We would like to compile a comprehensive listing of urban health information resources, so please send an email to dcampbell@usaid.gov if you have additional contacts, websites, journals, etc to add to the list below:

USAID Urban Health Contact

- Anthony Kolb, akolb@usaid.gov, USAID Urban Health Advisor.

Urban Health News – Environmental Health at USAID

- Urban Health Updates - A news feed on urban health issues 

USAID Sponspored Urban Health Links

- Urban Health Resource Centre-India - UHRC is a non-profit organization which aims to address health issues of the urban poor through in partnerships with government and civil society. programs in diverse cities.

- Urban Reproductive Health Initiative – URHI is a multi-country program targeting the urban poor, to improve contraceptive choice and increase access to high quality, voluntary family planning. The Initiative links country-level consortia with evaluation experts on the Measurement, Learning & Evaluation (MLE) Project who will build a robust evidence base to shape future urban family planning, reproductive health, and integrated maternal and newborn health programs.

- Making Cities Work - USAID’s Urban Programs Team is dedicated to increasing economic prosperity, democracy and security in the world’s rapidly growing cities. The Team works across sectors to advance the Agency’s Making Cities Work Strategy in (1) City Management and Services, (2) Local Economic Development, and (3) Municipal Finance.

International Organoizations

- IDRC Urban Poverty and Environment (UPE) Program - UPE funds research and activities in developing countries that apply integrated and participatory approaches to reducing environmental burdens on the urban poor and enhancing the use of natural resources for food, water and income security.

- International Society for Urban Health (ISUH) - ISUH is an association of researchers, scholars, and professionals from various disciplines and areas of the world who study the health effects of urban environments and urbanization.

- WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health – The Knowledge Network on Urban Settings (KNUS) is focused on synthesizing global knowledge on social determinants of health and urbanization.

- WHO Healthy Cities Initiative – Launched in 1986, Healthy Cities is now in its fourth phase (2003–2008). Cities currently involved are working on three core themes: healthy ageing, healthy urban planning and health impact assessment. Links to associated regional WHO efforts include: PAHO HealthyMunicipalities/Cities, PAHO Sustainable Development and Environmental Health, WHO Collaborating Centre for Urban Health and Alliance for Healthy Cities.

- World Bank/Urban Health - The goal of this site is to provide multi-sectoral programs and teams links to resources to design, implement and improve urban interventions that will improve health outcomes.

- HABITAT Water and Sanitation Program - The highest priority for UN-HABITAT’s Water and Sanitation program is improving access to safe water and helping provide adequate sanitation to millions of low-income urban dwellers and measuring that impact.

Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)/Universities

- African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) - The Center’s mission is to promote the well-being of Africans through policy-relevant research on population and health.

- International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) – IIED’s Human Settlements Programme has been working on urban environmental issues since the mid-1970s. IIED also publishes Environment and Urbanization, a key journal for studies on urban issues.

Jhpiego: Urban health in African Slums – Jhpiego has implemented two large programs in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya in the past several years and is a founding member of the Nairobi Urban Health Poverty Partnership, a collaborative effort designed to demonstrate the variety of interventions that must be addressed to foster sustainable improvements to health in urban slums.

KEY MESSAGES

Virtually all population growth over the next 30 years will be in urban areas.

The rapid increase of people living in cities will be among the most important global health issues of the 21st century. Over half the world’s population now live in cities. By 2030, six out of every 10 people will be city dwellers, rising to seven out of every 10 people by 2050. In many cases, especially in the developing world, the speed of urbanization has outpaced the ability of governments to build essential infrastructure. Unplanned urbanization can intensify an existing humanitarian crisis and has consequences for the health security and safety of all citizens in cities.

The urban poor suffer disproportionately from a wide range of diseases and other health problems

Health data is usually aggregated to provide an average of all urban residents – blurring differences between the rich and the poor. It thus masks the health conditions of the urban poor. More than one billion people – one third of the urban population – live in urban slums. World Bank estimates that by 2035, cities will become the predominant sites of poverty. Health problems of the urban poor include an increased risk for violence, chronic disease, and for some communicable diseases such as tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.

The major drivers of health in urban settings are beyond the health sector.

Urbanization is not inherently positive or negative. Underlying drivers – also referred to as social determinants – converge in urban settings which strongly influence health status and other outcomes. These determinants include physical infrastructure, access to social and health services, local governance, and the distribution of income and educational opportunities. Communicable diseases such as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, chronic diseases such as heart disease and diabetes, mental disorders, and deaths due to violence and road traffic injuries are all driven by these underlying social determinants.

