45 research outputs found
Stigma of People with HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Literature Review
The aim of this
literature review is to elucidate what is known
about HIV/AIDS and stigma in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Literature about HIV/AIDS and stigma in
Sub-Saharan Africa was systematically searched
in Pubmed, Medscape, and Psycinfo up to March
31, 2009. No starting date limit was specified.
The material was analyzed using Gilmore and
Somerville's (1994) four processes of
stigmatizing responses: the definition of the
problem HIV/AIDS, identification of people
living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), linking HIV/AIDS
to immorality and other negative
characteristics, and finally behavioural
consequences of stigma (distancing, isolation,
discrimination in care). It was found that the
cultural construction of HIV/AIDS, based on
beliefs about contamination, sexuality, and
religion, plays a crucial role and contributes
to the strength of distancing reactions and
discrimination in society. Stigma prevents the
delivery of effective social and medical care
(including taking antiretroviral therapy) and
also enhances the number of HIV infections. More
qualitative studies on HIV/AIDS stigma including
stigma in health care institutions in
Sub-Saharan Africa are
recommended
Turbidity and Urine Turbidity: A Mini Review
Turbidity, the measurement for impurity and the opposite phenomenon of
clarity, is described as the reduced transparency of a liquid caused by the
existence of undissolved matter in the form of suspended particles. The
permissible volume of light through the liquid, or light that is not dispersed or
absorbed but emitted through the liquid and propagated toward the observer,
provides a foundation for the analysis of various subject matters, such as
liquid mass concentration and impurity identification. The turbidity of urine is
increased by the presence of cellular debris, cast, and, in some cases, crystal
and other debris in the urine. Blood (both red and white blood cells),
hemoglobin, cholesterol, albumin, leukocyte esterase, nitrites, ketones,
bilirubin, and urobilinogen are all substances that are not expected to be
found in urine, the presence of which can increase urine turbidity. Owing to
the principle of turbidimetry, it is not the detection of turbidity that is the
cause of the turbid state of urine but the presence of suspended particles and
a rough estimate of the number of suspended particles in urine. This research
exposes the different methods of obtaining the turbidity of a liquid sample
and the working principles of turbidimetry and nephelometry
Smart Toilets and Toilet Gadgets in Sustainable Smart Cities: An Overview of Personal Health Monitoring
Healthcare as a service in most developed countries has advanced more than
just electronic medical records (EMR), automated hospital experience, hospital
information systems, and the like of it. Healthcare services have attained the
height of remote surgery, computer-aided surgery, and remote patient
monitoring and care due to the advancements in information and
communication technology coupled with the advancement in artificial
intelligence (AI) ability on the Internet of things. The use of smart gadgets in
the toilet capable of collecting data relevant to healthcare makes the gadget a
personal health monitoring device, which is a medical care supplement to
traditional health monitoring. This provides an effective, non-invasive, nondestructive,
low-cost, accuracy, and timesaving method of conducting health
monitoring on the user in real time
Gender-related power differences, beliefs and reactions towards people living with HIV/AIDS: an urban study in Nigeria
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although there are an increasing number of studies on HIV-related stigma in Nigeria, very little research has focused on how power differences based on gender perpetuate the stigmatization of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) and how these gender differences affect the care that PLWHA receive in health care institutions. We explore gender-related beliefs and reactions of society, including health care professionals (HCPs), with regard to PLWHA, using Connell's theoretical framework of gender and power (1987). With Connell's structural theory of gender and power (financial inequality, authority and structure of social norms), we can describe gender differences in stigmatization of PLWHA.</p> <p>Method</p> <p>We conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews, lasting 60 to 90 minutes, with 100 persons (40 members of the general public, 40 HCPs and 20 PLWHA) in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. The interviews were tape-recorded and transcribed verbatim. The Nvivo 7 computer package was used to analyze the data.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There are similarities and differences between the general public and HCPs towards PLWHA in gender-related beliefs and reactions. For instance, although association with promiscuity and power differences were commonly acknowledged in the different groups, there are differences in how these reactions are shown; such as HCPs asking the female PLWHA to inform their partners to ensure payment of hospital bills. Women with HIV/AIDS in particular are therefore in a disadvantaged position with regard to the care they receive.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Despite the fact that men and women with HIV/AIDS suffer the same illness, clear disparities are apparent in the negative reaction women and men living with HIV/AIDS experience in society. We show that women's generally low status in society contributes to the extreme negative reactions to which female PLWHA are subject. The government should create policies aimed at reducing the power differences in family, society and health care systems, which would be important to decrease the gender-related differences in stigma experienced by PLWHA. Interventions should be directed at the prevailing societal norms through appropriate legislation and advocacy at grassroots level with the support of men to counter laws that put women in a disadvantaged position. Furthermore, development of a policy that encourages equality in access to health care for all patients with HIV/AIDS by applying the same conditions to both men and women in health care institutions is recommended. There is a need to protect women's rights through implementing support policies, including paying attention to gender in the training of HCPs.</p
A Spatial Analysis of County-level Variation in Syphilis and Gonorrhea in Guangdong Province, China
Sexually transmitted infections (STI) have made a resurgence in many rapidly developing regions of southern China, but there is little understanding of the social changes that contribute to this spatial distribution of STI. This study examines county-level socio-demographic characteristics associated with syphilis and gonorrhea in Guangdong Province.This study uses linear regression and spatial lag regression to determine county-level (n = 97) socio-demographic characteristics associated with a greater burden of syphilis, gonorrhea, and a combined syphilis/gonorrhea index. Data were obtained from the 2005 China Population Census and published public health data. A range of socio-demographic variables including gross domestic product, the Gender Empowerment Measure, standard of living, education level, migrant population and employment are examined. Reported syphilis and gonorrhea cases are disproportionately clustered in the Pearl River Delta, the central region of Guangdong Province. A higher fraction of employed men among the adult population, higher fraction of divorced men among the adult population, and higher standard of living (based on water availability and people per room) are significantly associated with higher STI cases across all three models. Gross domestic product and gender inequality measures are not significant predictors of reported STI in these models.Although many ecological studies of STIs have found poverty to be associated with higher reported STI, this analysis found a greater number of reported syphilis cases in counties with a higher standard of living. Spatially targeted syphilis screening measures in regions with a higher standard of living may facilitate successful control efforts. This analysis also reinforces the importance of changing male sexual behaviors as part of a comprehensive response to syphilis control in China
MasakhaNEWS:News Topic Classification for African languages
African languages are severely under-represented in NLP research due to lack of datasets covering several NLP tasks. While there are individual language specific datasets that are being expanded to different tasks, only a handful of NLP tasks (e.g. named entity recognition and machine translation) have standardized benchmark datasets covering several geographical and typologically-diverse African languages. In this paper, we develop MasakhaNEWS -- a new benchmark dataset for news topic classification covering 16 languages widely spoken in Africa. We provide an evaluation of baseline models by training classical machine learning models and fine-tuning several language models. Furthermore, we explore several alternatives to full fine-tuning of language models that are better suited for zero-shot and few-shot learning such as cross-lingual parameter-efficient fine-tuning (like MAD-X), pattern exploiting training (PET), prompting language models (like ChatGPT), and prompt-free sentence transformer fine-tuning (SetFit and Cohere Embedding API). Our evaluation in zero-shot setting shows the potential of prompting ChatGPT for news topic classification in low-resource African languages, achieving an average performance of 70 F1 points without leveraging additional supervision like MAD-X. In few-shot setting, we show that with as little as 10 examples per label, we achieved more than 90\% (i.e. 86.0 F1 points) of the performance of full supervised training (92.6 F1 points) leveraging the PET approach