16 results match your criteria: "Centre for Population Studies and Health Promotion[Affiliation]"

Empirical research showcases that pre-abortion counseling scarcely reverses the woman's decision either to terminate a pregnancy or not. Growing evidence regarding the high levels of decisional certainty among women seeking abortions renders a careful rethink of the place of mandatory pre-abortion counseling packages. Mandatory counseling packages, when inscribed in the laws, at times contain false information that can deter women from going in for safe abortions.

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The recent Ebola and Zika virus epidemics in some parts of Africa and Asia have showcased the porosity in disaster preparedness and response, not only in the affected countries, but on a global scale. For the Ebola epidemic, scientifically robust research was started late during the course of the epidemic, with waste of resources and lost research opportunities. Research Ethics Committees have a significant role to play with regards to epidemic response for the future.

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Background: Theoretical and methodological research on risk-taking practices often frames risk as an individual choice. While risk does occur at individual level, it is determined by aspirations which are connected to others and society. For many displaced women globally, these aspirations are often linked to the well-being of their children and other household members.

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Legal and Ethical Considerations during Maternal Death Surveillance and Response.

Afr J Reprod Health

June 2018

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Abuja, Nigeria.

Maternal death surveillance and response (MDSR) is a promising strategy, to identify record and track key drivers of maternal deaths. Despite its potential in reducing maternal mortality, ethical and legal challenges need to be properly ascertained and acted upon, to guarantee its acceptability, sustainability, and effectiveness. This paper proposes a legal and ethical framework to guide practitioners and researchers through the MDSR process.

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Background: The abortion law in Cameroon is highly restrictive. The law permits induced abortions only when the woman's life is at risk, to preserve her physical and mental health, and on grounds of rape or incest. Unsafe abortions remain rampant with however rare reported cases of persecution, even when these abortions are proven to have been carried out illegally.

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Edmund Pellegrino considered medicine as a skill, art, and perhaps most importantly, a moral enterprise. In this essay, I attempt to exemplify how the legacy and contributions of Edmund Pellegrino, as a teacher and a physician, could allow for a renaissance of medical practice in which physicians engage intellectual and moral virtue to both effect sound care, and do so in a humanitarian way, rather than in simple accordance with a business model of medicine. The virtues are viewed in a renewed light as being key characteristics of physicians, and important to patient centered care.

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Coronary heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa: still rare, misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed?

Cardiovasc Diagn Ther

February 2016

1 Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Yaoundé 1, Cameroon ; 2 Centre for Population Studies and Health Promotion, CPSHP, Yaoundé, Cameroon.

Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in developed countries, but it has generally been considered to be rare in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). SSA is undergoing rapid epidemiological transition with an increasing prevalence of major cardiovascular risk factors and consequential cardiovascular diseases such as stroke. However, CHD including myocardial infarction has generally been considered to be rare despite this deterioration in the risk factors profile.

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Post-stroke care: an alternative model to reduce stroke related morbidity in sub-Saharan Africa.

Ann Transl Med

September 2015

1 Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Department of Internal medicine, University of Yaounde 1, Cameroon ; 2 Department of Military Health, Ministry of Defense, Cameroon and Centre for Population Studies and Health Promotion, Yaounde, Cameroon.

Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability in adults in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Despite its considerable burden, there has been limited progress to properly cater for and rehabilitate stroke survivors. Scarcity of rehabilitation services and grossly inadequate skilled personnel for post stroke care are distressing realities for stroke victims in SSA.

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Background: Prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV remains a key public health priority in most developing countries. The provider Initiated Opt - Out Prenatal HIV Screening Approach, recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) lately has been adopted and translated into policy in most Sub - Saharan African countries. To better ascertain the ethical reasons for or against the use of this approach, we carried out a literature review of the ethics literature.

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Despite the enormous victory that has been recorded in decreasing significantly HIV-TB related mortality and morbidity in Sub-Saharan Africa, enormous challenges continue to obstruct proper and enviable control of these conditions. These range from prioritization, ethics, funding, drug resistance and research gaps. Resistance to these diseases could constitute key treatment and prevention challenges to health care systems and the international community if not handled appropriately and promptly.

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Background: Sub-Saharan Africa is undergoing epidemiological transition with an increase in the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases that will add to the already devastating burden of infectious diseases such as human immunodeficiency virus infection. Human immunodeficiency virus infection is increasingly being recognized as an important etiological factor for dilated cardiomyopathy with the potential complication of intraventricular thrombus. However, biventricular thrombi are extremely rare.

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Eco-epidemiology: challenges and opportunities for tomorrow's epidemiologists.

Pan Afr Med J

August 2015

Centre for Population Studies and Health Promotion, Yaounde, Cameroon ; Faculty of Arts, Letters and Social Sciences, University of Yaounde I, Yaounde, Cameroon.

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Malnutrition in Sub-Saharan Africa: burden, causes and prospects.

Pan Afr Med J

July 2014

Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel - Centre for Population Studies and Health Promotion, CPSHP, BP 7535, Yaoundé, Cameroon ; Faculty of Arts, Letters and Social Sciences, FALSS, University of Yaoundé I, Cameroon.

Malnutrition is estimated to contribute to more than one third of all child deaths, although it is rarely listed as the direct cause. Contributing to more than half of deaths in children worldwide; child malnutrition was associated with 54% of deaths in children in developing countries in 2001. Poverty remains the major contributor to this ill.

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Introduction: Epilepsy associated stigma remains a main hindrance to epilepsy care, especially in developing countries. In Africa, anti-epileptic drugs are available, affordable and effective. As of now, no community survey on epilepsy awareness and attitudes has been reported from this area Cameroon with a reported high prevalence of epilepsy.

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