Actions and solutions exist to tackle the root causes of urban health challenges.

Urban planning can promote healthy behaviours and safety through investment in active transport, designing areas to promote physical activity and passing regulatory controls on tobacco and food safety. Improving urban living conditions in the areas of housing, water and sanitation will go a long way to mitigating health risks. Building inclusive cities that are accessible and age-friendly will benefit all urban residents. Such actions do not necessarily require additional funding, but commitment to redirect resources to priority interventions, thereby achieving greater efficiency.

Build partnerships with multiple sectors of society to make cities healthier.

Health is a human right for all citizens. It is the role and responsibility of individuals, civil society, and governments to uphold this principle. Platforms where municipalities, civil society and individuals come together must be encouraged to protect the right to health of current and future generations of urban dwellers. By bringing multiple sectors of society together to actively engage in developing policies, more sustainable health outcomes will be achieved.

Read More – Urban Health Trends, etc. -  http://www.who.int/world-health-day/2010/WHDtoolkit2010_en_section2.pdf

Urban dwellers in Manila will double to 12.9 million by 2015, from only 6.8 million in 1985 when most cities in Asia already showed a resurgence of growth.  This was bared in a data from the World Health Organization (WHO) which also showed that six out of every 10 people will be city dwellers in the world by 2030.

As this developed, BBC news reported that the world’s urban population is expected to reach four billion from 2015 to 2020, citing the Gall-Peters projection. With this expected increase in the world’s urban population, the WHO cautioned that this phenomenon could post serious challenge for public health. “Urbanization is associated with many health challenges related to water, environment, violence, and injury, non-communicable diseases and their risk factors like tobacco use, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, harmful use of alcohol as well as the risks associated with disease outbreaks,’’ the WHO said in its report published on its website.

Specifically, the WHO stressed that the urban poor may “suffer disproportionately from a wide range of diseases and other problems, and include an increased risk for violence, chronic disease and for some communicable diseases such as tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.’’ The international health organization urged cities and urban planners to tackle seriously the root causes of urban health challenges and come up with urban planning that promotes healthy behaviors and safety through investment regulatory controls on tobacco and food safety.

It also urged urban planners to improve living conditions in the areas of housing, water, and sanitation to mitigate health risks. “Building inclusive cities that are accessible and age-friendly will benefit all urban residents,’’ the WHO said.  It underscored that commitment to addressing the challenges is far more crucial than requiring additional funding.

For its part, the WHO will highlight urbanization and health during the World Health Day 2010 in April. “The theme was selected in recognition of the effect urbanization has on our collective health globally and for us all individually,’’ WHO said in its report. Among the more crucial programs include campaigning for “1,000 cities, 1,000 lives,’’ which will call upon all cities worldwide to open up portions of streets to people to promote healthy activities for one day during the week-long celebration from April 7 to 11. 

The 1,000 lives program also seeks to collect 1,000 stories of urban health champions who have taken action and had a significant impact on health in their cities.  In 2007, the WHO documented that the world’s population living in cities surpassed 50% for the first time in history. In 2050, seven out of every 10 people will become urban settlers, the report added.

Source – http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/241097/manila-dwellers-double-2015

The 1000 cities, 1000 lives campaign for World Health Day 2010 calls upon all cities worldwide to open up portions of streets to the people to promote health activities for one day during the week of 7-11 April 2010.

JOIN THE CAMPAIGN: Support 1000 cities, 1000 lives by sharing your photos, videos and event ideas. Create your profile and join the discussion – it only takes a couple of clicks.

SHARE YOUR IDEAS: Profile your cities’ activities and learn what others organize to improve the health in their city.

NOMINATE A CHAMPION: Nominate a health champion in your city and tell the world about it.

Bangladesh has ordered an emergency deployment of 100 mobile toilets in its capital to head off a worrying rise in public defecation, Dhaka’s mayor Sadeque Hossain Khoka said. With an official population of 12 million (unofficially 20 million), the city has only 48 public toilets – one for every quarter of a million residents.

“We have launched 100 mobile toilets, which will be carried around manually on tricycle vans. They will be strategically placed so that people don’t have to use road corners to answer the call of nature,” he said.

The tin-sided mobile toilets are plastered with colourful advertisements including quotes from a famous Bangla poem which tells people: “Let’s do good work, no matter where you were born.”

They also carry posters urging people not to treat streets and open spaces as public toilets.

The mobile toilets will charge five taka (3.5 US dollar cents) for people to defecate and two taka to urinate, and are now available for 12 hours a day — between 8am and 8pm.

