50,102 research outputs found

    Agricultural Growth in China and Sub-Saharan African Countries

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    Agriculture remains a dominant sector in the economies of most African and several Asian countries. However, the poor performance of agriculture in Africa stands in sharp contrast to the robust agricultural growth in many Asian countries.2 In this regard, the experience of China is perhaps as impressive as it is relevant to many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. A general observation is that the productivity of land and labour has to rise through intensive agriculture, given the limited area of arable land (in China and Africa) and the high rates of growth of population (as in Africa). In many African countries, labour productivity has fallen and land productivity has not increased significantly. In China, productivities of both land and labour have increased significantly since at least the early 1980s. Agricultural output can increase in three ways: (i) get more from the same quantities of inputs through better utilisation of the existing capacity; (ii) use increased quantities of inputs; and (iii) use new techniques to raise the productivity of each input or raise the total product curve. All of these may require changes in tenurial arrangements, levels of investment in infrastructure and support services, and policies that affect the prices of outputs and inputs. A close examination of factors underlying the contrasting experiences in China and African countries reveals important differences in the institutional and policy environments affecting the individual behaviour with regard to the adoption and use of new (profitable) technologies to raise the land and labour productivities.

    Climate change and its impacts on older adults’ health in Kazakhstan

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    There has been growing concern over climate change and its impacts on many aspects of human society, particularly on health. Climate change may affect health in a wide range of forms: increased floods and droughts, increased frequency and intensity of heat waves, changes in the distribution of vector-borne diseases and effects on the risk of disasters and malnutrition (Haines et al 2006b). So far, little is known about climate change and its impact on older adults' health in Central Asia, particularly in Khazakhstan, where a downturn of life expectancy, has been prevalent. The objective of this paper is to examine the impacts of climate change on older adults’ health in Kazakhstan. Based on the literature review and empirical evidence, this study concludes that climate change largely affects older adults’ health in Kazakhstan. This study emphasizes that older adults are becoming increasingly aware of the climate-change risks and its impacts on human health. Older adults are matured human capital of any society and can be utilized to address the climate-related health consequences in the twenty-first century. It is hoped that the findings of this study will have enormous policy implications

    Seroprevalence Of Hepatitis-b Virus In Mid And Far Western Region In Nepal

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    Hepatitis B is significant health problems that might involve the late sequel of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The present study aimed to know the seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in mid and far western region in Nepal with various clinical conditions.This was a retrospective study conducted in mid and far western region in Nepal, which was performed in the Central Laboratory of Microbiology at Nepalgunj Medical College and Teaching Hospital, Banke, Nepal during the period of September 2010 to April 2012. The serum samples were tested for Hepatitis B surface Antigen (HBsAg) by Sandwich immunoassay. Total 7010 patients including 43.72% male and 56.28% female were tested for HBsAg. Of them, 135 were positive and 6875 were negative.In 135 positive cases 84 (62.22%) were male and 51 (37.77% )were female. In 6875 negative cases 2981 were male and 3894 were female. The seroprevalence rate of HBV was 1.93% in mid and far western region in Nepal. Seroprevalence of HBV seems to be higher in male then the female; it was 2.75% in male and 1.29% in female.The study revealed that the seroprevalence of HBV was alarmingly higher in such a population, which probably reflects a high background prevalence of HBV infections should be taken into consideration and Implementation of community-based preventive measures and improved strategies for safe blood supply might prove useful to decrease the seroprevalence

    Anthropic tuning of the weak scale and of m_u/m_d in two-Higgs-doublet models

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    It is shown that in a model in which up-type and down-type fermions acquire mass from different Higgs doublets, the anthropic tuning of the Higgs mass parameters can explain the fact that the observed masses of the dd and uu quarks are nearly the same with dd slightly heavier. If Yukawa couplings are assumed not to "scan" (vary among domains), this would also help explain why the t quark is much heavier than the b quark. It is also pointed out that the existence of dark matter invalidates some earlier anthropic arguments against the viability of domains where the Standard Model Higgs has positive μ2\mu^2, but makes other even stronger arguments possible.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figure

    Adaptive link-weight routing protocol using cross-layer communication for MANET

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    Routing efficiency is one of the challenges offered by Mobile Ad-hoc Networks (MANETs). This paper proposes a novel routing technique called Adaptive Link-Weight (ALW) routing protocol. ALW adaptively selects an optimum route on the basis of available bandwidth, low delay and long route lifetime. The technique adapts a cross-layer framework where the ALW is integrated with application and physical layer. The proposed design allows applications to convey preferences to the ALW protocol to override the default path selection mechanism. The results confirm improvement over AODV in terms of network load, route discovery time and link reliability
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