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Institution

University of the Philippines Manila

EducationManila, Philippines
About: University of the Philippines Manila is a education organization based out in Manila, Philippines. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 2218 authors who have published 2357 publications receiving 88781 citations. The organization is also known as: UPM.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The parasitologic parameters reported in this study signify the need to pay more attention to IP children who are at higher risk of morbidity due to helminth infections and further studies to determine factors that contribute to the higher prevalence of STH among IP groups are recommended.

47 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The prevalence of heavy colonization and GBS serotypes varied significantly among study centers, whether this variation could in part explain geographic differences in neonatal morbidity and mortality is a hypothesis that needs further study.
Abstract: Background: Heavy colonization with group B streptococcus (GBS) has been associated with increased risk of preterm birth and neonatal sepsis; the burden of neonatal GBS disease varies geographically. To determine whether variation in heavy colonization and GBS serotypes could contribute to geographic differences in disease burden, we assessed the prevalence of heavy colonization and the distribution of serotypes in asymptomatic pregnant women in multiple countries.Methods: Cervical, lower vaginal and urine samples were collected from women attending seven prenatal clinics in six countries. Light colonization was defined as GBS isolation from Lim broth only; heavy colonization was isolation from urine or sheep blood agar plates. Isolates were serotyped using capillary precipitation.Results: GBS was present in 11.3% of 1308 participants (range 7.1–21.7%); 5.0% were heavily colonized (0.4–18.8%) and 6.4% were lightly colonized (2.9–8.0%). Serotypes III and V were most common (both 17.2%). Serotypes VII and V...

47 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show the possibility that leptospires living in soil survived after the storm surge, and may serve as a warning that when seawater inundates the land during a storm surge or a tsunami, an outbreak ofLeptospirosis could occur in the disaster-stricken area.
Abstract: Leptospirosis is a zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira spp. Most of the outbreaks of leptospirosis occur after floods caused by heavy rain in countries where Leptospira spp. are endemic. It has been believed that the overflow of seawater rarely causes outbreaks of leptospirosis because the leptospires are killed by salt water. On 8 November 2013, a storm surge caused by Super Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) inundated the entire coastal areas of Tacloban and Palo in Leyte, Philippines. The present study was carried out in order to determine whether the environmental leptospires in soil were able to survive after the storm surge in the affected areas. We collected 23 wet soil samples along the coastal areas of Tacloban and Palo 2 months after the storm surge. The samples were suspended in HEPES buffer, and the supernatants were cultured in liquid or semisolid Korthof's medium supplemented with five antimicrobial agents to inhibit the growth of contaminants. Leptospires were isolated from primary cultures of 22 out of 23 samples. The DNA of pathogenic Leptospira species was detected in 11 samples (47.8%) by analysis of flaB by nested PCR. Eventually, two pathogenic Leptospira strains were isolated and showed the highest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity to Leptospira kmetyi. When these isolates were experimentally mixed with soil, they were found to survive in seawater for 4 days. These results show the possibility that leptospires living in soil survived after the storm surge. Our findings may serve as a warning that when seawater inundates the land during a storm surge or a tsunami, an outbreak of leptospirosis could occur in the disaster-stricken area.

47 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings support studies that doctors will use evidence when convenient and current evidence improved clinical decisions and suggest clinical decisions guided by full-text articles were more accurate than those guided by abstracts alone.
Abstract: Background Many clinicians depend solely on journal abstracts to guide clinical decisions. Objectives This study aims to determine if there are differences in the accuracy of responses to simulated cases between resident physicians provided with an abstract only and those with full-text articles. It also attempts to describe their information-seeking behaviour. Methods Seventy-seven resident physicians from four specialty departments of a tertiary care hospital completed a paper-based questionnaire with clinical simulation cases, then randomly assigned to two intervention groups—access to abstracts-only and access to both abstracts and full-text. While having access to medical literature, they completed an online version of the same questionnaire. Findings The average improvement across departments was not significantly different between the abstracts-only group and the full-text group (p=0.44), but when accounting for an interaction between intervention and department, the effect was significant (p=0.049) with improvement greater with full-text in the surgery department. Overall, the accuracy of responses was greater after the provision of either abstracts-only or full-text (p Conclusions Our findings support studies that doctors will use evidence when convenient and current evidence improved clinical decisions. The accuracy of decisions improved after the provision of evidence. Clinical decisions guided by full-text articles were more accurate than those guided by abstracts alone, but the results seem to be driven by a significant difference in one department.

47 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202316
202223
2021381
2020325
2019199
2018184