Dhaka’s chief city planner, Sirajul Islam, said the authorities had adopted the mobile toilet plan after failing to identify sufficient plots of vacant city-centre land on which to build permanent public toilets.

“The situation has become so bad on some roads that you cannot walk there. This is spreading disease,” he said.

Source: AFP, 26 Jan 2010

This January 2010 issue of the Urban Health Bulletin contains citations and abstracts to 11 recently published health studies on urban health issues in Brazil, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mexico, Pakistan and Peru.

1 – Int J Epidemiol. 2010 Jan 20.

Evaluation of the optimal recall period for disease symptoms in home-based morbidity surveillance in rural and urban Kenya.

Feikin DR, Audi A, Olack B, Bigogo GM, Polyak C, Burke H, Williamson J, Breiman RF.

International Emerging Infections Program, Kenya, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nairobi and Kisumu, Kenya, Centre for Global Health Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisumu, Kenya and Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.

BACKGROUND: In African settings with poor access to health care, surveillance and surveys of disease burden are often done through home visits. The optimal recall period to capture data on symptoms and health utilization is unknown.

METHODS: We collected illness data among 53 000 people during fortnightly home visits in rural and urban Kenya. Rates of cough, fever and diarrhoea in the past 2 weeks and health-seeking behaviour were recorded. Incidence rates were modelled using Poisson regression for data collected from 1 July 2006 to 30 June 2007.

RESULTS: Incidence rates were higher in days 0-6 before the home visit than in days 7-13 before the home visit for all three symptoms, for the rural and urban sites, for children and adults, for self- and proxy-reported symptoms and for severe and non-severe illness in children. Recall decay was steeper in the rural than the urban sites, and for proxy- than self-reported symptoms. The daily prevalence of symptoms fell 3 days before the home visit for children and >4 days for persons >/=5 years of age. Recall of previously documented clinic visits, and prescriptions of antimalarials and antibiotics also declined by approximately 7, 15 and 23% per week, respectively, in children aged <5 years, and 6, 20 and 16%, respectively, in older persons (P < 0.0001 for each decline).

CONCLUSIONS: A 2-week recall period underestimates true disease rates and health-care utilization. Shorter recall periods of 3 days in children and 4 days in adults would likely yield more accurate data.

2 – BMC Public Health. 2009 Dec 15;9:465.

Overweight and obesity in urban Africa: A problem of the rich or the poor?

Ziraba AK, Fotso JC, Ochako R. African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC), PO Box 10787, 00100, Nairobi, Kenya. akziraba@yahoo.com

BACKGROUND: Obesity is a well recognized risk factor for various chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. The aim of this study was to shed light on the patterns of overweight and obesity in sub-Saharan Africa, with special interest in differences between the urban poor and the urban non-poor. The specific goals were to describe trends in overweight and obesity among urban women; and examine how these trends vary by education and household wealth.

METHODS: The paper used Demographic and Health Surveys data from seven African countries where two surveys had been carried out with an interval of at least 10 years between them. Among the countries studied, the earliest survey took place in 1992 and the latest in 2005. The dependent variable was body mass index coded as:  Not overweight/obese; Overweight; Obese. The key covariates were time lapse between the two surveys; woman’s education; and household wealth.  Control variables included working status, age, marital status, parity, and country. Multivariate ordered logistic regression in the context of the partial proportional odds model was used.

RESULTS: Descriptive results showed that the prevalence of urban overweight/obesity increased by nearly 35% during the period covered. The increase was higher among the poorest (+50%) than among the richest (+7%). Importantly, there was an increase of 45-50% among the non-educated and primary-educated women, compared to a drop of 10% among women with secondary education or higher. In the multivariate analysis, the odds ratio of the variable time lapse was 1.05 (p < 0.01), indicating that the prevalence of overweight/obesity increased by about 5% per year on average in the countries in the study. While the rate of change in urban overweight/obesity did not significantly differ between the poor and the rich, it was substantially higher among the non-educated women than among their educated counterparts.

CONCLUSION: Overweight and obesity are on the rise in Africa and might take epidemic proportions in the near future. Like several other public health challenges, overweight and obesity should be tackled and prevented early as envisioned in the WHO Global strategy on diet, physical activity and health.

3 – J Vector Borne Dis. 2009 Dec;46(4):273-9.

Entomological assessment of the potential for malaria transmission in Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya.

Kasili S, Odemba N, Ngere FG, Kamanza JB, Muema AM, Kutima HL. Centre for Biotechnology Research and Development, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya. skasili@yahoo.co.uk

BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: Malaria in urban and highland areas is emerging as a significant public health threat in Kenya which has seen a dramatic increase in malaria transmission in low risk highland areas. The objectives of the study were to find and incriminate potential vectors of malaria in Kibera, Nairobi.

