12 research outputs found

    Factors influencing voluntary medical male circumcision among men aged 18-50 years in Kibera Division

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    Background: Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) is the surgical removal of all or part of the foreskin from the penis. It is done for medical reasons as it has been shown to reduce the risk of female to male transmission of HIV by up to 60%. It has also been associated with lower transmission of sexually transmitted infections. Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision services have been scaled up in countries with high prevalence, generalised heterosexual HIV epidemics and low rates of male circumcision. Kibera is inhabited by a multi-ethnic community with a sizeable number of un-circumcising ethnic groups.Objectives: To determine the uptake of voluntary medical male circumcision among men in Kibera Division and to identify factors associated with circumcision preference.Design: Descriptive cross-sectional study.Setting: Kibera Division of Nairobi County.Subjects: Simple random sampling was used to enrol 387 participants. A 42-item questionnaire was administered to the participants for determining the uptake of VMMC. It had three sub-sections: demographic characteristics, general knowledge about VMMC and AIDS and acceptability of VMMC, which collected data on the main outcome measures. Data captured was entered into EpiInfo and converted to Stata13 for validation and analysis. Bivariate statistics were generated for all the variables in accordance to the study questions. Categorical variables were analysed using chi-square tests, while the qualitative variables were analysed using the t-test. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors associated with the acceptability of male circumcision.Results: The study analysed data for a sample of 341 individuals whose mean age was 31 years (95%= 31+-9.1) and 62% were married. A total of 54% of the respondents had completed secondary and tertiary level of education. The level of understanding about VMMC was above average. Fifty nine percent of the respondents (95% CI = 0.54 - 0.64) knew about VMMC. Of these, 31% had obtained information about VMMC from TV and radio. The most frequently mentioned reason for undergoing VMMC was prevention of HIV and sexually transmitted infections. The level of uptake of VMMC was high at 75%. The study established that the prefered age group for circumcision was during adolescence. Using multivariate logistic regression, the factors associated with uptake of VMMC were education level, medical and hygiene reasons for VMMC. Barriers for uptake were cost, pain and long recovery period after the operation.Conclusion: The uptake and acceptability of male circumcision is high among the general population in Kibera. Participant understanding of HIV and VMMC was also high. There is need for heightened awareness creation in educational institutes. This will specifically target young men before or shortly after their sexual debut when they may still be free of HIV and HSV-2 infections. Circumcision by medical providers should be increased in traditionally circumcising regions to reduce incidence of adverse events

    User fees in private non-for-profit hospitals in Uganda: a survey and intervention for equity

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    BACKGROUND: In developing countries, user fees may represent an important source of revenues for private-non-for-profit hospitals, but they may also affect access, use and equity. METHODS: This survey was conducted in ten hospitals of the Uganda Catholic Medical Bureau to assess differences in user fees policies and to propose changes that would better fit with the social concern explicitly pursued by the Bureau. Through a review of relevant hospital documents and reports, and through interviews with key informants, health workers and users, hospital and non-hospital cost was calculated, as well as overall expenditure and revenues. Lower fees were applied in some pilot hospitals after the survey. RESULTS: The percentage of revenues from user fees varied between 6% and 89% (average 40%). Some hospitals were more successful than others in getting external aid and government subsidies. These hospitals were applying lower fees and flat rates, and were offering free essential services to encourage access, as opposed to the fee-for-service policies implemented in less successful hospitals. The wide variation in user fees among hospitals was not justified by differences in case mix. None of the hospitals had a policy for exemption of the poor; the few users that actually got exempted were not really poor. To pay hospital and non-hospital expenses, about one third of users had to borrow money or sell goods and property. The fee system applied after the survey, based on flat and lower rates, brought about an increase in access and use of hospital services. CONCLUSION: Our results confirm that user fees represent an unfair mechanism of financing for health services because they exclude the poor and the sick. To mitigate this effect, flat rates and lower fees for the most vulnerable users were introduced to replace the fee-for-service system in some hospitals after the survey. The results are encouraging: hospital use, especially for pregnancy, childbirth and childhood illness, increased immediately, with no detrimental effect on overall revenues. A more equitable user fees system is possible

    Health care seeking behavior for diarrhea in children under 5 in rural Niger: results of a cross-sectional survey

