57 research outputs found

    Geographic distribution of registered packaged water production in Ghana: implications for piped supplies, groundwater management and product transportation

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    Packaged water consumption has grown rapidly in urban areas of many lowā€income and middleā€income countries, but particularly in Ghana. However, the sources of water used by this growing packaged water industry and the implications for water resource management and transport ā€related environmental impacts have not been described. This study aimed to assess the spatial distribution of regulated packaged water production in Ghana, both in relation to demand for natural mineral water and hydrogeological characteristics. A total of 764 addresses for premises licensed to produce packaged water from 2009 to 2015 were mapped and compared to regional sachet water consumption and examined beverage import/export data. We found evidence to suggest that packaged water is transported shorter distances in Ghana than in developed countries. Groundwater abstraction for packaged water is low relative to piped water production and domestic borehole abstraction nationally, but may be locally significant. For natural mineral water, producers should be able to address the most widespread water quality hazards (including high salinity, iron and nitrates) in aquifers used for production through reverse osmosis treatment. In future, packaged water producer surveys could be used to quantify unregulated production, volumes of piped versus groundwater abstracted and treatment processes used

    Effects of sachet water consumption on exposure to microbe-contaminated drinking water: household survey evidence from Ghana

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    There remain few nationally representative studies of drinking water quality at the point of consumption in developing countries. This study aimed to examine factors associated with E. coli contamination in Ghana. It drew on a nationally representative household survey, the 2012?2013 Living Standards Survey 6, which incorporated a novel water quality module. E. coli contamination in 3096 point-of-consumption samples was examined using multinomial regression. Surface water use was the strongest risk factor for high E. coli contamination (relative risk ratio (RRR) = 32.3, p < 0.001), whilst packaged (sachet or bottled) water use had the greatest protective effect (RRR = 0.06, p < 0.001), compared to water piped to premises. E. coli contamination followed plausible patterns with digit preference (tendency to report values ending in zero) in bacteria counts. The analysis suggests packaged drinking water use provides some protection against point-of-consumption E. coli contamination and may therefore benefit public health. It also suggests viable water quality data can be collected alongside household surveys, but field protocols require further revision

    Large-scale survey for novel genotypes of Plasmodium falciparum chloroquine-resistance gene pfcrt

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    Background. In Plasmodium falciparum, resistance to chloroquine (CQ) is conferred by a K to T mutation at amino acid position 76 (K76T) in the P. falciparum CQ transporter (PfCRT). To date, at least 15 pfcrt genotypes, which are represented by combinations of five amino acids at positions 72-76, have been described in field isolates from various endemic regions. To identify novel mutant pfcrt genotypes and to reveal the genetic relatedness of pfcrt genotypes, a large-scale survey over a wide geographic area was performed. Methods. Sequences for exon 2 in pfcrt, including known polymorphic sites at amino acid positions 72, 74, 75 and 76, were obtained from 256 P. falciparum isolates collected from eight endemic countries in Asia (Bangladesh, Cambodia, Lao P.D.R., the Philippines and Thailand), Melanesia (Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu) and Africa (Ghana). A haplotype network was constructed based on six microsatellite markers located -29 kb to 24 kb from pfcrt in order to examine the genetic relatedness among mutant pfcrt genotypes. Results. In addition to wild type (CVMNK at positions 72-76), four mutant pfcrt were identified; CVIET, CVIDT, SVMNT and CVMNT (mutated amino acids underlined). Haplotype network revealed that there were only three mutant pfcrt lineages, originating in Indochina, Philippines and Melanesia. Importantly, the Indochina lineage contained two mutant pfcrt genotypes, CVIET (n = 95) and CVIDT (n = 14), indicating that CVIDT shares a common origin with CVIET. Similarly, one major haplotype in the Melanesian lineage contained two pfcrt genotypes; SVMNT (n = 71) and CVMNT (n = 3). In Africa, all mutant pfcrt genotypes were the CVIET of the Indochina lineage, probably resulting from the intercontinental migration of CQ resistance from Southeast Asia. Conclusions. The number of CQ-mutant lineages observed in this study was identical to that found in previous studies. This supports the hypothesis that the emergence of novel CQ resistance is rare. However, in the mutant pfcrt genotypes, amino acid changes at positions 72, 74 and 75 appear to have recently been generated at least several times, producing distinct pfcrt mutant genotypes. The occurrence of new mutations flanking K76T may yield stronger resistance to CQ and/or a higher fitness than the original pfcrt mutant

    Willingness to work in rural areas and the role of intrinsic versus extrinsic professional motivations - a survey of medical students in Ghana