METHODS: One hundred and twenty houses within Lindi area of the southern central section of Kibera slum in Nairobi were chosen randomly and global positioning system (GPS) mapped. Day resting indoor mosquitoes were collected from January 2001 to December 2003. Larvae were collected between 2002 and 2004 and reared in the insectary to adults.

RESULTS: A total of 176,993 mosquitoes were collected. Out of this, 176,910 were Culex fatigans and 83 were Anopheles gambiae s.l. Mosquito population peaked during the long rains in April to May and the short rains in November and December. Blood meal analysis of An. gambiae s.l. female mosquitoes revealed 0.97 human blood index. No mosquito was found positive for Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites. Anopheles gambiae s.l. mosquitoes were found breeding in polluted water and 95% of the larvae were identified as An. arabiensis.

INTERPRETATION & CONCLUSION: Anopheles gambiae s.l., malaria vector is present in Nairobi and it breeds in polluted water. Anopheles arabiensis is predominantly preferring humans as blood meal source, thus, showing ecological flexibility within the species.

4 – Rev Saude Publica. 2009 Dec;43(6):1006-14.

Surveillance of mother-to-child HIV transmission: socioeconomic and health care coverage indicators.

Barcellos C, Acosta LM, Lisboa E, Bastos FI. Laboratório de Informações em Saúde, Instituto de Comunicação e Informação Científica e Tecnológica em Saúde, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Avenida Brasil 4365-Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.  xris@fiocruz.br  

OBJECTIVE: To identify clustering areas of infants exposed to HIV during pregnancy and their association with indicators of primary care coverage and socioeconomic condition.

METHODS: Ecological study where the unit of analysis was primary care coverage areas in the city of Porto Alegre, Southern Brazil, in 2003. Geographical Information System and spatial analysis tools were used to describe indicators of primary care coverage areas and socioeconomic condition, and estimate the prevalence of liveborn infants exposed to HIV during pregnancy and delivery. Data was obtained from Brazilian national databases. The association between different indicators was assessed using Spearman’s nonparametric test.

 RESULTS: There was found an association between HIV infection and high birth rates (r=0.22, p<0.01) and lack of prenatal care (r=0.15, p<0.05). The highest HIV infection rates were seen in areas with poor socioeconomic conditions and difficult access to health services (r=0.28, p<0.01). The association found between higher rate of prenatal care among HIV-infected women and adequate immunization coverage (r=0.35, p<0.01) indicates that early detection of HIV infection is effective in those areas with better primary care services.

CONCLUSIONS: Urban poverty is a strong determinant of mother-to-child HIV transmission but this trend can be fought with health surveillance at the primary care level.

5 – Inj Prev. 2009 Dec;15(6):390-6.

Falls, poisonings, burns, and road traffic injuries in urban Peruvian children and adolescents: a community based study.

Donroe J, Gilman RH, Brugge D, Mwamburi M, Moore DA. Asociación Benéfica PRISMA, San Miguel, Lima, Perú. jdonroe@gmail.com

OBJECTIVES: To identify individual and household characteristics associated with serious falls, poisonings, burns and road traffic injuries (RTIs) for children in Lima, Peru.

METHODS: 5061 households consisting of 10,210 children were included in this community based, cross-sectional study in San Juan de Miraflores (SJM), a low income, urban district of Lima, Peru. Households were eligible if there was a consenting adult and at least one resident child aged < or =18 years. A door to door survey was conducted in SJM, collecting childhood injury, demographic, and socioeconomic data. Analysis was done at the individual and household level for injuries severe enough to have required medical consultation.

RESULTS: The greatest burden of injury was from falls and RTIs. For individuals, male gender and age were the most important predictors of injuries. Households in which multiple injuries were reported were more likely to be poor (odds ratio (OR) 1.66, 95% CI 1.24 to 2.22) and overcrowded (OR 1.88, 95% CI 1.20 to 2.94). The occurrence of serious falls, poisonings, burns, and pedestrian RTIs significantly increased the likelihood of a second serious injury in the home (adjusted ORs ranged between 1.88 and 2.99).

CONCLUSION: All children from households in which an unintentional injury has occurred appear to have an increased likelihood of future injury; such high risk households may be readily identifiable in the clinical setting. Interventions in this environment designed to prevent subsequent injuries merit further investigation.

6 – Am J Hum Biol. 2010 Jan-Feb;22(1):60-8.

Children’s work, earnings, and nutrition in urban Mexican shantytowns.

