166 research outputs found

    Gender, education, and cohort differences in healthy working life expectancy at age 50 years in Australia: a longitudinal analysis

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    Background: We aimed to estimate healthy working life expectancy (HWLE) at age 50 years by gender, cohort, and level of education in Australia. Methods: We analysed data from two nationally representative cohorts in the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey. Each cohort was followed up annually from 2001 to 2010 and from 2011 to 2020. Poor health was defined by a self-reported, limiting, long-term health condition. Work was defined by current employment status. HWLEs were estimated with Interpolated Markov Chain multi-state modelling. Findings: We included data from 4951 participants in the cohort from 2001 to 2010 (2605 [53%] women and 2346 [47%] men; age range 50ā€“100 years) and 6589 participants in the cohort from 2011 to 2020 (3518 [53%] women and 3071 [47%] men; age range 50ā€“100 years). Baseline characteristics were similar between groups. Working life expectancy increased over time for all groups, regardless of gender or educational attainment. However, health expectancies only increased for men and people of either gender with higher education. Years working in good health at age 50 years for men were 9Ā·9 years in 2001 (95% CI 9Ā·3ā€“10Ā·4) and 10Ā·8 years (10Ā·4ā€“11Ā·3) in 2011. The corresponding HWLEs for women were 7Ā·9 years (7Ā·3ā€“8Ā·5) and 9Ā·0 years (8Ā·5ā€“9Ā·6). For people with low education level, HWLE was 7Ā·9 years (7Ā·3ā€“8Ā·5) in 2001 and 8Ā·4 years (7Ā·9ā€“8Ā·9) in 2011, and for those with high education level, HWLE rose from 9Ā·6 years in 2001 (9Ā·1ā€“10Ā·1) to 10Ā·5 years in 2011 (10Ā·2ā€“10Ā·9). Across all groups, there were at least 2Ā·5 years working in poor health and 6Ā·7 years not working in good health. Interpretation: Increases in length of working life have not been accompanied by similar gains in healthy life expectancy for women or people of any gender with low education, and it is not unusual for workers older than 50 years to work with long-term health limitations. Strategies to achieve longer working lives should address life-course inequalities in health and encourage businesses and organisations to recruit, train, and retain mature-age workers. Funding: Australian Research Council

    Hand-dug Well Water Quality: The Case of Two Peri-Urban Communities in Ghana

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    Many rural and peri-urban areas in developing countries including Ghana face challenges with access to good quality drinking water. These areas often depend on surface water or ground water sources which are often compromised with excess levels of nitrate, chloride and microbial pathogens. This study sought to assess the effect of household latrine system on household water quality of two peri-urban communities in the Upper West Region of Ghana. Geographic Information Systems were used to map the latrine location and elevation of household wells relative to latrines. Latrines and wells were visually inspected. Water samples were also collected from the selected household wells and tested for pH, chlorine, turbidity, colour, conductivity, temperature, total dissolved solids, nitrites and nitrates. Selected community borehole water were used for controls. The study showed average latrine location relative to household well was 13.7 m. The difference in elevation between the wells and latrines is at an average of 0.7m. All the household latrines were improved latrines and household wells with 47% of them having lids to cover them. The water quality observed were all within the WHO drinking water quality for the physicochemical parameters assessed. The study however showed higher levels of nitrate in household wells than bore holes. The need to educate households in locating of Kraals relative to household water systems is needed. Further studies including environmental and geological assessments are required to establish the observations made regarding why areas of high latrine concentrations had lower nitrate levels. Also microbiological studies to establish the safety of water for drinking is required

    Effect of the Newhints home-visits intervention on neonatal mortality rate and care practices in Ghana: a cluster randomised controlled trial.

