelli,Howard Njoo,Ivan Solovic,Alistair Story,Tamara Tayeb,Marieke J. van der Werf,Diana Weil,Jean-Pierre Zellweger,Mohamed Abdel Aziz,Mohamed R.M. Al Lawati,Stefano Aliberti,Wouter Arrazola de Oñate,Draurio Barreira,Vineet Bhatia,Francesco Blasi,Amy Bloom,Judith Bruchfeld,Francesco Castelli,Rosella Centis,Daniel Chemtob,Daniela Maria Cirillo,Alberto Colorado,Andrei Dadu,Ulf R Dahle,Laura De Paoli,Hannah Monica Yesudian Dias,Raquel Duarte,Lanfranco Fattorini,Mina Gaga,Haileyesus Getahun,Philippe Glaziou,Lasha Goguadze,Mirtha del Granado,Walter Haas,Asko Järvinen,Geun Yong Kwon,Davide Mosca,Payam Nahid,Nobuyuki Nishikiori,I. Noguer,Joan O'Donnell,Analita Pace-Asciak,Maria Grazia Pompa,Gilda Popescu,Carlos Robalo Cordeiro,Karin Rønning,Morten Ruhwald,Jean-Paul Sculier,Aleksandar Simunovic,Alison Smith-Palmer,Giovanni Sotgiu,Giorgia Sulis,Carlos A. Torres-Duque,Kazunori Umeki,Mukund Uplekar,Catharina Van Weezenbeek,Tuula Vasankari,Robert J. Vitillo,Constantia Voniatis,Maryse Wanlin,Mario C. Raviglione +72 more
TL;DR: An action framework for countries with low tuberculosis (TB) incidence sets out priority interventions required for these countries to progress first towards “pre-elimination” and eventually the elimination of TB as a public health problem.
Journal ArticleDOI
Morbidity and mortality in homeless individuals, prisoners, sex workers, and individuals with substance use disorders in high-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Robert W Aldridge,Alistair Story,Stephen W. Hwang,Merete Nordentoft,Serena Luchenski,Greg Hartwell,Emily J Tweed,Dan Lewer,Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi,Andrew Hayward +9 more
TL;DR: This study shows that homeless populations, individuals with substance use disorders, sex workers, and imprisoned individuals experience extreme health inequities across a wide range of health conditions, with the relative effect of exclusion being greater in female individuals than male individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI
What works in inclusion health: overview of effective interventions for marginalised and excluded populations.
Serena Luchenski,Nick Maguire,Robert W Aldridge,Andrew Hayward,Alistair Story,Patrick Perri,James Withers,Sharon Clint,Suzanne Fitzpatrick,Nigel Hewett +9 more
TL;DR: This work identified numerous interventions to improve physical and mental health, and substance use; however, evidence is scarce for structural interventions, including housing, employment, and legal support that can prevent exclusion and promote recovery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tuberculosis in London: the importance of homelessness, problem drug use and prison
TL;DR: High levels of infectious and drug resistant disease, poor adherence and loss to follow-up care indicate that TB is not effectively controlled among homeless people, prisoners and problem drug users in London.
Journal ArticleDOI
Smartphone-enabled video-observed versus directly observed treatment for tuberculosis: a multicentre, analyst-blinded, randomised, controlled superiority trial
Alistair Story,Alistair Story,Robert W Aldridge,Catherine M Smith,E Garber,E Garber,Joe Hall,Joe Hall,Gloria Ferenando,Gloria Ferenando,Lucia Possas,Lucia Possas,S Hemming,S Hemming,Fatima Wurie,Serena Luchenski,Ibrahim Abubakar,Timothy D. McHugh,Peter J White,Peter J White,John M Watson,Marc Lipman,Marc Lipman,Richard S. Garfein,Andrew Hayward +24 more
TL;DR: Video-observed therapy (VOT) is likely to be preferable to DOT for many patients across a broad range of settings, providing a more acceptable, effective, and cheaper option for supervision of daily and multiple daily doses than DOT.