Salome Manyau

Salome Manyau
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | LSHTM · Faculty of Public Health and Policy

PhD Candidate

About

14
Publications
1,513
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201
Citations
Introduction
Salome Manyau currently works at the Biomedical Research and Training Institute where she works on research in Medical Anthropology .

Publications

Publications (14)
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Background Healthcare ethnography requires a conscious effort at objectivity because the method is inherently subjective. Qualitative research in newborn care in low-resource-settings, such as Zimbabwe, can present significant challenges and ethical dilemmas. This abstract presents an ethnographic study conducted in a low-resource setting in Zimbab...
Article
Background: Vaccines prevent infections and could subsequently reduce antimicrobial use. A 1-week mass vaccination campaign was done with Typbar-TCV (Bharat Biotech, Hyderabad, India) between Feb 25 and March 4, 2019. We investigated whether this typhoid conjugate vaccine campaign could affect antimicrobial prescribing in children presenting to pr...
Article
Full-text available
The mass production of antibiotics in the 1940s enabled their travel beyond Europe and America, but to date the significance of the ways in which these medicines co-constituted colonial regimes at the time has not been systematically described. Through a case study of yaws and syphilis, this research article traces arrivals of antibiotics in three...
Article
Full-text available
The advent of antibiotics transformed the global public health landscape, dramatically improving health outcomes. Drawing on historical and ethnographic research on sex work in Zimbabwe, we examine the role of antibiotics in the management of sexually transmitted infections among sex workers, from punitive colonial approaches to "empowerment"-based...
Article
Full-text available
Background As concerns about the prevalence of infections that are resistant to available antibiotics increase, attention has turned toward the use of these medicines both within and outside of formal healthcare settings. Much of what is known about use beyond formal settings is informed by survey-based research. Few studies to date have used compa...
Article
Full-text available
Rising concerns around antimicrobial resistance (AMR) have led to a renewed push to rationalise antibiotic prescribing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). There is increasing unease in conceptualising antibiotic use as individuals behaving ‘(ir)rationally’, and recognition that rising use is emergent of and contributing to wider economic a...
Article
Background: Hospital-acquired infection (HAI) is an increasing cause of neonatal morbidity/mortality in low-income settings. Hospital staff behaviours (e.g. hand hygiene) are key contributors to HAI. Understanding the drivers of these can inform interventions to improve infection prevention and control (IPC). Aim: To explore barriers/facilitator...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the prevalence and types of antibiotics used in a given human and/or animal population is important for informing stewardship strategies. Methods used to capture such data often rely on verbal elicitation of reported use that tend to assume shared medical terminology. Studies have shown the category ‘antibiotic’ does not translate wel...
Article
Full-text available
Background A previous analysis of the impact of drought in Africa on HIV demonstrated an 11% greater prevalence in HIV-endemic rural areas attributable to local rainfall shocks. The Lesotho Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment (LePHIA) was conducted after the severe drought of 2014–2016, allowing for reevaluation of this relationship in a setting...
Data
LePHIA adult questionnaire. (PDF)
Data
Project concept analysis plan. (DOCX)

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