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    BACKGROUND: In 2009, on the basis of promising evidence from trials in south Asia, WHO and UNICEF issued a joint statement about home visits as a strategy to improve newborn survival. In the Newhints trial, we aimed to test this home-visits strategy in sub-Saharan Africa by assessing the effect on all-cause neonatal mortality rate (NMR) and essential newborn-care practices. METHODS: The Newhints cluster randomised trial was undertaken in 98 zones in seven districts in the Brong Ahafo Region, Ghana. 49 zones were randomly assigned to the Newhints intervention and 49 to the control intervention by use of restricted randomisation with stratification to ensure comparability between interventions. Community-based surveillance volunteers (CBSVs) in Newhints zones were trained to identify pregnant women in their community and to make two home visits during pregnancy and three in the first week of life to promote essential newborn-care practices, weigh and assess babies for danger signs, and refer as necessary. Primary outcomes were NMR and coverage of key essential newborn-care practices. Analyses were by intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00623337. FINDINGS: 16,168 (99%) of 16,329 deliveries between November, 2008, and December, 2009, were livebirths; the status at 1 month was known for 15,619 (97%) livebirths. 482 neonatal deaths were recorded. Coverage data were available from 6029 women in Newhints zones; of these 4358 (72%) reported having CBSV visits during pregnancy and 3815 (63%) reported having postnatal visits. This coverage increased substantially from June, 2009, after the introduction of new implementation strategies and reached almost 90% for pregnancy visits by the end of the trial and 75% for postnatal visits. The Newhints intervention significantly increased coverage of key essential newborn-care behaviours, except for four or more antenatal-care visits (5975 [76%] of 7859 vs 5988 [74%] of 8121, respectively; relative risk 1Ā·02, 95% CI 0Ā·96-1Ā·09; p=0Ā·52) and baby delivered in a facility (5373 [68%] vs 5539 [68%], respectively; 0Ā·97, 0Ā·81-1Ā·14; p=0Ā·69). The largest increase was for care-seeking, with 102 (77%) of 132 sick babies in Newhints zones taken to a hospital or clinic compared with 77 (55%) of 139 in control zones (1Ā·43, 1Ā·17-1Ā·76; p=0Ā·001). Increases were also noted in bednet use during pregnancy (5398 [69%] of 7859 vs 5135 [63%] of 8121, respectively; 1Ā·12, 1Ā·03-1Ā·21; p=0Ā·005), money saved for delivery or emergency (5730 [86%] of 6681 vs 5525 [80%] of 6941, respectively; 1Ā·09, 1Ā·05-1Ā·12; p<0Ā·0001), transport arranged in advance for facility (2496 [37%] vs 2061 [30%], respectively; 1Ā·30, 1Ā·12-1Ā·49; p=0Ā·0004), birth assistant for home delivery washed hands with soap (1853 [93%] of 1992 vs 1817 [87%] of 2091, respectively; 1Ā·05, 1Ā·02-1Ā·09; p=0Ā·001), initiation of breastfeeding in less than 1 h of birth (3743 [49%] of 7673 vs 3280 [41%] of 7921, respectively; 1Ā·22, 1Ā·07-1Ā·40; p=0Ā·004), skin to skin contact (3355 [44%] vs 1931 [24%], respectively; 2Ā·30, 1Ā·85-2Ā·87; p=0Ā·0002), first bath delayed for longer than 6 h (3131 [41%] vs 2269 [29%], respectively; 1Ā·65, 1Ā·27-2Ā·13; p<0Ā·0001), exclusive breastfeeding for 26-32 days (1217 [86%] of 1414 vs 1091 [80%] of 1371; 1Ā·10, 1Ā·04-1Ā·16; p=0Ā·001), and baby sleeping under bednet for 8-56 days (4548 [79%] of 5756 vs 4291 [73%] of 5846; 1Ā·09, 1Ā·03-1Ā·15; p=0Ā·002). There were 230 neonatal deaths in the Newhints zones compared with 252 in the control zones. The overall NMRs per 1000 livebirths were 29Ā·8 and 31Ā·9, respectively (0Ā·92, 0Ā·75-1Ā·12; p=0Ā·405). INTERPRETATION: The reduction in NMR with Newhints is consistent with the reductions achieved in three trials undertaken in programme settings in south Asia. Because there is no suggestion of any heterogeneity (p=0Ā·850) between these trials and Newhints, the meta-analysis summary estimate of a reduction of 12% (95% CI 5-18) provides the best evidence for the likely effect of the home-visits strategy delivered within programmes in sub-Saharan Africa and in south Asia. Improvements in the quality of delivery and neonatal care in health facilities and development of innovative, effective strategies to increase coverage of home visits on the day of birth could lead to the achievement of more substantial reductions. FUNDING: WHO, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and UK Department for International Development

    Designing a Mechanical System That Will Be Used To Extract and Separate Lemon Grass Oil

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    ABSTRACT Lemon grass is broadly used in medicine, perfumery industry, vitamin A manufacturing and pharmaceuticals. The need for lemon grass oil, especially in human health and its problem of extracting the oil, have directed this paper in designing a mechanical system that will be used to extract and separate lemon grass oil. The extraction of essential oil from lemon grass was done using direct steam distillation process. In all, three concepts were developed based on the orientation of the condensers, source of power, and method of oil production. The three (3) concepts were evaluated and the best concept was selected as the final design. Design analysis was performed on each part to determine their specification, the material to be used and manufacturing processes for the fabrication. Two tests were performed to determine the performance of machine and the quality of the oil produced. From the results, it can be established that the prototype machine developed can be used to extract lemon grass oil from the leaves. The efficiencies were then computed and favorable results were obtained. Also, the results obtained for the four tests responded positive given an indication of the pureness of the oil. It can then be concluded that the prototype machine developed can be used to extract lemon grass oil from the leaves and its efficiency ranges from 2.37 to 3.95 ml/kg and it is economically viable, effective and efficient

