64 research outputs found

    Assessment of cold chain management practices in immunisation centres in Kacheliba division, Pokot County, Kenya

    Get PDF
    Background: Immunisation contributes significantly to the achievement of MDGs. It is one of the eight elements and success stories of primary health care. Proper utilisation of Immunisation services is associated with improved child health outcomes. The WHO targets Immunisation coverage of 90% for urban areas and 80% for rural areas.Objectives: To assess the cold chain management practices that could affect  potency of vaccines and its utilisation by under five year old children in Kacheliba Division.Design: A cross-sectional descriptive study.Setting: All health facilities in Kacheliba Division, Kenya.Subjects: Parents/guardians of under-five year old children and all the health facility level within Kacheliba Division.Results: Seven (87.5%) health facilities reported that they collect vaccines at intervals of more than one month. Four (50%) health institution were located 20 kilometers from the local vaccine store - Kacheliba District Hospital. Kacheliba District Hospital gets their vaccine stocks from Eldoret KEMSA depot, an estimated 90 kilometers away. Completely melted ice packs during transportation of vaccine were encountered only in one (12.5%) centre- Kacheliba mobile dispensary. Major source of power for the refrigerators was the gas (75%), and electricity (28.6%). During electricity power block out, the right temperature intervals were then generated using gas. It was found that all the eight health facilities did not have a stand by biomedical technician who maintains and repair refrigerators. Furthermore there was no budgetary allocation for the refrigerators maintenance and repair among all the health facilities. Problems related to cold chain were observed in all the eight facilities in Kacheliba Division. Inadequate air circulation was seen in seven (87.5%) facilities, water bottles were kept inside the cold boxes and fridges in three (37.5%) facilities, Food and drinks were kept in cold boxes and fridges in 4(50%) facilities and vaccines were not kept in proper compartment in three (37.5%) facilities.Conclusion: The cold chain management practices among health facilities in Kacheliba Division of Pokot County were not upto the standards set by the Kenya Extended Programmeme on Immunisation (KEPI)) Guidelines. Cold chain  management should be improved through continuous medical educational  programmemes and sufficient budgetary allocation

    Characteristics of HIV-infected children seen in Western Kenya

    Get PDF
    Objectives: To describe the characteristics and outcomes of children registered for care in a large HIV care programme in Western Kenya. Design: A retrospective descriptive study. Setting: USAID-AMPATH HIV clinics in health centres; district and sub-district hospitals; Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Western Kenya. Subjects: HIV-infected children below age of 15 years seen in a network of 18 clinics in Western Kenya. Interventions: Paediatric HIV diagnosis and care including treatment and prevention of opportunistic infections and provision of combination antiretroviral therapy (CART). Main outcome measures: Diagnosis, clinical stage and immune status at enrollment and follow-up; hospitalisation and death. Descriptive statistical analyses and chi square tests were performed. Results: Four thousand and seventeen HIV-infected children seen between June 2002 and April 2008. Median age at enrollment was four years (0-14.2 years), 51% girls, 25% paternal orphans, 10% total orphans and 13% maternal orphans. At enrollment, 25% had weight-for-Age Z scores (WAZ)\u3e -1 and 21% had WAZ scores \u3c 3. Orphaned children had worse WAZ scores (p=0.0001). Twenty five per cent of children were classified as WHO clinical stage 3 and 4, 56% were WHO clinical stages 1 and 2 with 19% missing clinical staging at enrollment. Cough (25%), gastroenteritis (21%), fever (15%), pneumonia (10%) were the commonest presenting features. Twenty six per cent had been diagnosed with tuberculosis and only 25% started on cotrimoxazole preventive therapy (CPT). Median CD4% at enrollment was 16% (0-64%); latest recorded values were 22% (0-64). Sixty four per cent were on cART (cART+), median age at start was 5.4 (014.4 years).The median initial CD4% among cART+ was 13 (0-62) compared to 24 (0-64) for those not on ART (cART-). Median CD4% for cART+ improved to 22% (0-59); whereas cART- was 23% (0- 64) at last appointment. During the period of follow-up, one fifth (19%) of children on cART were lost to follow-up compared to slightly over one third (37%) for those not on cART. Thirty four percent were hospitalised; 41% diagnosed with pneumonia. Six per cent of 4017 were confirmed dead. Conclusions: HIV -infected children were enrolled in care early in childhood. Orphanhood was prevalent in these children as were gastroenteritis, fever, pneumonia and advanced immuno-suppression. Orphans were more likely to be severely malnourished. Only a quarter of children were put on cotrimoxazole preventive therapy. Children commenced on cART late but responded well to treatment. Loss to follow-up was less prevalent among those on cART