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Retaining health workers in rural areas is challenging for a number of reasons, ranging from personal preferences to difficult work conditions and low remuneration. This paper assesses the influence of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation on willingness to accept postings to deprived areas among medical students in Ghana.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A computer-based survey involving 302 fourth year medical students was conducted from May-August 2009. Logistic regression was used to assess the association between students' willingness to accept rural postings and their professional motivations, rural exposure and family parental professional and educational status (PPES).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Over 85% of students were born in urban areas and 57% came from affluent backgrounds. Nearly two-thirds of students reported strong intrinsic motivation to study medicine. After controlling for demographic characteristics and rural exposure, motivational factors did not influence willingness to practice in rural areas. High family PPES was consistently associated with lower willingness to work in rural areas.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Although most Ghanaian medical students are motivated to study medicine by the desire to help others, this does not translate into willingness to work in rural areas. Efforts should be made to build on intrinsic motivation during medical training and in designing rural postings, as well as favour lower PPES students for admission.</p

    For money or service? a cross-sectional survey of preference for financial versus non-financial rural practice characteristics among ghanaian medical students

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    Abstract Background Health worker shortage and maldistribution are among the biggest threats to health systems in Africa. New medical graduates are prime targets for recruitment to deprived rural areas. However, little research has been done to determine the influence of workers' background and future plans on their preference for rural practice incentives and characteristics. The purpose of this study was to identify determinants of preference for rural job characteristics among fourth year medical students in Ghana. Methods We asked fourth-year Ghanaian medical students to rank the importance of rural practice attributes including salary, infrastructure, management style, and contract length in considering future jobs. We used bivariate and multivariate ordinal logistic regression to estimate the association between attribute valuation and students' socio-demographic background, educational experience, and future career plans. Results Of 310 eligible fourth year medical students, complete data was available for 302 students (97%). Students considering emigration ranked salary as more important than students not considering emigration, while students with rural living experience ranked salary as less important than those with no rural experience. Students willing to work in a rural area ranked infrastructure as more important than students who were unwilling, while female students ranked infrastructure as less important than male students. Students who were willing to work in a rural area ranked management style as a more important rural practice attribute than those who were unwilling to work in a rural area. Students studying in Kumasi ranked contract length as more important than those in Accra, while international students ranked contract length as less important than Ghanaian students. Conclusions Interventions to improve rural practice conditions are likely to be more persuasive than salary incentives to Ghanaian medical students who are willing to work in rural environments a priori. Policy experiments should test the impact of these interventions on actual uptake by students upon graduation.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112499/1/12913_2011_Article_1837.pd

    Variability in water masers and possible accretion burst in NGC 2071-IR

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    MSc (Astrophysical Sciences), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusAlthough stars are ubiquitous in the Universe, the processes leading to their formation are still poorly understood. Developing a uniļ¬ed theory of star formation is hindered by the fact that stars in the diļ¬€erent mass regimes, namely, low (Māˆ— 8 M), and high-mass (Māˆ— > 8 M) regimes have similar but diļ¬€ering forma-tion processes. Further compounding the challenge is that intermediate-mass protostars are more obscured than their low-mass conterparts and also do not aļ¬€ect their surround-ing environments like high-mass stars, making it diļ¬ƒcult to establish a clear criterion for identifying intermediate-mass protostars observationally. One process common to star formation across all mass regimes is accretion, and episodic accretion events known as accretion bursts are reported to drive strong ļ¬‚ares in water masers accompanied with an increase in luminosity. Interstellar masers serve as indirect indicators of ongoing star formation as well as probes of the physical conditions such as temperature and density in star-forming regions. In 2019, ļ¬‚aring of the 22 GHz water maser (hereafter H2O maser) in the NGC 2071-IR star forming region was reported by the Maser Monitoring Organisation (M2O). Single-dish spectra of the H2O maser from the Hartebeesthoek 26-m telescope covering a period from 2019 to 2022 were analysed, revealing high variability and a strong ļ¬‚are in November 2019 which reached a peak of 4722 Ā± 4 Jy. Observations conducted to detect the mainline 6.7 GHz methanol maser towards NGC 2071-IR yielded no detections. This study aims to investigate the variability observed in the H2O maser spectra and verify if the 2019 ļ¬‚are was a result of an accretion burst event. Signatures of accretion bursts such as ļ¬‚aring of multiple maser species and increase in infrared luminosity were probed. Interferometric imaging of (sub)millimetre dust continuum and spectral line (speciļ¬cally carbon monox-ide (CO)) observations with the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array and the Very Large Array, revealed the NGC 2071-IR region is populated with multiple protostars with small spatial separations, driving multiple outļ¬‚ows. Water maser positions from the literature superimposed over the continuum images showed the H2O masers trace disks and outļ¬‚ows. Ks-band observations made during the 2019 ļ¬‚are with Kanata/HONIR telescope revealed a 0.2 mag increase compared to the 2MASS magnitude.Master
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