Sharing findings with other health professionals and patients groups

Sharing findings with other health professionals and patients groups

  • Community Health Promoters
  • Secondary Tuberculosis Prediction
  • Prediction of Clinical Evolution

 

 

 

A team-member collecting data in the field.

A team-member collecting data in the field.

What we do

Our Mission

Innovation For Health and Development, IFHAD, is a charity focused on improving public health through innovation and capacity-building in resource-poor settings. We research, design and implement novel, affordable strategies that improve the lives of those affected by poverty and tuberculosis, in Peru and globally.

Since our inception in 2002, activity at IFHAD has been focused on tuberculosis (TB), the most frequent infectious cause of death worldwide. Two billion people are infected with TB, leading to eight million cases per year. In wealthy countries, TB is easy to diagnose and treat, but poor countries generally can only afford inadequate tests and treatments developed half a century ago. As a result, two million people each year die needlessly from this escalating global health crisis.

Our TB research is based mainly in Perú, a country disproportionately affected by TB and drug-resistant TB.    IFHAD has developed, evaluated and implemented innovative strategies to improve TB diagnosis, prevent transmission, reduce susceptibility and improve treatment outcome. Our goal is to identify approaches that can be immediately and affordably implemented in the developing world, with the potential to have an enormous impact on this public health crisis.

Our Achievements

Please  see   some   of the publications resulting from our work and those of our collaborators; pdf versions of each publication are provided when available.

Some of our achievements include:

  • TB diagnosis and testing for drug-resistance usually requires a laboratory and we have developed simple colour-change tests that are being evaluated in clinics (more detail…)
  • Worm infections suppress TB immunity and deworming boosts anti-TB immunity—a discovery with important implications for controlling the TB epidemic (more detail…)
  • Simply monitoring weight loss over the first weeks of TB treatment predicts treatment failure and drug-resistance more rapidly and reliably than existing methods (more detail…)
  • TB principally affects poorly nourished people and we are evaluating whether nutritional fortification with vitamins prevents TB (more detail…)
  • TB from swallowed sputum can be detected in stool—important for diagnosing children too young to provide sputum (more detail…)
  • People often catch TB in over-crowded hospitals but this can be prevented by UV lights, negative air ionizers and by enhanced natural ventilation (more detail…)