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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Factors associated with the development of drug resistant tuberculosis in Ethiopia

Henock Bekele Keto 01 1900 (has links)
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to assess factors associated with the development of drug resistant tuberculosis in Ethiopia. DESIGN: A quantitative case-control study was conducted to determine if there were any significant differences in prevalence of pre-defined factors between cases and controls. METHODS: Cases were patients with drug resistant tuberculosis who had a confirmed diagnosis by culture drug-susceptibility or gene expert tests. Successfully treated, tuberculosis symptom free patients who had been on first-line tuberculosis treatment and who were registered as cured or treatment completed were taken as controls. An equal number of cases (N=181) and controls (N=181) was selected using a systematic random sampling method and was used in the study. A structured questionnaire developed by the researcher was used to collect data. Odds ratio and multiple logistic regression were used to quantify the strength of association between dependent and independent variables. RESULTS: The development of drug resistant tuberculosis was significantly associated with two or more previous episodes of tuberculosis illness (adjusted odds ratio (AOR): 14.84; 95% CI 8.90 –24.75), previous first-line tuberculosis treatment not directly observed by a health worker for 7 to 8 weeks (AOR: 13.41; 95% CI 8.06 – 22.29) and previous first-line tuberculosis treatment outcome of failure (AOR: 39.19; 95% CI 12.05 -127.46). Interruption of first-line tuberculosis treatment for one day or more (AOR = 4.28; 95% CI 2.76 – 6.64) and history of treatment in the first-line tuberculosis treatment category for previously treated patients (AOR: 3.70; 95% CI 2.40 – 5.72) were also significantly associated with the development of drug resistant tuberculosis in the current study. CONCLUSION: Patients with a history of previous first-line tuberculosis treatment, patients who interrupted previous first-line tuberculosis treatment and patients with previous first-line tuberculosis treatment outcome of failure were at high risk of developing drug resistant tuberculosis. Therefore, the full course of first-line tuberculosis treatment should be given, following the Directly Observed Treatment (DOT) guide. Patients with recurrent tuberculosis and unfavourable first-line tuberculosis treatment outcome should be tested for drug susceptibility. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
182

Evaluating the role of female police leaders in Ethiopia

Tekabo Haptemicheal Yilma 05 1900 (has links)
According to Seble (2003:15), in the early stages of human existence, that is to say, in primitive society, the head of the family was a woman, who took on every family responsibility and duty. However, this role of leadership did not last long. With the division of society into classes and the emergence of the state, women were degraded to a lower societal position. Women, starting from this time, were in one way or another forced to assume a dual burden. This burden emanated from the social and marital systems. The emergence of the state and the development of religion can be cited as major causes of the inferior status of women. Religious conceptions of the inferiority of women extended to Christian and Muslim teaching that God created woman from a split of the bone of man to serve man. Biblical excerpts from Genesis 1 and 2 state that: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth … So God created man in his own image ... and the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman. [Eve ate the fruit of tree of knowledge, expressly forbidden by God. God told Eve] “I will greatly multiply your sorrow and your conception; In pain you shall bring forth children; Your desire shall be for your husband, And he shall rule over you” (Genesis 1. 1, 27; Genesis 2. 22, 16). / Police Practice / M. Tech. (Policing)
183

The delivery of comprehensive healthcare services by private health sector in Amhara region, Ethiopia

Woleli, Melkie Assefa 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the health service delivery by private health sector and develop guidelines to enhance provision of health service so as to increase their contribution in the country’s health system. Interviews with 1112 participants were conducted in phase I. Descriptive statistics, chi square tests and logistic regression analysis were used for analysis. Private health facilities (30.5%) were providing healthcare services in their own buildings that were constructed for that purpose while others work in a rented houses built for residence or others. Some facilities (11.7%) received loan services from financial institutions in the region. A significant association was found between obtaining loan and owning building for healthcare services delivery (x2=13.99, p<0.001). Private health facilities were mainly engaged in profit driven and curative services while their participation in the promotive and preventive services like FP, ANC HIV test, TB and malaria prevention and control was not minimal. Majority, 247 (96.5%) provide services for extended hours out of normal working time such as evening, weekends and holidays. Physicians, more than other professionals were found practicing part time work (dual practice). Service consumers of the private health sector were urban dwellers 417 (71.6%) and 165 (28.4%) rural residents. Nearly three-fourth (73.0%) of study participants had a history of multiple visits to both public and private health facilities for current medical condition. Median payment of patients in a single visit including diagnosis and medicine was 860 birr ($30.85) (IQR = 993 ($35.62). Only 2.1% have paid through insurance services while others through out of pocket payments. Price of services delivered in private health facilities were set mainly by owners’ will (91.4%) while others with established team. Satisfaction on the fairness of prices to services obtained from each facility were reported by 63.1% service consumers. Those patients without any companion (AOR=1.83, 95% CI=1.16-2.91) and no history of visit to other facilities (AOR=1.97, 95% CI=1.24-3.12) were more likely to be satisfied than those coming with companions and those with history of visit. In addition, as age of consumers increase, satisfaction to services prices tend to decline (AOR=0.97, 95% CI=0.96-0.99). Uncomplimentary regulatory system to private health facilities, lack of training and continuing education for health professionals, unavailability of enough health workforce in the market and shortage of supplies to private facilities were among main gaps disclosed. Based on findings, five guidelines were developed to enhance health services delivery in the private health sector, namely, increase facilitation for financial access to actors in the sector, increase facilitation to access regular updating trainings and continuing education for healthcare workers, enhance and scale up the capability of existing association in the private health sector, strengthen and support working for extended hours to promote user friendly services and accessibility of healthcare services for the poor through community based health insurance and exemption. Therefore, these recommendations to help enhance the private health sector for better performance and contribution. / Health Studies / D.Lit.Phil (Health Studies
184

