354 research outputs found
How informal ties matter: encroachment on road reservations along the Kumasi–Accra highway in Ghana
A failure of urban planning in many developing countries is evidenced by encroachment on road reservations. Urban planning literature suggests that such encroachment is largely explained by poverty and urban growth. But how do encroachers find space in the road reservations? This paper examines encroachment along the Anloga Junction to Ejisu section of the Kumasi–Accra highway in Ghana. It argues that formal rules are not effective in governing the road reservations: informal rules rooted in social networks of reciprocity matter more. The research involved interviews with encroachers, senior officials from government institutions and traditional authorities. It emerged that encroachers invoked mainly ethnic and political party ties with public officials to secure space in the road reservations. This occurred in an environment of non-enforcement of relevant laws, weak formal collaboration among public institutions, and inadequate political commitment. There is a need for effective application of the principles and methods of multi-stakeholder governance, linking improved legal regulation with informal processes, to achieve better outcomes
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Costs of streamlined HIV care delivery in rural Ugandan and Kenyan clinics in the SEARCH Studys.
OBJECTIVES/DESIGN:As antiretroviral therapy (ART) rapidly expands in sub-Saharan Africa using new efficient care models, data on costs of these approaches are lacking. We examined costs of a streamlined HIV care delivery model within a large HIV test-and-treat study in Uganda and Kenya. METHODS:We calculated observed per-person-per-year (ppy) costs of streamlined care in 17 health facilities in SEARCH Study intervention communities (NCT: 01864603) via micro-costing techniques, time-and-motion studies, staff interviews, and administrative records. Cost categories included salaries, ART, viral load testing, recurring goods/services, and fixed capital/facility costs. We then modeled costs under three increasingly efficient scale-up scenarios: lowest-cost ART, centralized viral load testing, and governmental healthcare worker salaries. We assessed the relationship between community-specific ART delivery costs, retention in care, and viral suppression. RESULTS:Estimated streamlined HIV care delivery costs were 117/ppy for TDF/3TC/EFV [40%]) and viral load testing (51/ppy), recurring costs (7/ppy). Optimized ART scale-up with lowest-cost ART (24/ppy), and governmental healthcare salaries (163/ppy. We found clinic-to-clinic heterogeneity in retention and viral suppression levels versus streamlined care delivery costs, but no correlation between cost and either retention or viral suppression. CONCLUSIONS:In the SEARCH Study, streamlined HIV care delivery costs were similar to or lower than prior estimates despite including viral load testing; further optimizations could substantially reduce costs further. These data can inform global strategies for financing ART expansion to achieve UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets
A 50-Year-Old Woman with Recurrent Generalised Seizures
Ronald Ma and colleagues discuss the differential diagnosis, investigation, and management of this patient
ASB2 is an Elongin BC-interacting protein that can assemble with Cullin 5 and Rbx1 to reconstitute an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex.
International audience; The ankyrin repeat-containing protein with a suppressor of cytokine signaling box-2 (ASB2) gene was identified as a retinoic acid-response gene and a target of the promyelocytic leukemia-retinoic acid receptor-alpha oncogenic protein characteristic of acute promyelocytic leukemia. Expression of ASB2 in myeloid leukemia cells inhibits growth and promotes commitment, recapitulating an early step known to be critical for differentiation. Here we show that ASB2, by interacting with the Elongin BC complex, can assemble with Cullin5.Rbx1 to form an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that stimulates polyubiquitination by the E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Ubc5. This is a first indication that a member of the ASB protein family, ASB2, is a subunit of an ECS (Elongin C-Cullin-SOCS box)-type E3 ubiquitin ligase complex. Altogether, our results strongly suggest that ASB2 targets specific proteins to destruction by the proteasome in leukemia cells that have been induced to differentiate
Nutritional status, feeding practices and state of other related indicators at onset of a multi-model community nutrition intervention program in Mpigi District, Uganda.
