319 research outputs found

    Increasing Youth Participation in Livestock Production in Kenya

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    Agriculture is a primary source of employment in Kenya. Most employment takes the form of smallholder crop and livestock farming, either as a main or supplementary livelihood activity. In recent years, youth have been found to prefer employment in non-farm livelihood activities to farming, in part due to lack of markets, market information, affordable credit facilities, and land, and a preference for jobs that offer financial security, prestige, comforts of urban life and which avoid the drudgery associated with farming. In order to encourage young people back into livestock production, programmes led by the Ministry of Agriculture and partners need to avoid entrenching existing gender inequalities. Focus also needs to be placed on how the adoption of an agri-business model of smallholder livestock farming could improve profitability and attract young people into this type of employment.The MasterCard Foundatio

    Review of gender and value chain analysis, development and evaluation toolkits

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    Measuring women’s social and economic empowerment

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    Women’s empowerment in collective dairy value chains

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    Antibiotic Sensitivity Patterns of Aerobic Bacterial Agents in Post-Surgical Orofacial Infections

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    Background: There is no data on the bacteriology of postsurgical orofacial infections at our institutions. Uncontrolled use of antibiotics may lead to development of resistance with the resultant increase in morbidity and cost of treatment. We aimed to determine the aerobic bacterial agents and antibiotic sensitivity of post-surgical infections in the orofacial region. Methodology: Patients were evaluated for post-surgical wound infection from the 5th to 30th post-operative day. In cases where a surgical implantwas placed the period of review was extended for up twelve months. The specimens were collected using sterile swabs and transported to the  microbiology laboratory within two hours of collection. The specimens were then analyzed for bacteriology according to the standard bacteriological  techniques. A wide range of antibiotics including those commonly used to treat orofacial infections were tested for sensitivity against the isolates obtained using the disk diffusion test (Kirby-Bauer procedure, using CLSI protocols). Results: Staphylococcus aureus accounted for 40% of the isolates followedby Klebsiella species (23%) and the Pseudomonas species (19%).  Amoxycillin/clavulinic acid, the 2nd and 3rd generation cephalosporins were effective against most of the bacterial infections from the orofacial region. Conclusion: Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella, and Pseudomonas species arethe commonest isolates from the oral facial region. Antibiotics which showed adequate efficacy against them were the augmented Penicillins and newer generations Cephalosporins.Key Words: Oro-facial infection, Post-surgical, Antibiotic

    Lay management of malaria in Baringo County

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    Who Gets in? The Quest for Diversity after Grutter

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    Transcript of The 2004 James McCormick Mitchell Lecture. On March 8, 2004, the University at Buffalo Law School hosted its annual Mitchell Lecture,1 a panel discussion entitled, Who Gets In? The Quest for Diversity After Grutter. The Mitchell Committee decided to focus this year\u27s lecture on innovative proposals to ensure diversity in law school admissions in light of the Supreme Court\u27s ruling in Grutter v. Bollinger, which confirmed that race and ethnicity could be taken into consideration in admission decisions for diversity purposes. Noting that much of the debate about Grutter thus far has emphasized the decision\u27s constitutionality or its implications for affirmative action, the Committee sought to have a different kind of conversation, one that explored new approaches to admissions that might aid law schools in admitting more diverse student bodies. To this end, the Committee invited five leading scholars, whose work, either analytical or empirical, could change or deepen understandings about the potential for and the obstacles to diversity in law school admissions post-Grutter. Their short presentations (each speaker had only twelve minutes to speak), which provoked a lively discussion, are presented in this edited transcript of the event together with selected excerpts from the question and answer period
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