    Nutritional status of children admitted for diarrhoeal diseases in a referral hospital in western Kenya

    Get PDF
    Objectives: To determine the prevalence of malnutrition among children admitted with acute diarrhoea disease at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital and to establish the effect of malnutrition on duration of hospital stay. Design: Prospective observational study. Setting: Paediatric wards of Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, Eldoret, Kenya Subjects: A total of 191 children aged 6 and 59 months admitted with acute diarrhoea disease, without chronic co-morbidities or visible severe malnutrition, were systematically enrolled into the study between November 2011 and March 2012. Outcome Measures: Nutritional status based on WHO WHZ scores taken at admission and duration of hospital stay. Results:The mean age was 13.2 months with a male to female sex ratio of 1.16:1. Of all the children seen with acute diarrhoeal diseases, 43.9% had acute malnutrition ( Conclusion: Routine anthrometry including weight for height identifies more children with malnutrition in acute diarrhoeal diseases. Presence of malnutrition did not affect duration of hospital stay

    Immunoglobulin heavy variable (IgHV) gene mutation and micro-RNA expression in Burkitt\u2019s lymphoma at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Western Kenya

    Get PDF
    Introduction: Burkitt\u2019s lymphoma (BL) is a virus associated childhood B-cell cancer common in Eastern Africa. Continued survival of B-cells in germinal centres depend on expression of high affinity immunoglobulins (Ig) to complementary antigens by somatic hypermutation of Ig genes. Cellular microRNAs, non-coding RNAs have been reported to play role in cell cycle regulation. Both viral antigen dependent mutation and micro-RNA expression maybe involved in BL pathogenesis. Objective: To describe immunoglobulin heavy variable (IgHV) rearrangement and micro-RNA expressions in BL tumours. Methods: Genomic DNA were extracted and purified from BL tissue blocks at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, before amplification using IgHV consensus primers and sequencing. The sequences were then aligned with germline alleles in IMGT/ V-QUEST\uae database. Total RNA extracted from tissue blocks and cell lines were used to determine relative expression of hsamiR-34a and hsa-miR-127. Results: In all tumours, allele alignment scores and number of mutations range were 89.2-93.2%, 15-24 respectively. The range of IgHV amino acid changes were higher in EBER-1+ (15-25) than EBER-1- (9-15). In MYC+ tumours, the relative expression were: hsa-miR-127(2.09);hsa-miR-34a (2.8) and MYC- hsa-miR-127 (1.2), hsa-miR-34a (1.0). Conclusion: B-cell in BL contained somatic mutated IgHV gene and upregulated cellular microRNAs with possible pathogenetic role(s)

    Commonly cited incentives in the community implementation of the emergency maternal and newborn care study in western Kenya

