52 research outputs found
Justification of Intimate Partner Violence in Egypt
Background: Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is an important problem in developing countries and associated with poor reproductive health outcomes.
Objectives: To describe trends and justification of IPV in Egypt.
Methods: We used the 2008 Egypt Demographic Health Surveys (EDHS). Information on IPV was drawn from 16,527 women in 2008. We performed bivariate analyses to examine trends in and risk factors for justification of IPV.
Results: 39.5% of respondents reported that IPV is justifiable. Logistic regression suggests that age, education, wealth and female autonomy are associated with respondents not justifying IPV. In contrast respondents who supported the continuation of female circumcision and who were related to their husband reported that IPV is justifiable.
Conclusions: Justification of IPV continues to be prevalent in Egypt. Further research is needed to identify points of intervention to reduce the support for IPV in Egypt
Cross-Sectional Comparison of Behavioral Risk Factors for HIV/HCV in People Who Inject Drugs (PWID) in Egypt
Background
Egypt has the greatest HCV prevalence worldwide at 15% and a concentrated HIV epidemic in male people who inject drugs (PWID) at 6.8%, who are at a high risk for HCV infection as well. Injection drug use is criminalized in Egypt, and there is limited availability of harm reduction programs. Drug-use and sexual risk behaviors between PWID and the general population have not been studied there.
Methods
To address this gap, a cross-sectional HIV/HCV epidemiological study of 632 consenting injection drug users in Cairo and Alexandria was conducted. Bivariate logistic regression analysis was done to evaluate the associations between HIV/HCV and needle sharing or sexual practices using SAS 9.4.
Results
10.6% (63/ 604) of the study population tested positive for HIV and 61.5% (384/624) tested positive for HCV. Sharing needles with more than 10 people was associated with HIV and HCV infection (OR=3.65, p-val=0.001; OR=2.05, p-val=0.02, respectably). Age was associated with both HIV and HCV (p-val=0.03 and
Conclusions
The results indicate that the growing epidemic among PWID in Egypt may place the general population at risk for HIV and HCV primarily through sexual contact. In Russia, repressive
policies toward PWID allowed HIV to spread to the general population at the start of the
epidemic in 2000. Now, 48% of HIV is heterosexually transmitted in Russia and the country contributes \u3e80% of the HIV cases in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. In response to the epidemic, even more punitive laws and regulations were introduced in Russia, and their HIV prevalence has seen a 49% increase between 2005 and 2015. A similar trajectory can be expected for Egypt if preventative measures are not taken. Common-sense harm reduction programs like clean needle exchanges and decriminalization of injection drug use should be part of a comprehensive plan to control the spread of HIV and HCV in Egypt
Evaluation of Recruitment Strategies on Inclusiveness of Populations at Risk for Health Disparities in the Statewide Remote Online COVIDsmart Registry
Background
The COVID-19 pandemic affected health research practices. The large-scale impacts of COVID-19 and restrictions on face-to-face interaction led to increased use of remote online data collection methods. However, it is unclear if such efforts led to the representation of populations at risk for health disparities. We evaluated whether multiple recruitment strategies would capture a representative sample of individuals at risk for health disparities.
Methods
The COVIDsmart registry collected clinical, social, economic, and behavioral data in the state of Virginia from March to November, 2021. Seven hundred eighty-two adult participants were enrolled. We compared the representation of COVIDsmart participants at risk for health disparities against state data with two-tailed Z tests. Monte-Carlo estimates evaluated the association between recruitment strategies utilized and health disparity risk status.
Results
The majority of participants were non-Hispanic White (81.5%), female (78.6%), non-rural (98%), had a Masters’ degree or higher (62.6%), and an income of $100,000 or higher (51%). The recruitment strategy that brought participants into the study did not differ significantly based on racial/ethnic minority status (p\u3e.05), but did differ for low SES versus high SES groups, p=.03. Low SES and ethnic/racial minority representation proportions were significantly lower for COVIDsmart participants than state data, (p\u3e.05).
Conclusions
Participants at risk for health disparities were not well represented in this registry despite multiple recruitment strategies. The use of targeted emails, social media, and community collaboration may improve the participation of populations at risk for health disparities in remote online research studies
National surveillance for human and pet contact with oral rabies vaccine baits, 2001–2009
Objective—To determine the rate and absolute number of human and pet exposures to oral rabies vaccine (ORV) bait containing liquid vaccinia rabies glycoprotein recombinant vaccine and to evaluate factors that might affect human contact with bait to modify the program and reduce human exposure to the vaccine.