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    Diarrhea remains the second leading cause of death in children under 5 years of age in sub-Saharan Africa. Health care seeking behavior for diarrhea varies by context and has important implications for developing appropriate care strategies and estimating burden of disease. The objective of this study was to determine the proportion of children under five with diarrhea who consulted at a health structure in order to identify the appropriate health care levels to set up surveillance of severe diarrheal diseases

    Isolation And Characterization Of Lactic Acid Bacteria In Kirario, An Indigenous Kenyan Fermented Porridge Based On Green Maize And Millet

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    The lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are the most diverse groups of bacteria known, and have been used by many communities in the World in spontaneous fermentation to produce fermented porridges with unique technological characteristics. Kirario is a traditional fermented porridge based on green maize, millet and/or sorghum produced by spontaneous fermentation for 24 to 48 hours at ambient temperature. Kirario contained mean total viable counts, LAB, lactococcus, and yeast and moulds counts of 9.30, 9.63, 8.62 and 4.83log10cfu/ml respectively. The coliform numbers encountered wer

    Diabetic ketoacidosis: clinical presentation and precipitating factors at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi

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    Objective: To determine the clinico-laboratory features and precipitating factors of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH). Design: Prospective cross-sectional study. Setting: Inpatient medical and surgical wards of KNH. Subjects: Adult patients aged 12 years and above with known or previously unknown diabetes hospitalised with a diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis. Results: Over a nine month period, 48 patients had DKA out of 648 diabetic patients hospitalised within the period, one died before full evaluation. Mean (SD) age was 37 (18.12) years for males, 29.9 (14.3) for females, range of 12 to 77 years. Half of the patients were newly diagnosed. More than 90% had HbA1c >8%, only three patients had HbA1c of 7-8.0%. More than 90% had altered level of consciousness, with almost quarter in coma, 36% had systolic hypotension, almost 75% had moderate to severe dehydration. Blunted level of consciousness was significantly associated with severe dehydration and metabolic acidosis. Over 65% patients had leucocytosis but most (55%) of them did not have overt infection. Amongst the precipitating factors, 34% had missed insulin, 23.4% had overt infection and only 6.4% had both infection and missed insulin injections. Infection sites included respiratory, genito-urinary and septicaemia. Almost thirty (29.8%) percent of the study subjects died within 48 hours of hospitalisation. Conclusion: Diabetic ketoacidosis occurred in about 8% of the hospitalised diabetic patients. It was a major cause of morbidity and mortality. The main precipitant factors of DKA were infections and missed insulin injections. These factors are preventable in order to improve outcomes in the diabetic patients who complicate to DKA. East African Medical Journal Vol. 82(12) 2005: S191-S19

    Overcoming phase 1 delays: the critical component of obstetric fistula prevention programs in resource-poor countries

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>An obstetric fistula is a traumatic childbirth injury that occurs when labor is obstructed and delivery is delayed. Prolonged obstructed labor leads to the destruction of the tissues that normally separate the bladder from the vagina and creates a passageway (fistula) through which urine leaks continuously. Women with a fistula become social outcasts. Universal high-quality maternity care has eliminated the obstetric fistula in wealthy countries, but millions of women in resource-poor nations still experience prolonged labor and tens of thousands of new fistula sufferers are added to the millions of pre-existing cases each year. This article discusses fistula prevention in developing countries, focusing on the factors which delay treatment of prolonged labor.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Obstetric fistulas can be prevented through contraception, avoiding obstructed labor, or improving outcomes for women who develop obstructed labor. Contraception is of little use to women who are already pregnant and there is no reliable screening test to predict obstruction in advance of labor. Improving the outcome of obstructed labor depends on prompt diagnosis and timely intervention (usually by cesarean section). Because obstetric fistulas are caused by tissue compression, the time interval from obstruction to delivery is critical. This time interval is often extended by delays in deciding to seek care, delays in arriving at a hospital, and delays in accessing treatment after arrival. Communities can reasonably demand that governments and healthcare institutions improve the second (transportation) and third (treatment) phases of delay. Initial delays in seeking hospital care are caused by failure to recognize that labor is prolonged, confusion concerning what should be done (often the result of competing therapeutic pathways), lack of women’s agency, unfamiliarity with and fear of hospitals and the treatments they offer (especially surgery), and economic constraints on access to care.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>Women in resource-poor countries will use institutional obstetric care when the services provided are valued more than the competing choices offered by a pluralistic medical system. The key to obstetric fistula prevention is competent obstetrical care delivered respectfully, promptly, and at affordable cost. The utilization of these services is driven largely by trust.</p
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