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Showing posts from December, 2015

Increasing and accurately measuring rabies vaccination coverage in Tanzania

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Canine mediated rabies is endemic in Tanzania despite the fact that the disease can be prevented entirely by mass dog vaccination. Since 2003 the Serengeti Health Initiative has been carrying out rabies vaccination campaigns that aim to achieve the 70% coverage required in order to eliminate rabies. The research team, a partnership among the Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology, the Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health at Washington State University, and Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo, studied whether the use of incentives might increase owner participation in the vaccination events, and also examined the most effective way to estimate post-vaccination coverage. Sixty-two villages were randomly allocated to either a control (no incentives) or one of three incentives: bright colored collars given to the dogs, bright colored wristbands given to the owners and both collars and wristbands handed out. Dog owners were also asked to rate which incentiv...

One Group of People Is Acquiring HIV in Record Numbers, But We Don't Talk About Them

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By  Nico Lang World AIDS Day  recognizes the everyday lives and particular struggles of people around the world living with AIDS and HIV, but one population has been long overlooked. According to recent findings from the World Health Organization that analyzed data from 15 countries, transgender women are  nearly 49 times more likely  than the general population to contract HIV. This means that, just for being who they are, they are part of the population at highest risk for acquiring HIV. But according to advocates, the transgender community's HIV problem remains an  "invisible" epidemic, as trans women are too often ignored in health advocacy, stigmatized for their diagnosis or criminalized. Mic  spoke to the Human Rights Campaign's Noël Gordon, a senior specialist for HIV prevention and health equity, who argued that transgender women "find themselves at the eye of a perfect storm" when it comes to contracting HIV. "A number of fact...

Tanzania Leader Targets Christmas in War on Government Waste

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 By    Joseph Burite   John Magufuli   Photographer: Daniel Hayduk/AFP/Getty Images New president Magufuli seeking to curb perceived overspending Future cabinet appointments seen as signaling extent of reform Don’t wait by your mailbox for a Christmas card from Tanzania’s president this year. Since taking office in early November, John Magufuli has been on the warpath against perceived government overspending and work-shy staff. This month’s Independence Day celebrations are out; officials have been told to  curb  their overseas travel. And they’ve been barred from  printing cards  for the festive season at the government’s expense. It’s an approach familiar to those who followed the 56-year-old’s previous stint as Tanzania’s works minister, in which his zeal earned him the nickname of tingatinga, Swahili for bulldozer. It may also be the image-boost needed by his Chama Cha Mapinduzi party,...

Pope says fundamentalism is 'disease of all religions'

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. View gallery . . Aboard the papal plane (AFP) - Pope Francis said fundamentalism is "a disease of all religions", including the Roman Catholic Church, as he returned from a three-nation tour of Africa in which he preached reconciliation and hope. "Fundamentalism is always a tragedy. It is not religious, it lacks God, it is idolatrous," the Argentine pontiff told journalists on the plane back from the Central African Republic. There, on the final leg of his first trip to Africa, the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics called on Christian and Muslim "brothers and sisters" to end the sectarian conflict that has torn the country apart. He was given a rapturous welcome by thousands of people as he visited a mosque in the flashpoint Muslim PK5 neighbourhood of the capital Bangui, on what was the most dangerous part of his 24-hour visit to the country. "Together, we must say no to hatred, to revenge and ...