Brewis A, Lee S. Arizona State University, Tempe, 85287-2402, USA. Alex.Brewis@asu.edu

For many children living in conditions of urban poverty, earning money can provide additional resources to them and their families, and this raises interesting questions about the potential biological consequences (costs and benefits) of children’s work in ‘modern’ settings. This study uses time allocation, ethnographic, dietary, and anthropometric data collected with 96 urban Mexican shantytown children (aged 8-12 years) and their older and younger siblings (aged 1-18 years) to test hypotheses related to the effects of children’s cash earning and cash contributions to their households for their own and their sibs’ nutritional status. Regression models show that children’s contributions to household income and the time they allocate to working outside the home makes no difference to their own or their younger siblings’ nutritional status assessed anthropometrically. Dietary quality, based on food recalls, is worse in working than non-working children, even taking household income into account. Children’s allocation of time to work and their cash contributions to the household do however significantly improve the weight of their older siblings, especially sisters. This suggests children’s work in urban ecologies might have different constraints and opportunities for their own and siblings’ growth and nutrition than typically observed in subsistence settings.

7 Microbes Infect. 2010 Jan 20.

The dengue vector Aedes aegypti: What comes next.

Jansen CC, Beebe NW. CSIRO Entomology, Long Pocket Laboratories, Indooroopilly, QLD, 4068, Australia.

Aedes aegypti is the urban vector of dengue viruses worldwide. While climate influences the geographical distribution of this mosquito species, other factors also determine the suitability of the physical environment for this mosquito. Importantly, the close association of Ae. aegypti with humans and the domestic environment allows this species to persist in regions that may otherwise be unsuitable based on climatic factors alone. We highlight the need to incorporate the impact of the urban environment in attempts to model the potential distribution of Ae. aegypti and briefly discuss the potential for future technology to aid management and control of this widespread vector species.

8 – BMC Public Health. 2010 Jan 19;10(1):21.

Prevalence and risk factors for soil-transmitted helminth infection in mothers and their infants in Butajira, Ethiopia: a population based study.

Belyhun Y, Medhin G, Amberbir A, Erko B, Hanlon C, Alem A, Venn A, Britton J, Davey G.

Background – Soil-transmitted helminths (STHs) are widespread in underdeveloped countries. In Ethiopia, the prevalence and distribution of helminth infection varies by place and with age. We therefore investigated the
prevalence of and risk factors for STH infection in mothers and their one year-old children living in Butajira town and surrounding rural areas in southern Ethiopia.

Methods – In 2005-2006, 1065 pregnant women were recruited in their third trimester of pregnancy. In 2006-2007, when children reached their first birthdays, data on the infants and their mothers were collected, including stool samples for qualitative STH analysis. Questionnaire data on various demographic, housing and lifestyle variables were available. Logistic regression analysis was employed to determine the independent risk factors for STH infection in the mothers and children.

Results – 908 mothers and 905 infants provided complete data for analysis. Prevalence of any STH infection was 43.5% (95% confidence interval (CI) 40.2-46.8%) in mothers and 4.9% (95%CI 3.6-6.5%) in children. In the fully adjusted regression model, infrequent use of soap by the mother was associated with increased risk (odds ratio (OR) 1.40, 95% CI 1.04-1.88, and 1.66, 95% CI 0.92-2.99, for use at least once a week and less frequent than once a week respectively, relative to daily use; p for trend=0.018), and urban place of residence (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.28-0.73, p=0.001) was associated with reduced risk of maternal STH infection. The only factor associated with STH infection in infants was household source of water, with the greatest risk in those using piped water inside the compound (OR 0.09, 95% CI 0.02-0.38 for river water, 0.20, 95% CI 0.56-0.69 for either well or stream water and 0.21, 95% CI 0.09-0.51 for piped water outside compared with piped water inside the compound, overall p=0.002)

Conclusion In this rural Ethiopian community with a relatively high prevalence of STH infection, we found a reduced risk of infection in relation to maternal hygiene and urban living. Daily use of soap and a safe supply of water are likely to reduce the risk of STH infection.

9 – Issues Ment Health Nurs. 2010 Feb; 31(2):82-8.

Development of an economic skill building intervention to promote women’s safety and child development in Karachi, Pakistan.

