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Teri Roberts

Researcher at Médecins Sans Frontières

Publications -  29
Citations -  2202

Teri Roberts is an academic researcher from Médecins Sans Frontières. The author has contributed to research in topics: Viral load & Public health. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1833 citations. Previous affiliations of Teri Roberts include Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines & University of Cape Town.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerating the elimination of viral hepatitis: a Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology Commission

Graham S Cooke, +88 more
TL;DR: Key recommendations include a greater focus on national progress towards elimination with support given, if necessary, through innovative financing measures to ensure elimination programmes are fully funded by 2020.
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Human gene expression profiles of susceptibility and resistance in tuberculosis

TL;DR: The gene expression profiles defined in this study provide valuable clues for better understanding of progression from latent infection to active disease and pave the way for defining predictive correlates of protection in TB.
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Scale-up of Routine Viral Load Testing in Resource-Poor Settings: Current and Future Implementation Challenges

TL;DR: If rapid and timely scale-up of viral load testing in resource-limited settings is to become a reality, numerous factors will need to be addressed, including health and laboratory system strengthening, pricing, and multiple programmatic and funding challenges.
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An evaluation of commercial fluorescent bead-based luminex cytokine assays.

TL;DR: The LINCO Inc kit was found to be the most sensitive assay for measuring concentrations of multiple recombinant cytokines in samples that had been spiked with serial dilutions of the standard provided by the manufacturer, followed respectively by the RnD Fluorokine-(MAP) and Bio-Rad 17-plex kits.
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Sustainable HIV Treatment in Africa through Viral Load-Informed Differentiated Care

TL;DR: It is found that viral-load-informed differentiated care using dried blood sample testing is cost-effective and is a recommended strategy for patient monitoring, although further empirical evidence as the approach is rolled out would be of value.