    Get PDF
    Background: Mortality of mothers and newborns is an important public health problem in low-income countries. In the rural setting, implementation of community based education and mobilization are strategies that have sought to reduce these mortalities. Frequently such approaches rely on volunteers within each community. Objective: To assess the perceptions of the community volunteers in rural Kenya as they implemented the EmONC program and to identify the incentives that could result in their sustained engagement in the project. Method: A community-based cross sectional survey was administered to all volunteers involved in the study. Data were collected using a self-administered supervision tool from all the 881 volunteers. Results: 881 surveys were completed. 769 respondents requested some form of incentive; 200 (26%) were for monetary allowance, 149 (19.4%) were for a bicycle to be used for transportation, 119 (15.5%) were for uniforms for identification, 88 (11.4%) were for provision of training materials, 81(10.5%) were for training in Home based Life Saving Skills (HBLSS), 57(7.4%) were for provision of first AID kits, and 39(5%) were for provision of training more facilitators, 36(4.7%) were for provision of free medication. Conclusion: Monetary allowances, improved transportation and some sort of identification are the main incentives cited by the respondents in this context

    Morbidity and mortality in HIV - infected children admitted at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Western Kenya

    Get PDF
    Background: HIV-infected children are at higher risk of opportunistic infections that could result in hospitalisation. The outcomes of hospitalisation are variable and depend on the admission diagnosis, the patients’ immune status and whether or not the patient is on anti-retroviral drugs.Objective: To describe the characteristics and causes of hospitalisation and mortality for HIV infected children admitted to Moi Teaching and Referral hospital in western Kenya.Design: a retrospective study of prospectively collected data.Setting: The paediatric wards of Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH). A Kenyan National Referral Hospital.Subjects: HIV-infected children admitted the paediatric wards.Interventions: Treatment with combination anti-retroviral therapy (cART), treatment of common opportunistic infections.Main outcome measures: Demographic and clinical data, including diagnosis, immune status, and treatment with combination anti-retroviral therapy (cART), were extracted from hospital admission records of HIV-infected children registered with the USAIDAcademic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH) partnership. We conducted descriptive statistical analyses and used chi-square and fisher’s exact tests to assess for associations between categorical variables and each of the independent variables.Results: Between December 2006 and May 2009, 396 HIV-infected children were admitted to MTRH. Median age at admission was 2.0 years (range 0-15); 236 (59%) were male; 36 (15%) of available 236 orphan status entries were orphaned; 198 (73%) were in CDC categories B and C and 61 (16%) of available 386 had been on ART. Among 108 patients with documented immunologic status, the mean CD4 cell percentage was 16% (SD 10.8). Among the 396 children, 104 (15%) were diagnosed with pneumonia, 92 (14%) with gastroenteritis, 36 (9%) with tuberculosis and 37 (9%) with malaria. Deaths occurred in 28(7%) of the patients. The median duration of hospitalisation was seven days (range 1- 516) for discharged patients and six days (range 0-72) for those who died. A significantly higher percentage of the children who were not previously enrolled in AMPATH died, signifying 14 (15%) mortality among this population of admitted patients, p = 0.0017. Of those who died, (17%) were diagnosed with pneumonia and 22 (79%) of them were not on cART.Conclusion: The common diagnoses at hospitalisation included pneumonia, gastroenteritis, malaria and tuberculosis. Higher mortality occurred among those diagnosed with pneumonia and those not previously enrolled in the HIV care programme. Aggressive treatment and prevention of the most prevalent diseases and early enrollment into HIV care are recommended for HIV-infected children. A follow-up study to investigate the pathological causes of death in this population is recommended

    Community based weighing of newborns and use of mobile phones by village elders in rural settings in Kenya: a decentralised approach to health care provision