Hirani SS, Karmaliani R, McFarlane J, Asad N, Madhani F, Shehzad S, Ali NA. The Aga Khan University, School of Nursing, P. O. Box 3500, Stadium Road, Karachi 74800 Pakistan. saima.hirani.n07@aku.edu

Violence against women is a global epidemic phenomenon that can result in major mental health problems. Not only are women affected but also the health and well-being of their children are in jeopardy. To prevent violence and promote women’s safety, several strategies have been tested in various cultural contexts. This article describes the process of developing and validating an economic skill building intervention for women of an urban slum area of Karachi, Pakistan. The purpose of the intervention is to increase women’s economic independence, promote women’s safety, and improve the behavioral functioning of their children.

10 – J R Soc Interface. 2010 Jan 8.

Rational spatio-temporal strategies for controlling a Chagas disease vector in urban environments.

Levy MZ, Malaga Chavez FS, Cornejo Del Carpio JG, Vilhena DA, McKenzie FE, Plotkin JB.

Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, , 219 Carolyn Lynch Laboratories, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.

The rational design of interventions is critical to controlling communicable diseases, especially in urban environments. In the case of the Chagas disease vector Triatoma infestans, successful control is stymied by the return of the insect after the effectiveness of the insecticide wanes. Here, we adapt a genetic algorithm, originally developed for the travelling salesman problem, to improve the spatio-temporal design of insecticide campaigns against T. infestans, in a complex urban environment. We find a strategy that reduces the expected instances of vector return 34-fold compared with the current strategy of sequential insecticide application to spatially contiguous communities. The relative success of alternative control strategies depends upon the duration of the effectiveness of the insecticide, and it shows chaotic fluctuations in response to unforeseen delays in a control campaign. We use simplified models to analyse the outcomes of qualitatively different spatio-temporal strategies. Our results provide a detailed procedure to improve control efforts for an urban Chagas disease vector, as well as general guidelines for improving the design of interventions against other disease agents in complex environments.

11 – Acta Paediatr. 2010 Jan 5.

Breastfeeding perceptions in communities in Mangochi district in Malawi.

Kamudoni PR, Maleta K, Shi Z, de Paoli MM, Holmboe-Ottesen G. Institute of General Practice and Community Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.

Aim: To investigate mothers’ perceptions of breastfeeding and influences from their social network.
Methods: A cross-sectional survey was carried out in Mangochi district, Malawi where questionnaire data from 157 rural and 192 semi-urban mother-infant pairs were obtained.

Results: The proportion of mothers who thought that exclusive breastfeeding should last for 6 months and those who reported to have actually exclusively breastfed were 40.1% and 7.5% respectively. Of those who reported practising exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months, 77.5% stated that exclusive breastfeeding should last for 6 months. This opinion was independently associated with giving birth in a Baby-Friendly facility, OR = 5.22; 95% CI (1.92-14.16). Among the mothers who thought that exclusive breastfeeding should last for less than 6 months, 43.9% reported having been influenced in their opinion by health workers. Infant crying was the most common (62.4%) reason for stopping exclusive breastfeeding.

Conclusion: The findings illustrate the positive impact health workers can have, as well as the need to raise awareness of the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding among both health workers and mothers. Furthermore, continued counselling of mothers on how to deal with stressful infant behaviour such as crying may assist to prolong exclusive breastfeeding.

USAID Global Development Alliance. (2010). Safe Drinking Water Alliance – Experiences in Haiti, Ethiopia, and Pakistan: Lessons for future water treatment programs.

Full-text: http://www.ehproject.org/PDF/ehkm/gda2010.pdf

To address some of the challenges created by lack of access to safe water, in 2004, the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Global Development Alliance (GDA) brought together Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs (CCP), Population Services International (PSI), CARE USA, and Procter & Gamble (P&G) to create the Safe Drinking Water Alliance (SDWA). The general goal of the Alliance was to test three marketing models to increase demand for water treatment and to identify the potential of P&G’s PUR in each model as an alternative POU technology. PUR is a household-based water treatment product that combines disinfection with removal of dirt and other pollutants and transforms turbid contaminated water into clear, potable water. The three models tested by the SWDA included:

(1) a commercial marketing model with full cost recovery in Pakistan;
(2) a social marketing model where some promotional costs were subsidized in Haiti; and
(3) an emergency relief model in Ethiopia.

In Pakistan and Haiti a combination of behavior change communication activities and PUR-branded messages and materials were disseminated to increase the demand for water treatment and to introduce PUR. In both countries, CCP led the behavior change campaigns, while in Haiti PSI handled the specific promotion and distribution of PUR. In Pakistan, P&G focused on creating demand for PUR. In Ethiopia, CARE staff working in the Community-Based Therapeutic program were fully in charge of introducing PUR and providing the motivation and information for its use.

