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Brian Houle

Researcher at Australian National University

Publications -  62
Citations -  1885

Brian Houle is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1516 citations. Previous affiliations of Brian Houle include University of Colorado Boulder & University of Washington.

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Social patterns and differentials in the fertility transition in the context of HIV/AIDS: evidence from population surveillance, rural South Africa, 1993 – 2013

TL;DR: The fertility transition in rural South Africa shows a pattern of decline until the height of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, with a resulting stall until further decline in the context of ART rollout, and fertility patterns are not homogenous among groups.
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The effects of household and community context on mortality among children under five in Sierra Leone: Evidence from the 2013 Demographic and Health Survey

TL;DR: Evidence is provided suggesting that policymakers should focus on assisting mothers through family planning programmes to promote longer birth intervals, increased coverage of health services for mothers and children, and targeted interventions to reduce child mortality in the most affected regions of Sierra Leone.
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Cohort Profile: The Siyakhula Cohort, rural South Africa.

TL;DR: This cohort predated antiretroviral treatment (ART) roll-out, allowing for examination of outcomes associated with HIV exposure, without ART exposure in utero and during breastfeeding.
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Psychological morbidity and parenting stress in mothers of primary school children by timing of acquisition of HIV infection: a longitudinal cohort study in rural South Africa

TL;DR: Investigating the prevalence of, and factors associated with, psychological morbidity amongst mothers who were still the primary caregiver of the child at follow-up, and integrating parental support into mostly bio-medical treatment programmes, during and beyond pregnancy, is important.