3 resultados para [JEL:I30] Santé, éducation et bien-être - Bien-être et pauvreté - Généralités

em Bioline International


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Limited data exits on factors influencing fertility in Zambia. This study examined underlying determinants of fertility patterns and levels in Zambia. Data extracted from the 2007 Zambia Demographic and Health Survey was analysed using bivariate and multivariate logistic regression. Of 7146 women aged 15-49 years, age group 25-29 years experienced the highest prevalence of births (28.5%). Married women accounted for 27% of all births. Women with low education recorded more births (27%) than those with higher education (9.5%) (P<0.001). Fertility was higher among the poorest (28%) compared to the richest (12%) (P<0.001). Though not statistically significant, urban areas recorded more births (25%) than rural areas (15%). Education and wealth significantly influence fertility Zambia. Fertility management strategies should consider these factors and their fertility reducing effects. Improving education and wealth status of women can contribute to fertility reduction, particularly rural women. Lower fertility, with reduced mortality and migration, would provide less pressure on distribution of the limited economic resources of the country.

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Les enjeux de développement en rapport avec la santé urbaine des enfants en Afrique sub-saharienne deviennent d’autant plus importants qu’on a eu à observer dans certaines villes un paradoxe sanitaire se traduisant par une mortalité relativement plus élee que celle du milieu rural. En outre, concilier la croissance rapide des villes africaines avec l’objectif d’un environnement sanitaire adéquat et adapté à l’ampleur et à la diversité des besoins relève du défi. Cet article propose un état des lieux critique de la littérature sur la santé urbaine, à travers une synthèse de 82 travaux scientifiques portant sur les relations entre dynamiques urbaines et sanitaires. L’étude accorde un regard particulier à la santé des enfants en Afrique subsaharienne francophone. Cette synthèse met en évidence les points de convergences et de divergences de santé urbaine, et aborde aussi, sous un angle critique, les aspects méthodologiques. Elle met en évidence une pluralité de situations sanitaires urbaines, ainsi que la complexité des mécanismes explicatifs des relations entre dynamique urbaine et santé des populations.

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Tropospheric ozone (O3), a main component of photochemical oxidants, adversely affects not only human health but also vegetation. To clarify the long-term effects of ambient levels of tropospheric ozone (O3) on photosynthetic components and radical scavenging system in the leaves of cowpea ( Vigna unguiculata L.), two African varieties, Blackeye and Asontem, were grown in open-top chambers and exposed to filtered air (FA), non-filtered air (NF) or non-filtered air with additional O3 of approximately 50 nl l-1. Ambient levels of O3 significantly reduced chlorophyll concentration, quantum yield and activity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), thus contributing to the reduction in net photosynthetic rate at the reproductive growth stage of both varieties; with no significant variety difference in the sensitivity to O3. The O3-induced significant reduction in catalase activity was observed in Blackeye at vegetative and reproductive growth stages; and in Asontem at reproductive growth stage. On the other hand, exposure to O3 significantly increased ascorbate peroxidase activity in Blackeye at reproductive stage and did not significantly affect that in Blackeye at vegetative growth stage and that in Asontem at both growth stages. At reproductive growth stage, activities of monodehydroascorbate reductase and glutathione reductase were significantly increased by the exposure to O3 in both varieties. The results obtained in this study suggest that, although ascorbate peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase and glutathione reductase played important roles in scavenging O3-induced reactive oxygen species in the leaves, radical scavenging ability of these enzymes is not sufficient to avoid detrimental effects of ambient levels of O3 on photosynthesis in both African cowpea varieties.