In all three contexts SDWA partners also studied barriers and facilitators to sustained water treatment behaviors, as well as reactions to and use of PUR specifically. Findings have clear programmatic relevance, and add to the emerging literature on water treatment behavior and the adoption of new technologies, and particularly provide insights about feasible directions for PUR.

EPA to investigate cluster of birth defects in Kettleman City, California

Some residents blame a nearby toxic waste dump for health problems. U.S. says the study shows the Obama administration’s commitment to environmental justice.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Tuesday that it plans to investigate a cluster of facial birth defects and other health issues among migrant farm workers in the impoverished California enclave of Kettleman City as part of the Obama administration’s pledge to shift the agency’s attention toward issues of environmental justice.

Residents suspect the facial deformities are linked to a nearby toxic waste dump. The dump is set to be expanded to accommodate waste from large population centers, including Los Angeles, and residents have filed a lawsuit against the Kings County Board of Supervisors challenging its approval of the expansion.

In an interview, Jared Blumenfeld, administrator for the EPA’s Pacific Southwest region, said the case meets the standards of the Obama administration’s decision this month to make environmental justice a priority.

“Kettleman City is a very vulnerable community at the confluence of large agriculture and pesticide use, heavy truck traffic, a chemical waste facility accepting PCBs and a proposed 600-megawatt power plant,” Blumenfeld said. “This is also a community trying to be represented in a way to get its voice heard.

“Our job is to make sure that we look under every rock and try to see if there is a causal relationship between all these activities and the health impacts on the ground,” he said. “We need to provide real information, based on science, not just from the company proposing a project.”

The EPA’s announcement was welcomed by Chemical Waste Management, which owns the toxic waste facility about 3 miles southwest of Kettleman City, according to company spokeswoman Kit Cole. “We think our site is very protective of human health and the environment,” she said. “But we also recognize that the families of Kettleman City need and deserve answers.”

Blumenfeld cautioned against unrealistic expectations of the federal government’s study of Kettleman City, a town of about 1,500 mostly Spanish-speaking residents located just off Interstate 5 about halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles. “We may not find a smoking gun when we do our health analysis, or pinpoint the exact causal relationship between the environment and harm,” he said. “But that should not hinder our ability to act.”

Read More

Since 1994, a strange and quiet mosquito has bred in Taiz. This kind of mosquito transmits dengue fever [virus] among people so that the  pandemic increased in the city as the mosquito became established.

Despite differences over the number of infections with the disease and fatal cases, all agree that the disease has become established in Taiz and plagued the city amid ignorance of concerned bodies despite of the fact that its danger is  increasing. “If concerned bodies would have intervened early, the matter would have been easier. We ignore the disease, its reasons, and the environment in which it reproduces.

We do not even know the protection against the disease because we didn’t know it was dengue fever [until] only lately,” said a Taizi citizen. Physician Samir Sufian, director of Al-Rawdha Hospital, reveals the size of the catastrophe affirming that public and private hospitals receive cases of dengue fever. “Like any other public and private hospital, we perform our duty and receive many cases, whether infected with dengue fever [virus] or other cases suffering the same
complications of the disease,” he said. “We have been receiving more  than 100 cases a day, all of them are not necessarily infected with the disease [virus] but there are similar cases.

Only 72 cases have been hospitalized and [we] gave them blood platelets as the disease reduces the blood platelets to under 60 000 units. All these cases have recovered,” he said.

Concerning fatalities, the director of Al-Rawdha Hospital indicates that fatal cases have been occurring with the spread of the disease but indicates “death could happen if there are accompanying diseases.” He estimated the number of mortalities has reached only 7 and there are similar fatal cases in other hospitals. ” All of us are responsible for society with all [its health] categories, the health office is not solely responsible for deterring the disease and it is not our responsibility to exaggerate the number of infections and fatal cases,” said Sufian.

However, the technical director of Al-Safwa Hospital, Abdurrahman Saeed, affirms that the hospital has received hundreds cases during the past 2 months, but he indicates that [dengue] infections with disease have become rare during the past month. He expected that fatal cases in Taiz are estimated in tens. “In our hospital, for example, 3 fatal cases have been registered.”

The secretary general of health, Abdul-Jalil Azuraiqi, says, “The disease was not new, if concerned bodies had intervened early in 1994, the situation would have been better. The disease is now terribly rampant and there are not enough efforts for combating it.”

Deputy minister of Public Health and Population for Health and Planning Development, Jamal Nasher, says the ministry is working through its office in Taiz to limit the pandemic by curing [treating] all cases and helping the office to find diagnostic means to recognize dengue fever.