    Representation of Africa online: sourcing practice and frames of reference

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    The dominant perspective on the representation of Africa in the western media claims that western media coverage is bias and crisis orientated and the liberal perspective claims that the coverage of Africa is not as negative as is often assumed. However, there is a paucity of literature on the representation of Africa online. This research enquiry is relevant because literature claims that the Internet has the potential to resolve the journalistic predicament of representing other culture through political participation and deliberation. But this requires a re-orientation of the sourcing practice of news organization to embrace sensitivity to and knowledge of African cultures. Moreover, the journalistic predicament can be resolved or not depending on the news gathering approach adopted by the news organization. Literature has identified two approaches, that is, ā€˜gatekeepingā€™ used mainly by dominant traditional media and ā€˜gatewatchingā€™ used by alternative media in their quest to counter mainstream ideology. This study examines the impacts of the ā€˜gatewatchingā€™ approach adopted by Africa Have Your Say (AHYS) website on its representation and frames of reference of Africa. It uses on-site observation, in-depth interviews and textual analysis to gather data. The study found that although the sourcing practice at the AHYS is elaborate and complex, the ā€˜gatewatchingā€™ approach makes its susceptible to second level agenda setting. Hence, its frame repeats the attributes and tone used by the mainstream traditional media. However, a minority of users did not use repeat this frame in their comments

    Cost and cost-eff ectiveness of newborn home visits: fi ndings from the Newhints cluster-randomised controlled trial in rural Ghana

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    Background Every year, 2Ā·9 million newborn babies die worldwide. A meta-analysis of four cluster-randomised controlled trials estimated that home visits by trained community members in programme settings in Ghana and south Asia reduced neonatal mortality by 12% (95% CI 5ā€“18). We aimed to estimate the costs and cost-eff ectiveness of newborn home visits in a programme setting. Methods We prospectively collected detailed cost data alongside the Newhints trial, which tested the eff ect of a homevisits intervention in seven districts in rural Ghana and showed a reduction of 8% (95% CI ā€“12 to 25%) in neonatal mortality. The intervention consisted of a package of home visits to pregnant women and their babies in the fi rst week of life by community-based surveillance volunteers. We calculated incremental cost-eff ectiveness ratios (ICERs) with Monte Carlo simulation and one-way sensitivity analyses and characterised uncertainty with cost-eff ectiveness planes and cost-eff ectiveness acceptability curves. We then modelled the potential cost-eff ectiveness for baseline neonatal mortality rates of 20ā€“60 deaths per 1000 livebirths with use of a meta-analysis of eff ectiveness estimates. Findings In the 49 zones randomly allocated to receive the Newhints intervention, a mean of 407 (SD 18) communitybased surveillance volunteers undertook home visits for 7848 pregnant women who gave birth to 7786 live babies in 2009. Annual economic cost of implementation was US203998,or203 998, or 0Ā·53 per person. In the base-case analysis, the Newhints intervention cost a mean of 10343(9510 343 (95% CI 2963 to ā€“7674) per newborn life saved, or 352 (95% CI 104 to ā€“268) per discounted life-year saved, and had a 72% chance of being highly cost eff ective with respect to Ghanaā€™s 2009 gross domestic product per person. Key determinants of cost-eff ectiveness were the discount rate, protective eff ectiveness, baseline neonatal mortality rate, and implementation costs. In the scenarios modelled with the meta-analysis results, the ICER increased from 127perlifeāˆ’yearsavedataneonatalmortalityrateof60deathsper1000livebirths,to127 per life-year saved at a neonatal mortality rate of 60 deaths per 1000 livebirths, to 379 per life-year saved at a rate of 20 deaths per 1000 livebirths. The strategy had at least a 99% probability of being highly cost eff ective for lower-middle-income countries in all neonatal mortality rate scenarios modelled, and at least a 95% probability of being highly cost eff ective for low-income countries at neonatal mortality rates of 30 or more deaths per 1000 livebirths. Interpretation Our fi ndings show that the seemingly modest mortality reductions achieved by a newborn home-visit strategy might in fact be cost eff ective. In Ghana, such strategies are also likely to be aff ordable. Our fi ndings support recommendations from WHO and UNICEF that low-income and middle-income countries implement newborn home visits

    NEWHINTS cluster randomised trial to evaluate the impact on neonatal mortality in rural Ghana of routine home visits to provide a package of essential newborn care interventions in the third trimester of pregnancy and the first week of life: trial protocol

