M
Moses R. Kamya
Researcher at Makerere University
Publications - 504
Citations - 15407
Moses R. Kamya is an academic researcher from Makerere University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Malaria & Population. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 435 publications receiving 12598 citations. Previous affiliations of Moses R. Kamya include Mulago Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
HIV-subtype A is associated with poorer neuropsychological performance compared with subtype D in antiretroviral therapy-naive Ugandan children.
Michael J. Boivin,Theodore Ruel,Hannah E. Boal,Paul Bangirana,Huyen Cao,Leigh Anne Eller,Edwin D. Charlebois,Diane V. Havlir,Moses R. Kamya,Jane Achan,Carolyne Akello,Joseph K. Wong +11 more
TL;DR: HIV subtype A children demonstrated poorer neurocognitive performance than those with HIV subtype D, which may have important implications for when to initiate ART and the selection of drugs with greater central nervous system penetration.
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Comparative efficacy of topical therapy with a slow-release mucoadhesive buccal tablet containing miconazole nitrate versus systemic therapy with ketoconazole in HIV-positive patients with oropharyngeal candidiasis.
TL;DR: The low-dose 10-mg miconazole mucoadhesive tablet is not inferior to systemic antifungal treatment with ketoconazole in the treatment of AIDS-related oropharyngeal candidiasis with and without dysphagia and should be considered in first-line therapy for this condition, particularly in resource-poor settings.
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The Effect of Indoor Residual Spraying on Malaria and Anemia in a High-Transmission Area of Northern Uganda
Laura C. Steinhardt,Adoke Yeka,Sussann Nasr,Ryan E. Wiegand,Denis Rubahika,Asadu Sserwanga,Humphrey Wanzira,Geoff Lavoy,Moses R. Kamya,Grant Dorsey,Scott G. Filler +10 more
TL;DR: Carefully managed IRS can significantly reduce malaria burden in high-transmission settings, and a child living in a sprayed district had a 46% and 32% lower risk of parasitemia and anemia than a child in a non-sprayed district.
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Hair concentrations of antiretrovirals predict viral suppression in HIV-infected pregnant and breastfeeding Ugandan women.
Catherine A. Koss,Paul Natureeba,Julia Mwesigwa,Deborah Cohan,Bridget Nzarubara,Peter Bacchetti,Howard Horng,Tamara D. Clark,Albert Plenty,Theodore Ruel,Jane Achan,Edwin D. Charlebois,Moses R. Kamya,Diane V. Havlir,Monica Gandhi +14 more
TL;DR: Antiretroviral hair concentrations represent an innovative tool that strongly predicts viral suppression among HIV-infected childbearing women during the critical periods of delivery and breastfeeding, and are the strongest predictor of viral suppression at delivery and 24 weeks postpartum.
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Electronic Medical Records and Same Day Patient Tracing Improves Clinic Efficiency and Adherence to Appointments in a Community Based HIV/AIDS Care Program, in Uganda
Stella Alamo,Glenn J. Wagner,Pamela Sunday,Rhoda K. Wanyenze,Joseph Ouma,Moses R. Kamya,Robert Colebunders,Robert Colebunders,Fred Wabwire-Mangen +8 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that EMR and same day patient tracing can significantly reduce missed appointments, and LTFU and improve clinic efficiency, and the total median waiting time to see providers significantly decreased.