113 research outputs found

    Estimating the determinants of poverty among farming households in Akwa Ibom state, Nigeria

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    The research was conducted in Mkpat Enin Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria to estimate the determinants of poverty among rural farming households in the area. Multistage sampling technique was used and data were obtained from primary source using a structured questionnaire. Tobit regression model was used to analyse the determinants of poverty in the area. From the result of the Tobit regression, sigma is 0.9886 which is significant at one percent level with intercept of 0.7012 which represents the poverty depth among rural farm households in the area. This indicates that the model has a good fit to the data. Sex of household heads, household size, educational level, farm income, farm size, access to modern farm inputs and distance to clinic were the determinants of poverty in the area. It is recommended that both sexes be involved actively in income generating activities. Training opportunities should be provided for the poor because education is considered the easiest means of breaking the vicious circle of poverty and farmers should be encouraged by government in the area through provision of improved farm inputs.KEYWORDS: Poverty, farming households, determinants.

    Determinants and Differentials of Maternal Reproductive Health Outcomes in Nigeria: A Review of National Demographic Health Survey Data from 1999 to 2013

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    Women in Sub-Saharan Africa face significant clinical and socio-demographic challenges that translate to poor health outcomes including high maternal morbidity and mortality. Nigeria being the most populous nation in Africa bears a significant burden of both communicable and non-communicable diseases. This study aimed to determine the trends and differentials in indices fuelling poor health outcomes in Nigeria. The study was a review and trend analysis of maternal reproductive health indicators obtained from the Nigeria National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) data from 1990 to 2013 including secondary data from WHO, UNICEF and the World Bank. The life expectancy at birth was 54.5 years with an estimated infant mortality rate of 75 per 1000 live births, child mortality rate of 88 per 1,000 live births, under-5 mortality rate of 157 per 1,000 live births and a maternal mortality ratio (MMR) of 545 per 100,000 live births. Contraceptive prevalence was 22% among women in the wealthiest quintile and 3% among those in the poorest quintile.  Only 3% of women with no education used modern contraception as compared to 24% of women with tertiary education. Most of the maternal deaths were due to preventable causes which were largely related to poverty, inimical socio-cultural beliefs and practices as well as clinical factors like haemorrage, hypertension, and indirect causes like inadequate human resource for health, user charges, cultural pregnancy/childbirth beliefs and myths. A community-based participatory research using both qualitative and quantitative methods may shed more light on the non-clinical factors fueling high MMR in Nigeria. Keywords: Maternal and Child Health, maternal mortality, contraceptio

    Travel, tourism, climate change and behavioral change: travelers’ perspectives from a developing country, Nigeria

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    While studies have examined people's understanding of climate change and its relationship to tourism, these focus largely on developed country populations. Much future tourism growth will come from developing countries following economic development; often countries where climate change will be strongly felt. Do tourists from developing countries have the same knowledge gaps about travel, tourism, and climate change as in the developed world? Will behavioral change policies be successful in encouraging more environmentally friendly approaches to climate change and tourism in developing countries? This paper presents findings from 20 in-depth interviews with active Nigerian tourists, analyzing their understanding of climate change, the links known, or not, between their travel and climate change, and their willingness to change their tourism patterns. Understanding of climate change was limited and there was conceptual confusion. Participants did not view their own travel as a cause of climate change and many were embedded in air travel practice. Participants were unwilling to change their tourism patterns to reduce their contribution to climate change. Significant structural barriers limit low carbon tourism travel in Nigeria (and other developing countries), including reliability, availability safety, and speed. Behavioral change will be difficult to achieve

    BIOCHRONOLOGY OF SELECTED MAMMALS, MOLLUSCS AND OSTRACODS FROM THE MIDDLE PLIOCENE TO THE LATE PLEISTOCENE IN ITALY. THE STATE OF THE ART

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    The Authors have elaborated four range charts of mammalian (large and micro), molluscs and fresh-water and brackish ostracodes faunas, for the selected Plio-Pleistocene fossiliferous localities of the Italy. A new Mammal Age (Aurelian) correlatable to late Middle and Late Pleistocene has been defined. Inside this age two Faunal Units (Torre in Pietra and Vitinia) have been defined as characteristic for Early and Middle Aurelian, while no gisements have been chosen for the late Aurelian. Biochronological units are calibrated on magnetostratigraphic and isotopic scales and by radiometric datings.   &nbsp