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    BACKGROUND: Tackling neonatal mortality is essential for the achievement of the child survival millennium development goal. There are just under 4 million neonatal deaths, accounting for 38% of the 10.8 million deaths among children younger than 5 years of age taking place each year; 99% of these occur in low- and middle-income countries where a large proportion of births take place at home, and where postnatal care for mothers and neonates is either not available or is of poor quality. WHO and UNICEF have issued a joint statement calling for governments to implement "Home visits for the newborn child: a strategy to improve survival", following several studies in South Asia which achieved substantial reductions in neonatal mortality through community-based approaches. However, their feasibility and effectiveness have not yet been evaluated in Africa. The Newhints study aims to do this in Ghana and to develop a feasible and sustainable community-based approach to improve newborn care practices, and by so doing improve neonatal survival. METHODS: Newhints is an integrated intervention package based on extensive formative research, and developed in close collaboration with seven District Health Management Teams (DHMTs) in Brong Ahafo Region. The core component is training the existing community based surveillance volunteers (CBSVs) to identify pregnant women and to conduct two home visits during pregnancy and three in the first week of life to address essential care practices, and to assess and refer very low birth weight and sick babies. CBSVs are supported by a set of materials, regular supervisory visits, incentives, sensitisation activities with TBAs, health facility staff and communities, and providing training for essential newborn care in health facilities.Newhints is being evaluated through a cluster randomised controlled trial, and intention to treat analyses. The clusters are 98 supervisory zones; 49 have been randomised for implementation of the Newhints intervention, with the other 49 acting as controls. Data on neonatal mortality and care practices will be collected from approximately 15,000 babies through surveillance of women of child-bearing age in the 7 districts. Detailed process, cost and cost-effectiveness evaluations are also being carried out. TRIAL REGISTRATION: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov (identifier NCT00623337)

    Vaccination timing of low-birth-weight infants in rural Ghana: a population-based, prospective cohort study

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    Objective: To investigate delays in first and third dose diphtheriaā€“tetanusā€“pertussis (DTP1 and DTP3) vaccination in low-birth-weight infants in Ghana, and the associated determinants. Methods: We used data from a large, population-based vitamin A trial in 2010ā€“2013, with 22 955 enrolled infants. We measured vaccination rate and maternal and infant characteristics and compared three categories of low-birth-weight infants (2.0ā€“2.4 kg; 1.5ā€“1.9 kg; and <1.5 kg) with infants weighing ā‰„2.5 kg. Poisson regression was used to calculate vaccination rate ratios for DTP1 at 10, 14 and 18 weeks after birth, and for DTP3 at 18, 22 and 24 weeks (equivalent to 1, 2 and 3 months after the respective vaccination due dates of 6 and 14 weeks). Findings: Compared with non-low-birth-weight infants (n=18 979), those with low birth weight (n=3382) had an almost 40% lower DTP1 vaccination rate at age 10 weeks (adjusted rate ratio, aRR: 0.58; 95% confidence interval, CI: 0.43ā€“0.77) and at age 18 weeks (aRR: 0.63; 95% CI: 0.50ā€“0.80). Infants weighing 1.5ā€“1.9 kg (n=386) had vaccination rates approximately 25% lower than infants weighing ā‰„2.5 kg at these time points. Similar results were observed for DTP3. Lower maternal age, educational attainment and longer distance to the nearest health facility were associated with lower DTP1 and DTP3 vaccination rates. Conclusion: Low-birth-weight infants are a high-risk group for delayed vaccination in Ghana. Efforts to improve the vaccination of these infants are warranted, alongside further research to understand the reasons for the delays

    Effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age on cause-specific early and late infant mortality in rural Ghana: ObaapaVitA double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial

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    Objectives To assess the effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age in Ghana on cause- and age-specific infant mortality. In addition, because of recently published studies from Guinea Bissau, effects on infant mortality by sex and season were assessed. Design Double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial. Setting 7 contiguous districts in the Brong Ahafo region of Ghana. Participants All women of reproductive age (15-45 years) resident in the study area randomised by cluster of residence. All live born infants from 1 June 2003 to 30 September 2008 followed up through 4-weekly home visits. Intervention Weekly low-dose (25 000 IU) vitamin A. Main outcome measures Early infant mortality (1-5 months); late infant mortality (6-11 months); infection-specific infant mortality (0-11 months). Results 1086 clusters, 62 662 live births, 52ā€ˆ574 infant-years and 3268 deaths yielded HRs (95% CIs) comparing weekly vitamin A with placebo: 1.04 (0.88 to 1.05) early infant mortality; 0.99 (0.84 to 1.18) late infant mortality; 1.03 (0.92 to 1.16) infection-specific infant mortality. There was no evidence of modification of the effect of vitamin A supplementation on infant mortality by sex (Wald statistic =0.07, p=0.80) or season (Wald statistic =0.03, p=0.86). Conclusions This is the largest analysis of cause of infant deaths from Africa to date. Weekly vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age has no beneficial or deleterious effect on the causes of infant death to age 6 or 12 months in rural Ghana. Trial registration number http://ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00211341
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