5 results match your criteria: "Department of Dentistry Kabul University of Medical Sciences[Affiliation]"

Background And Aims: Since 1990, global child and infant mortality rates have typically stabilized or decreased due to improved healthcare, vaccination rollouts, and international funding. However, Afghanistan continues to face the highest child and infant mortality rates globally, with 43 deaths per 1000 live births. This study aims to examine the factors contributing to this high mortality rate and propose interventions to address the issue.

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Background And Aim: Afghanistan is grappling with a severe health crisis marked by a high prevalence of infectious diseases, particularly tuberculosis, malaria, HIV, and the added strain of the COVID-19 pandemic. The nation's healthcare system, already fragile, faces formidable challenges. Socioeconomic constraints, including limited resources and financial barriers, hinder healthcare accessibility, leading to delayed or inadequate care.

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Multiple theories, including family systems, epigenetics, attachments, and many others, have proposed mechanisms for trauma transmission from generation to generation. Intergenerational trauma is today one of the most important psychosocial issues affecting Afghans' mental health and psychology, with the potential to affect subsequent generations. A variety of factors have impacted the mental health of the Afghan population over the years, including years of conflict, socioeconomic instability, natural disasters, chronic drought conditions, economic turmoil, and food insecurity, all of which have been exacerbated by recent political turbulence and the The Coronavirus pandemic COVID-19 pandemic that has further increased the susceptibility to intergenerational trauma among the Afghan population.

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Challenges faced by African healthcare workers during the third wave of the pandemic.

Health Sci Rep

November 2022

Research and Development, Healthy Africans Platform Research and Development Ibadan Nigeria.

Africa experienced the third wave of the coronavirus disease in 2019, which caused an 18% rise in cases in most parts of the continent. As of January 2022, the region had an estimated 10.4 million cumulative cases and more than 233,000 deaths, which add up to the burden on the fragile healthcare system, which continues to face a shortage of staff and resources.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the publishing practices of medical students in Pakistan, highlighting a significant lack of research output among this demographic, with only 6.6% of the surveyed students having published an article.
  • - Male students and those in their final year showed higher publication rates, with improved chances for students knowing the importance of research for job prospects and those who received training in writing and submission processes.
  • - The results stress the need for educational reforms and support to enhance research participation among medical students, urging authorities to address the barriers they face in publishing.
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