82 research outputs found
Pour une agriculture intelligente face au changement climatique au Sénégal: Recueil de bonnes pratiques d'adaptation et d'atténuation
Climate change is at the present time a new threat which leads to increased frequency and intensity of floods, droughts and cyclones with rising sea levels; thus placing additional demands on a situation already critical in rural areas.
In Senegal, as in many countries of the Sahel, those natural phenomena result in a significant drop in harvests, water shortages and worsening health crisis which leads to consequences such as growing food insecurity of the population; thus threatening the progress achieved in regards with the fight against poverty during the last century.
Indeed, many farmers live in rural areas which are characterized as low rainfall, saline soils, fragile or degraded soils and limited market access areas. The poverty in which they live, especially those of women, is often worsened by social exclusion. Such farmers are vulnerable because they depend directly on rainfall and seasons. They have little savings while supports from the government or their local authorities remain inadequate. It is essential to strengthen the adaptive capacity of vulnerable countries and communities to cope with the impacts of climate change on agriculture and food security.
This document is the result of a multi-criteria analysis of experiences of tackling climate variability, drought and desertification, and land degradation on one hand, and Adaptation to Climate Change in Senegal on the other.
It is carried out on the initiative of the national platform for science-policy dialogue on adaptation of agriculture and food security to climate change (C-CASA) for capacity building and informed decision making for adaptation to climate change.
This work has received technical and financial support from CCAFS Program (www.ccafs.cgiar.org).
It is intended for the use of field workers in the area of adaptation to climate change. It also serves as technologies and tools guide to adapt to climate change impacts in the area of agriculture and food security.
The manual is based primarily on (1) both the institutional and peasant experiences of the actors; (2) the recommendations of the reports of the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC); (3) the procedures manual for assessing climate change impacts and adaptation strategies; (4) the results of development projects and applied research.
This is a collection that comes as a complement to other initiatives in the country and ongoing operations which provide practical examples of using the technological options for successful implementation of projects and programs and for the definition of agricultural policies in the Sahel
Djehuty : a mixed-initiative handwriting game for preschoolers
Learning to read and write is a fundamental right and a necessary
skill for the personal, cultural, and economic development of people
and their societies. However, children of developing countries, such
as sub-Saharan areas, are currently at a greater risk of illiteracy.
The current penetration of mobile technologies and the internet in
sub-Saharan rural areas, however, offers a unique opportunity for
tackling the challenge of literacy at a large scale. Motivated by the
current shortage of preschool teachers for training handwriting in
a personalised manner, this paper discusses the design of Djehuty,
an educational gamified environment for preschoolers. Djehuty is
equipped with an artificial intelligence module which generates a
style of handwriting and suggests handwriting paths to the child
in a mixed-initiative manner. The paper presents the key elements
of the game prototype.peer-reviewe
Vers un dialogue Science-Politique pour l’adaptation de l’agriculture au changement climatique au Sénégal: Etat des lieux des acteurs institutionnels et politiques
Senegal benefited from the support of CCAFS West Africa program to implement National Dialogue Science
Policy Platform on Adaptation of Agriculture and Food Security to Climate Change. This is a network of
national stakeholders including mainly scientists, policy makers and other related stakeholders for undertaking
regular exchange of information and knowledge on adaptation to climate change.
As part of the implementation of the roadmap, the platform has initiated a study to identify all key national
stakeholders actively involved in the management of climate change issues especially for agriculture and food
security. This is a first step that would enable the platform to analyze the roles and missions of the stakeholders
but also and especially to consider mechanisms or approaches to functional interaction to support decision
making. The study helped identify about forty key national organizations and define their respective missions
and roles in the development of national strategies and action plans to fight against the effects of climate
change. She also documented the current national policies, mechanisms and institutional arrangements, as well
as the gaps that hinder effective integration of scientific knowledge and information for decision-making. The
study finally evoked suggestions for an effective system of support for policy making, especially through an
operational dialogue between researchers and decision makers in Senegal
Multidetector CT in emergency radiology. Acute and generalized non-traumatic abdominal pain
Multidetector CT (MDCT) is an imaging technique that provides otherwise unobtainable information in the diagnostic work-up of patients presenting with acute abdominal pain. A correct working diagnosis depends essentially on understanding the individual patient's clinical data and laboratory findings. In haemodynamically stable patients with acute severe and generalized abdominal pain, MDCT is now the preferred imaging test and gives invaluable diagnostic information, also in unstable patients after stabilization. In this descriptive review, we focus our attention on acute, severe and generalized or undifferentiated non-traumatic abdominal pain. The main differential diagnoses are acute pancreatitis, gastrointestinal perforation, ruptured abdominal aneurysm and acute mesenteric ischaemia. We will provide radiologist readers with a technical guide to optimize MDCT imaging protocols and list the major CT signs essential to reach a correct diagnosis and guide the best treatment
Placebo use in vaccine trials: recommendations of a WHO expert panel.
Vaccines are among the most cost-effective interventions against infectious diseases. Many candidate vaccines targeting neglected diseases in low- and middle-income countries are now progressing to large-scale clinical testing. However, controversy surrounds the appropriate design of vaccine trials and, in particular, the use of unvaccinated controls (with or without placebo) when an efficacious vaccine already exists. This paper specifies four situations in which placebo use may be acceptable, provided that the study question cannot be answered in an active-controlled trial design; the risks of delaying or foregoing an efficacious vaccine are mitigated; the risks of using a placebo control are justified by the social and public health value of the research; and the research is responsive to local health needs. The four situations are: (1) developing a locally affordable vaccine, (2) evaluating the local safety and efficacy of an existing vaccine, (3) testing a new vaccine when an existing vaccine is considered inappropriate for local use (e.g. based on epidemiologic or demographic factors), and (4) determining the local burden of disease
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