Design—Retrospective analysis of surveillance data (2001 to 2009).
Sample—Reports on human and pet contact with ORV baits in states with ORV surveillance programs.
Procedures—Data were collected from passive, multistate ORV surveillance systems in Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia. Data collected included the nature of human or pet contact with bait and vaccine, the caller’s knowledge of the ORV bait program, local human population density, and other relevant demographic data.
Results—All 18 states participated in the surveillance program for at least 1 year, for a combined 68 years of observation. One thousand four hundred thirty-six calls were reported, representing 3,076 found baits (6.89/100,000 baits dropped); 296 (20%) calls were related to human contact with ruptured bait, and 550 (38%) involved pet contact with the bait. Six adverse events in humans were reported, one of which required hospitalization. Fifty-nine adverse events in pets were noted, all of which were nonserious.
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Findings from surveillance activities have been used to improve baiting strategies and minimize human and pet contact with ORV baits. Overall, human and pet contact with ORV baits was infrequent. Surveillance has led to early identification of persons exposed to ORV and rapid intervention
Zinc Therapy for Diarrhoea Increased the Use of Oral Rehydration Therapy and Reduced the Use of Antibiotics in Bangladeshi Children
Excessive use of antibiotics for diarrhoea is a major contributing
factor towards increasing rates of antimicrobial resistance in
developing countries. Zinc therapy for diarrhoea has been shown to be
beneficial in controlled efficacy trials, and it is of interest to
determine if availability of zinc syrup for treatment of diarrhoea
would satisfy the demand for a 'medicine' for diarrhoea, thus reducing
the use of antibiotics, without competing with the use of oral
rehydration therapy (ORT). This community-based controlled trial was
conducted from November 1998 to October 2000, and all children aged
3-59 months in the study area were included. In this trial, the
availability of zinc supplements, along with ORT and appropriate
education programmes, was associated with significantly higher use of
ORT and lower use of antibiotics
Assessing seasonality of travel distance to harm reduction service providers among persons who inject drugs
BACKGROUND: Prior research has examined access to syringe exchange program (SEP) services among persons who inject drugs (PWID), but no research has been conducted to evaluate variations in SEP access based on season. This is an important gap in the literature given that seasonal weather patterns and inclement weather may affect SEP service utilization. The purpose of this research is to examine differences in access to SEPs by season among PWID in the District of Columbia (DC). FINDINGS: A geometric point distance estimation technique was applied to records from a DC SEP that operated from 1996 to 2011. We calculated the walking distance (via sidewalks) from the centroid point of zip code of home residence to the exchange site where PWID presented for services. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to examine differences in walking distance measures by season. Differences in mean walking distance measures were statistically significant between winter and spring with PWID traveling approximately 2.88 and 2.77Â miles, respectively, to access the SEP during these seasons. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that seasonal differences in SEP accessibility may exist between winter and spring. PWID may benefit from harm reduction providers adapting their SEP operations to provide a greater diversity of exchange locations during seasons in which inclement weather may negatively influence engagement with SEPs. Increasing the number of exchange locations based on season may help resolve unmet needs among injectors
Assessing the Effectiveness of a Community Intervention for Monkeypox Prevention in the Congo Basin
Human monkeypox is a potentially severe illness that begins with a high fever soon followed by the development of a smallpox-like rash. Both monkeypox and smallpox are caused by infection with viruses in the genus Orthopoxvirus. But smallpox, which only affected humans, has been eradicated, whereas monkeypox continues to occur when humans come into contact with infected animals. There are currently no drugs specifically available for the treatment of monkeypox, and the use of vaccines for prevention is limited due to safety concerns. Therefore, monkeypox prevention depends on diminishing human contact with infected animals and preventing person-to-person spread of the virus. The authors describe a film-based method for community outreach intended to increase monkeypox knowledge among residents of communities in the Republic of the Congo. Outreach was performed to ∼23,600 rural Congolese. The effectiveness of the outreach was evaluated using a sample of individuals who attended small-group sessions. The authors found that among the participants, the ability to recognize monkeypox symptoms and the willingness to take ill family members to the hospital was significantly increased after seeing the films. In contrast, the willingness to deter some high-risk behaviors, such as eating animal carcasses found in the forest, remained fundamentally unchanged
Mug - No Handles
Pottery.https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/artshow_gallery_2014/1007/thumbnail.jp
Strainer
Pottery.https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/artshow_gallery_2014/1008/thumbnail.jp
Thrown + Hand Carved Teacup
Pottery.https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/artshow_gallery_2014/1009/thumbnail.jp
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