    BIOCHRONOLOGY OF SELECTED MAMMALS, MOLLUSCS AND OSTRACODS FROM THE MIDDLE PLIOCENE TO THE LATE PLEISTOCENE IN ITALY. THE STATE OF THE ART

    Get PDF
    The Authors have elaborated four range charts of mammalian (large and micro), molluscs and fresh-water and brackish ostracodes faunas, for the selected Plio-Pleistocene fossiliferous localities of the Italy. A new Mammal Age (Aurelian) correlatable to late Middle and Late Pleistocene has been defined. Inside this age two Faunal Units (Torre in Pietra and Vitinia) have been defined as characteristic for Early and Middle Aurelian, while no gisements have been chosen for the late Aurelian. Biochronological units are calibrated on magnetostratigraphic and isotopic scales and by radiometric datings.   &nbsp

    L’insediamento a bifacciali di Guado San Nicola (Monteroduni, Molise, Italia)

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    La monografia rappresenta un compendio di lavori specialistici sul sito paleolitico di Guado San Nicola a Monteroduni (Molise, Italia), oggetto di ricerche sistematiche ed indagini interdisciplinari inaugurate nell’area a partire dal 2000 dall'Università degli Studi di Ferrara. Il sito, ascrivibile al MIS 10/11, costituisce un tassello importante nell’ambito della ricostruzione del quadro del popolamento umano della penisola italiana e dell’intero bacino del Mediterraneo, alla luce delle considerazioni crono-stratigrafiche, della ricchezza della documentazione e della presenza di elementi innovativi dal punto di vista culturale quali la padronanza del metodo Levallois e l’uso di percussori in palchi di cervo

    Malariometric indices among Nigerian children in a rural setting

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    Malaria contributes to high childhood morbidity and mortality in Nigeria. To determine its endemicity in a rural farming community in the south-south of Nigeria, the following malariometric indices, namely, malaria parasitaemia, spleen rates, and anaemia were evaluated in children aged 2-10 years. This was a descriptive cross-sectional survey among school-age children residing in a rubber plantation settlement. The children were selected from six primary schools using a multistaged stratified cluster sampling technique. They were all examined for pallor, enlarged spleen, or liver among other clinical parameters and had blood films for malaria parasites. Of the 461 children recruited, 329 (71.4%) had malaria parasites. The prevalence of malaria parasitaemia was slightly higher in the under fives than that of those ≥5 years, 76.2% and 70.3%, respectively. Splenic enlargement was present in 133 children (28.9%). The overall prevalence of anaemia was 35.7%. Anaemia was more common in the under-fives (48.8%) than in those ≥5 years (32.8%). The odds of anaemia in the under fives were significantly higher than the odds of those ≥5 years (OR = 1.95 [1.19-3.18]). Malaria is highly endemic in this farming community and calls for intensification of control interventions in the area with special attention to school-age children

    Dengue contingency planning: from research to policy and practice

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    Background Dengue is an increasingly incident disease across many parts of the world. In response, an evidence-based handbook to translate research into policy and practice was developed. This handbook facilitates contingency planning as well as the development and use of early warning and response systems for dengue fever epidemics, by identifying decision-making processes that contribute to the success or failure of dengue surveillance, as well as triggers that initiate effective responses to incipient outbreaks. Methodology/Principal findings Available evidence was evaluated using a step-wise process that included systematic literature reviews, policymaker and stakeholder interviews, a study to assess dengue contingency planning and outbreak management in 10 countries, and a retrospective logistic regression analysis to identify alarm signals for an outbreak warning system using datasets from five dengue endemic countries. Best practices for managing a dengue outbreak are provided for key elements of a dengue contingency plan including timely contingency planning, the importance of a detailed, context-specific dengue contingency plan that clearly distinguishes between routine and outbreak interventions, surveillance systems for outbreak preparedness, outbreak definitions, alert algorithms, managerial capacity, vector control capacity, and clinical management of large caseloads. Additionally, a computer-assisted early warning system, which enables countries to identify and respond to context-specific variables that predict forthcoming dengue outbreaks, has been developed. Conclusions/Significance Most countries do not have comprehensive, detailed contingency plans for dengue outbreaks. Countries tend to rely on intensified vector control as their outbreak response, with minimal focus on integrated management of clinical care, epidemiological, laboratory and vector surveillance, and risk communication. The Technical Handbook for Surveillance, Dengue Outbreak Prediction/ Detection and Outbreak Response seeks to provide countries with evidence-based best practices to justify the declaration of an outbreak and the mobilization of the resources required to implement an effective dengue contingency plan

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