Introduction: In Uganda, malnutrition level has persistently remained
high among the under-fives and this has led NGOs like World Vision,
Uganda into finding innovative ways for intervention. This paper
presents an assessment of nutrition status and values of related
indicators at onset of a community intervention program in four
sub-counties of Mpigi district in Central Uganda. Methods: This was a
cross-sectional study to provide baseline information for a nutrition
intervention. The study units were index children aged 6-59 months from
818 households. Face to face interviews were conducted using
semi-structured questionnaires. Values of key indicators were computed
and compared between designated control and intervention areas.
Results: Stunting level was 32% while wasting was 3% and underweight at
10%. Most of the index children (78%) started breastfeeding within the
first hour of birth. Nearly a third of the households visited had a
kitchen garden and this did not differ by intervention status.
Conclusion: Like at regional level, nutrition status and feeding
practices in the study area were poor. The values of these indicators
did not significantly change by designated intervention status. Much
effort was needed to realize a difference in nutrition and feeding
practices in designated intervention areas
Improved tools and strategies for the prevention and control of arboviral diseases: A research-to-policy forum
Background
Research has been conducted on interventions to control dengue transmission and respond to outbreaks. A summary of the available evidence will help inform disease control policy decisions and research directions, both for dengue and, more broadly, for all Aedes-borne arboviral diseases.
Method
A research-to-policy forum was convened by TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, with researchers and representatives from ministries of health, in order to review research findings and discuss their implications for policy and research.
Results
The participants reviewed findings of research supported by TDR and others. Surveillance and early outbreak warning. Systematic reviews and country studies identify the critical characteristics that an alert system should have to document trends reliably and trigger timely responses (i.e., early enough to prevent the epidemic spread of the virus) to dengue outbreaks. A range of variables that, according to the literature, either indicate risk of forthcoming dengue transmission or predict dengue outbreaks were tested and some of them could be successfully applied in an Early Warning and Response System (EWARS). Entomological surveillance and vector management. A summary of the published literature shows that controlling Aedes vectors requires complex interventions and points to the need for more rigorous, standardised study designs, with disease reduction as the primary outcome to be measured. House screening and targeted vector interventions are promising vector management approaches. Sampling vector populations, both for surveillance purposes and evaluation of control activities, is usually conducted in an unsystematic way, limiting the potentials of entomological surveillance for outbreak prediction. Combining outbreak alert and improved approaches of vector management will help to overcome the present uncertainties about major risk groups or areas where outbreak response should be initiated and where resources for vector management should be allocated during the interepidemic period.
Conclusions
The Forum concluded that the evidence collected can inform policy decisions, but also that important research gaps have yet to be filled
Factors associated with community-acquired urinary tract infections among adults attending assessment centre, Mulago Hospital Uganda.
Background: Urinary tract infections (UTI) are a common medical problem
affecting the general population and thus commonly encountered in
medical practice, with the global burden of UTIs at about 150 million
people. Because uropathogens largely originate from colonic flora, they
are easy to predict, and this is the rationale for empirical treatment
in Community Acquired- UTI (CA-UTIs). With the increasing prevalence of
drug-resistant bacteria among adults with CA-UTI in Uganda, it is no
longer adequate to manage CA-UTIs on empiric regimen without revising
the susceptibility patterns of common CA-UTI causative agents. Thus in
this study we set out to identify: The factors associated with CA-UTIs,
the common uropathogens and the drug sensitivity patterns of the common
uropathogens cultured. Methodology: This was a cross-sectional study
that was conducted in adults who presented with symptoms of a UTI at
Mulago Hospital, assessment center. There were 139 patients who
consented to the study and were recruited, an interviewer administered
questionnaire was used to collect information from the study
participants as regards demographic, social and clinical
characteristics and Mid Stream Urine (MSU) samples were collected for
urinalysis, culture and antibiotic susceptibility testing using the
Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion technique was applied to the
isolates.Numeric data were summarized using measures of central
tendency while the categorical data was summarized using proportions
and percentages. Results: Age, female sex and marital status were