According to him, the strategy aims at eradicating the environment where the mosquito spreads the dengue fever  via eliminating the factors [that] led to the mosquito establishment in the city.  These factors are dominated by personal behavior, like storing water for a long time due to the lack of water in the city, and waste from workshops, houses, and cars.

Based on these factors, the strategy is divided into 2 parts; the 1st one concerns solving the water crisis while the 2nd is to clean the city of all trash to get rid of  [breeding sites] of the mosquito which spreads the disease [virus] in
addition to awareness campaigns on the dangers of the disease and [for individuals,] how to protect themselves against it.

Director of Taiz Health Office, Abdul-Naser al-Kabab, says the disease was established in the city and the water crisis is the main reason. He said the 1st appearance of the disease in Taiz city was in 1994 with one confirmed case and another case found in Jeddah,  Kingdom of Saudi Arabia at that time. The disease appeared again in  2007 when 220 cases of the infection had been registered. While the  disease spread in 2008, with 360 confirmed cases, the pandemic became
rampant in 2009 to the degree that Taizi people have become terrified. The number of infected cases has reached 906.

[Although there are wide differences in the numbers of reported dengue cases and fatalities cited in the report above, it is clear that a major dengue outbreak has been occurring in Taiz. Descriptions of a number of anecdotal dengue cases, including fatalities, mentioned in this report were not included.

An interactive map showing the location of Taiz in southwestern Yemen can be accessed at
<http://www.travelpost.com/ME/Yemen/Other/Taiz/map/2695532>.
A map of Yemen showing the administrative units (governorates) can be accessed at
<http://lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/yemen_admin_2002.jpg>.
A HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Yemen can be accessed at
<http://healthmap.org/r/013d>. - Mod.TY]

Soure: http://www.promedmail.org/, Jan 19. 2010.

World Vision Says Port-au-Prince’s Urban Setting Creates New Challenges for Crisis Response

  • Aid agency says comparisons to 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami inaccurate, misleading
  • Global shift toward urbanization will set new paradigms for disaster response

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Jan. 25 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The potential death toll and high-visibility of Haiti’s deadly earthquake have sparked comparisons to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. However, aid group World Vision sees more differences than similarities and cites the complexity of disaster response in urban settings as a critical complicating factor.

“I can see the temptation to compare these two disasters. But they are different in incredibly significant ways. The tsunami came with a loud bang followed by eerie silence in so many villages. In Haiti, one city lies in ruins, but aftershocks, injuries and further deaths continue day after day,” said World Vision relief expert Jeffrey Wright from World Vision’s base of operations in Port-au-Prince.

Some of the most significant differences World Vision cites include:

  • Lack of sufficient space for large-scale displacement camps:  “In part because of Haiti’s topography, and in part because this disaster took place in an urban area, we don’t have wide open spaces to set up large displacement areas,” says Jean-Claude Mukadi, who is leading World Vision’s Response Team there. “We’re finding smaller camps tucked away on hillsides and even in the middle of neighborhoods full of rubble. In rural areas, we are able to use large spaces to set up camps for thousands – even tens of thousands – of people. And it becomes much easier to bring populations food and relief supplies quickly.”
  • Population density inherent to urban setting:  For the most part, the tsunami hit broad coastal communities, most of which were sparsely populated. “While the number of people affected by the tsunami was massive, it was spread across multiple countries. It’s possible that we see a death toll in Haiti that is similar to the tsunami’s. The difference is that, here in Haiti, a comparable number of people will have died within a much smaller area, creating different secondary public health risks and a completely new displacement scenario,” said Wright.
  • Proliferation of survivors with devastating injuries:  “With the tsunami, people either drowned or escaped; there wasn’t as much need in the aftermath of the disaster to treat the injured,” said Wright. “Following the Haiti earthquake, however, thousands of people had severe crush injuries. The need for medical supplies, particularly pain killers and antibiotics, continues to be overwhelming. We didn’t see that kind of need during the tsunami.”

“Fortunately, where there are similarities, World Vision has been able to apply learnings from the tsunami and other recent ‘mega-disasters’ like the 2009 earthquake in China and Cyclone Nargis, which struck Myanmar,” said Wright. “World Vision is putting together a response plan that includes multiple sectors, including shelter, water and sanitation, the re-development of livelihood and microeconomic structures, and community empowerment and governance.

“Rebuilding is going to take years, not months. And because we’ve been in Haiti for more than 30 years, we know how to handle that kind of response in this specific context, maximizing local capacities and factoring in local solutions and innovations,” said Mukadi.

“As climate change and global migration to cities continues to change the landscape of the developing world, we can expect to see more and more disasters centered on urban areas,” said Wright.

Source – PR Newswire