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Health and Long Run Economic Growth in Selected Low Income Countries of Africa South of the Sahara : Cross country panel data analysisTekabe, Liya Frew January 2012 (has links)
Health is one of the most important components of human capital. It can affect production level of a country through various channels. In this study the causal relationship of health and real GDP per capita income in 5 low income countries of Africa south of the Sahara is analyzed using granger causality test. Unbalanced panel data set during the year 1970 to 2009 is used. Life expectancy and mortality rate are used as a proxy for health. The result revealed that mortality rate has a significant and negative impact on real per capita income. The Granger causality test showed, real GDP per capita and mortality rate have causal or bidirectional relationship. On the other hand, real GDP per capita does not granger cause life expectancy, but life expectancy granger cause real GDP per capita. The comparative descriptive analysis of the health indicators in different income groups of the world also showed that, higher income countries are better off in their health status.
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Culture, gender, and HIV and AIDS : United Church of Zambia's response to traditional marriage practices.Siwila, Lilian Cheelo. January 2011 (has links)
In the wake of HIV and AIDS in Africa, culture has been identified as central to HIV
prevention, care, and support. Therefore, scholars have argued that HIV intervention in
communities should focus on cultural practices rather than just individual behaviour.
Researchers have also taken note of the interconnectedness between religion and culture in
Africa. Therefore the African theologian, Mercy Oduyoye, proposed the term ‘religioculture.’
In the light of this connection, it has become crucial to examine not just cultural
practices but the response of religion to cultural practices in the context of HIV. Given that
Zambia is a Christian country, this qualitative empirical study sought to examine the response
of a church, the United Church of Zambia (UCZ), to traditional marriage practices that I
consider to be harmful in the context of HIV. Traditional marriage practices such as child
marriage and widowhood inheritance were analysed through gendered theological
perspectives. The study was located in the United Church of Zambia in the towns of Mufulira
and Kitwe in the Copperbelt Province of Zambia. The reason for choosing the practices of
widowhood inheritance and child marriage as the areas of focus was twofold: first,
throughout history and in the current context, the church and society’s perception of these
two practices has been ambiguous. Depending on the time and event in history, the practices
were seen as either a norm or a problem. In this study, I have questioned the extent to which
this historical ambiguity towards these traditional marriage practices has contributed to the
way in which the church today is responding to these culture practices. The second reason for
choosing these two marriage practices was to highlight how the institution of marriage has
been challenged in the context of HIV and AIDS. When marriage ceases to be a safe practice
for couples, how should the church respond to the harmful cultural practices associated with
marriage, especially in the context of HIV and AIDS? The question that this study posed,
therefore, was: What role has the United Church of Zambia played in either promoting or
discouraging harmful marriage practices in the context of HIV and AIDS?
The methodology used to answer this question included: semi- structured interviews, openended
in-depth interviews, Contextual Bible Study, and focus group discussions as forms of
data collection from: church leaders, lay people, widows, girls involved in child marriage,
and members of the Marriage Guidance Committee. Thereafter, the data was thematically
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analysed using the theory of African feminist cultural hermeneutics. The study is divided into
eight chapters, each chapter answers one of the objectives of the study.
Through the use of the tools for data collection stated above, the study drew a number of
conclusions. Firstly, it was established that indeed child marriage and widowhood inheritance
are contributing factors to the spread of HIV. Secondly, the Marriage Guidance Programme
of the United Church of Zambia was identified as a point of entry in re-examining the
theology of marriage that is contextual and holistic in the United Church of Zambia. Thirdly,
the church’s ambivalence with regard to harmful marriage practices in the context of HIV and
AIDS was attributed to people’s belief systems about their cultures which are embedded in
their worldviews. Overall, the study has shown that there is a need for an analysis of culture
within the church which can enable it to respond to harmful cultural practices in the context
of HIV. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2011.
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Evaluation of a training program to increase the capacity of health care providers to provide antiretroviral therapy to pediatric patients in sub-Saharan Africa /Kamiru, Harrison N. Ross, Michael W. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Dr.P.H.)--University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, School of Public Health, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 114-126).
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