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Identifying every pregnancy, regardless of home or health facility delivery, is crucial to accurately estimating maternal and neonatal mortality. Furthermore, obtaining birth weights and other anthropometric measurements in rural settings in resource limited countries is a difficult challenge. Unfortunately for the majority of infants born outside of a health care facility, pregnancies are often not recorded and birth weights are not accurately known. Data from the initial 6 months of the Maternal and Neonatal Health (MNH) Registry Study of the Global Network for Women and Children's Health study area in Kenya revealed that up to 70% of newborns did not have exact weights measured and recorded by the end of the first week of life; nearly all of these infants were born outside health facilities.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>To more completely obtain accurate birth weights for all infants, regardless of delivery site, village elders were engaged to assist in case finding for pregnancies and births. All elders were provided with weighing scales and mobile phones as tools to assist in subject enrollment and data recording. Subjects were instructed to bring the newborn infant to the home of the elder as soon as possible after birth for weight measurement.</p> <p>The proportion of pregnancies identified before delivery and the proportion of births with weights measured were compared before and after provision of weighing scales and mobile phones to village elders. Primary outcomes were the percent of infants with a measured birth weight (recorded within 7 days of birth) and the percent of women enrolled before delivery.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The recorded birth weight increased from 43 ± 5.7% to 97 ± 1.1. The birth weight distributions between infants born and weighed in a health facility and those born at home and weighed by village elders were similar. In addition, a significant increase in the percent of subjects enrolled before delivery was found.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Pregnancy case finding and acquisition of birth weight information can be successfully shifted to the community level.</p

    An exploration of scenarios to support sustainable land management using integrated environmental socio-economic models

    Get PDF
    Scenario analysis constitutes a valuable deployment method for scientific models to inform environmental decision-making, particularly for evaluating land degradation mitigation options, which are rarely based on formal analysis. In this paper we demonstrate such an assessment using the PESERA–DESMICE modeling framework with various scenarios for 13 global land degradation hotspots. Starting with an initial assessment representing land degradation and productivity under current conditions, options to combat instances of land degradation are explored by determining: (1) Which technologies are most biophysically appropriate and most financially viable in which locations; we term these the “technology scenarios”; (2) how policy instruments such as subsidies influence upfront investment requirements and financial viability and how they lead to reduced levels of land degradation; we term these the “policy scenarios”; and (3) how technology adoption affects development issues such as food production and livelihoods; we term these the “global scenarios”. Technology scenarios help choose the best technology for a given area in biophysical and financial terms, thereby outlining where policy support may be needed to promote adoption; policy scenarios assess whether a policy alternative leads to a greater extent of technology adoption; while global scenarios demonstrate how implementing technologies may serve wider sustainable development goals. Scenarios are applied to assess spatial variation within study sites as well as to compare across different sites. Our results show significant scope to combat land degradation and raise agricultural productivity at moderate cost. We conclude that scenario assessment can provide informative input to multi-level land management decision-making processes

    Achtsamkeit in systemischer Beratung und Coaching

    Full text link
    Als mich Markus Hänsel fragte, ob ich einen Beitrag in dem Band >>Die spirituelle Dimension in Coaching und Beratung<< schreiben würde, sagte ich freudig zu. Um zu beantworten, was das ist, diese >>spirituelle Dimension<<, muss man vielleicht zunächst einmal klären, was die >>nichtspirituelle Dimension<< ist. Dazu fällt mir eine Geschichte ein:Fragt ein Klient in dieser Sache seinen Berater: >>Was ist der Unterschied zwischen der spirituellen Dimension und der nichtspirituellen Dimension?<< Entgegnet der Berater: >>Die nichtspirituelle Dimension glaubt, es gäbe einen.<< Jeder Artikel über Spiritualität in Beratung und Coaching müsste eigentlich hier enden, da mit dieser kurzen Antwort alles über das Thema gesagt ist. Der Rest ist die Erfahrung. Die Entfaltung der Ereignisse im Beratungsprozess. Die Erfahrung von Gelingen oder Misslingen, Inspiration, Verbundenheit und Trennung. Der Begriff spirituelle Erfahrung ist eine Eingrenzung der Erfahrungsebene, die eine Trennlinie markiert und gewisse Erfahrungen als nichtspirituelle denunziert. Damit unterliegen wir schon der ersten Täuschung, um die es unter anderem in diesem Beitrag gehen soll. Der Zen-Patriarch Dajian Huineng (638-713) hat an dieser Stelle gesagt, der reine Geist finde sich in unserem unreinen Geist. Beides ist eins. Die Unterscheidung treffen wir (vgl. McRae, 2000)
    corecore