The effects of deregulation on the efficiency of agricultural marketing in Ethiopia : case study from Bako area

Negassa, Asfaw January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
185

Analysis of correlates and determinants of household behaviour towards Malaria in Tigray, Ethiopia

Balesh, Fadi W. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
186

Literacy for work : a comparative study of literacy campaigns in Tanzania and Ethiopia

Alemayehu, Retta January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
187

Learning styles and strategies of Ethiopian secondary school students in learning mathematics

Geche, Tesfaye Jale 10 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to identify preferred learning styles and strategies of secondary school students and to examine the prevailing problems that restrict them to use their own preferences. The study was intended to highlight a number of issues that need to be revealed and addressed in the learning of mathematics. The types of preferred learning styles and strategies students need to employ in learning mathematics, the assistance students require from their teachers, the conduciveness of the design of mathematics curriculum and the challenges they might face to use their own preferred learning styles and strategies in the learning of mathematics were addressed as basic research questions. The study dealt with various elements that were related to environmental, emotional, sociological, physiological and psychological categories of learning in the identification of the types of learning styles and strategies. This study is believed to contribute a lot in addressing the problems of learning styles and strategies, provide feedback to the concerned government bodies to help them improve the teaching learning processes in secondary schools. It is also to reduce the bias or prejudice on mathematics by assisting students to use their own preferred learning styles and strategies, and contribute to further investigations to make the learning of mathematics more enjoyable, participatory and lifelong career. This study was conducted in four secondary schools in West Shoa Zone. A qualitative method that was descriptive in nature was employed in the study while the instruments of the study were questionnaires and an interview. The sample comprised of 249 (128 male and 121 female) secondary school students and 30 (25 male and 5 female) secondary school mathematics teachers selected randomly. The result has shown that students were not learning mathematics on the basis of their preferred learning styles and strategies and the teachers were practicing autocratic teaching styles. Most of the students did not prefer learning mathematics through plasma television; they required brief outlines and concrete presentations, and indicated that there is not enough time to check and recheck the answers they found for the problems. These imply that the organization of secondary school mathematics curriculum requires reform to accommodate the preferred learning styles and strategies of students. / Further Teacher Education / M. Ed. (Mathematics Education)
188

Evaluating the application of human rights principles in crime investigation in Ethiopia : a case study of the Addis Ababba city police

Tulu, Alemayehu Shiferaw 10 1900 (has links)
In any society the police are organized with the responsibility of keeping peace and order, ensuring the rule of law, justice, prevention of crime as well as protection of human rights. Regardless of the circumstances in which the police find them, they should act towards every human being with a sense of duty and care for human rights; it is the responsibility of the police to conduct the process of arrest, search and seizure according to the law with no neglect of duties. The police are expected to comply with the arrest, search and seizure procedures designed to ensure the protection of human rights. Nevertheless, usually, the task of investigation is vulnerable to human right violation. This is particularly true in the case of the developing countries where the process of democratization is so infant that most of them not only lack the required level of awareness/understanding pertaining to the human right principles but also the necessary institutional mechanisms that contribute to the proper application of human right principles are missing. The report of the Ethiopian Federal Police Inspection Service conducted in the year 2003 indicated that there were some suspects arrested without court warrant and with the existence of reasonable doubt for their guiltiness. Moreover, findings of a research conducted in the same year on certain Addis Ababa sub-city police stations also clearly indicate this fact. The objective of the this research is to evaluate the extent to which crime investigator, who are duty bearers in the Addis Ababa city police, adhere to the human right principles pertaining to the rights of suspected, accused and arrested person that are recognized in pertinent international instruments and enshrined in the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE) constitution and other related laws of the country while fulfilling their duties and responsibilities throughout the crime investigation process. Specifically the study is also aimed at exploring the form and type of commonly violated human right, if any and the determinant factors behind the respective types of human right violation by crime investigation belong to the Addis Ababa police .Methodologically the study followed and is mainly relied on the qualitative empirical approach to social science research. / Police Practice / M. Tech. (Policing (Investigation))
189

Impact of reducing loan by Ethiopian banks on their own performance

Semu, Zewdu Seyoum 05 May 2011 (has links)
This study intends to assess the impact of reducing or restricting loan disbursement on the performance of banks in Ethiopia.
190

Determinants of non-performing loans : the case of Ethiopian banks

Geletta, Wondimagegnehu Negera 20 August 2012 (has links)
This study intends to assess determinants of nonperforming loans. The mixed research approach was adopted for the study. Survey was conducted with professionals engaged in both private and state owned Banks in Ethiopia holding different positions using a self administered questionnaire. In addition, the study used structured review of documents and records of banks and in-depth interview of senior bank officials in the Ethiopian banking industry. The findings of the study shows that poor credit assessment, failed loan monitoring, underdeveloped credit culture, lenient credit terms and conditions, aggressive lending, compromised integrity, weak institutional capacity, unfair competition among banks, willful default by borrowers and their knowledge limitation, fund diversion for unintended purpose, over/under financing by banks ascribe to the causes of loan default.

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