factors that were significantly associated with CA-UTIs. Fifty four
(54) cultures were positive for UTI with 26 giving pure growths. The
commonest uropathogen isolated was Escherichia coli at 50%, this was
followed by Staphylococcus aureus at 15.4%. The sensitivity of
Escherichia coli to Ampicillin and Nitrofurantoin were78.6%, 64.3%
respectively, and the sensitivity of Staphylococcus aureus to
ciprofloxacin, Nitrofurantoin and gentamycin were 100%, 66.7% and 66.7%
respectively. Conclusion: There are known factors associated with
CA-UTIs such as age, female sex. There was generally high sensitivity
to nitrofurantoin and gentamycin by most of the uropathogens isolated,
and high resistance to the common antibiotics such as nalidixic acid
and erythromycin thus a need for a bigger study that can be used to
effect the change of the current recommendations in the Uganda Clinical
Guidelines as regards empirical management of CA-UTIs
Targeting the TCA cycle can ameliorate widespread axonal energy deficiency in neuroinflammatory lesions
Inflammation in the central nervous system can impair the function of neuronal mitochondria and contributes to axon degeneration in the common neuroinflammatory disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Here we combine cell-type-specific mitochondrial proteomics with in vivo biosensor imaging to dissect how inflammation alters the molecular composition and functional capacity of neuronal mitochondria. We show that neuroinflammatory lesions in the mouse spinal cord cause widespread and persisting axonal ATP deficiency, which precedes mitochondrial oxidation and calcium overload. This axonal energy deficiency is associated with impaired electron transport chain function, but also an upstream imbalance of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzymes, with several, including key rate-limiting, enzymes being depleted in neuronal mitochondria in experimental models and in MS lesions. Notably, viral overexpression of individual TCA enzymes can ameliorate the axonal energy deficits in neuroinflammatory lesions, suggesting that TCA cycle dysfunction in MS may be amendable to therapy
Targeting the TCA cycle can ameliorate widespread axonal energy deficiency in neuroinflammatory lesions
In this study, Tai et al. provide insights into the metabolic and bioenergetic responses in the axonal compartment in the context of multiple sclerosis. Moreover, they show how upregulating the tricarboxylic acid cycle confers protection against neuroinflammation-induced energy deprivation. Inflammation in the central nervous system can impair the function of neuronal mitochondria and contributes to axon degeneration in the common neuroinflammatory disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Here we combine cell-type-specific mitochondrial proteomics with in vivo biosensor imaging to dissect how inflammation alters the molecular composition and functional capacity of neuronal mitochondria. We show that neuroinflammatory lesions in the mouse spinal cord cause widespread and persisting axonal ATP deficiency, which precedes mitochondrial oxidation and calcium overload. This axonal energy deficiency is associated with impaired electron transport chain function, but also an upstream imbalance of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzymes, with several, including key rate-limiting, enzymes being depleted in neuronal mitochondria in experimental models and in MS lesions. Notably, viral overexpression of individual TCA enzymes can ameliorate the axonal energy deficits in neuroinflammatory lesions, suggesting that TCA cycle dysfunction in MS may be amendable to therapy
Tuberculosis and Silicosis Burden in Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Miners in a Large Occupational Health Outreach Programme in Zimbabwe.
Artisanal and small-scale miners (ASMs) labour under archaic working conditions and are exposed to high levels of silica dust. Exposure to silica dust has been associated with an increased risk of tuberculosis and silicosis. ASMs are highly mobile and operate in remote areas with near absent access to health services. The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of tuberculosis, silicosis and silico-tuberculosis among ASMs in Zimbabwe. A cross-sectional study was conducted from 1 October to 31 January 2021 on a convenient sample of 514 self-selected ASMs. We report the results from among those ASMs who attended an outreach medical facility and an occupational health clinic. Data were collected from clinical records using a precoded data proforma. Data variables included demographic (age, sex), clinical details (HIV status, GeneXpert results, outcomes of chest radiographs, history of tuberculosis) and perceived exposure to mine dust. Of the 464 miners screened for silicosis, 52 (11.2%) were diagnosed with silicosis, while 17 (4.0%) of 422 ASMs were diagnosed with tuberculosis (TB). Of the 373 ASMs tested for HIV, 90 (23.5%) were sero-positive. An HIV infection was associated with a diagnosis of silicosis. There is need for a comprehensive occupational health service package, including TB and silicosis surveillance, for ASMs in Zimbabwe. These are preliminary and limited findings, needing confirmation by more comprehensive studies
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