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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.
171

Counsellors perceptions of applying cognitive behavioural counselling approaches to intervention for HIV sexual risk reduction.

Rawatlal, Kamilla V. January 2007 (has links)
There are two dominant approaches to counselling for sexual risk reduction In South Africa. The TASO model which is based on client centred principles, informs much of vCT counsellors' training. More recently, the (ARRM) AIDS Risk Reduction Model which includes a cognitive behavioural component to counselling for sexual risk reduction has been introduced. A sample of vCT counsellors who have been trained using the ARRM were interviewed to develop an understanding of their experiences of using this approach. These participants provide a vCT service to clients in the midlands of the province of KwaZulu-Natal. A central finding was that although counsellors experienced the cognitive behavioural approach as having good potential for effecting sexual behaviour change, numerous barriers were identified to applying the approach within the South African context. Counsellors were also critical of the TASO model as a model for counsell ing for sexual risk reduction. Elements of the cognitive behavioural approach they experienced as useful included its potential for changing cognitions (misconceptions and myths in communities), the collaborative nature of the approach, negotiating strategies for risk reduction, use of a problem solving approach, follow-up and monitoring of behaviour. Barriers identified included contextual constraints such as poverty, gender power differentials and cultural practices. Also identified as a barrier was the dominance of the biomedical approach within the health care system. Despite identifying barriers to the application of this approach, counsellors remained optimistic that cognitive behavioural approaches could be adapted to the life context of their clients and that this could be facilitated through further training and mentoring. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.
172

Investigating the influences on sexual abstinent behaviour of rural African high school going youth in KwaZulu-Natal.

Dlamini, Siyabonga Blessing. January 2007 (has links)
Introduction: The high prevalence of HIV in South Africa was confirmed by Department of Health (2005) which reported an HIV prevalence rate of 40.7 percent amongst antenatal clinic attendees at public facilities in KwaZulu-Natal in 2004. Abstinence is one of the strategies used by many different cultures where young unmarried people are encouraged to abstain from sex until marriage, to prevent young girls from getting pregnant and acquiring sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate African rural high school learners' choice of sexual abstinence and to compare abstinent versus non-abstinent African rural high school learners in order to be able to develop tailored educational messages. Abstinence was defined as not having penetrative sex, since this is the accepted definition of abstinence in Zulu culture. Objectives: a) To investigate the prevalence of abstinence from sexual intercourse amongst African rural high school learners, b) To assess demographic, psychosocial, and economic determinants of abstinence from sexual intercourse, c) To make recommendations about abstinence interventions. Method: A descriptive cross-sectional study was carried out in a rural area (Ugu District in southern KwaZulu-Natal). One class of Grade 9 learners, ages 14-20 years, was selected from each often randomly selected rural high schools. An anonymous selfreporting semi-structured questionnaire used the I-Change model to investigate demographic and economic information, attitudes, social influences, self-efficacy and intentions towards sexual abstinence. Chi square and T-tests were used for bivariate analysis and Logistic regression was used to develop a model for abstinence from sexual intercourse. Results: A total of 454 learners participated with a mean age of 16.76 years (SD 1.41) age range 14-20 years. Of the sample 208 (45.8%) were male and 246 (54.2%) female. The majority were Christian (84.6% (n=384)) and of this population, 28.3% (n=127) reported that they had 'ever had sex'. Furthermore, 24.5% (n=91) of learners reported that they were currently sexually active. Fifty six percent (n=252) of learners reported that they abstained from sex. When comparing learners reporting abstinence (n= 252) with those not abstinent (n= 202), abstinent learners were significantly more often females, who had never had sex (p / Thesis (M.Med.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.
173

The safety of infant feeding practices in a semi-urban community in the North-West Province / S.J. du Plessis

Du Plessis, Susanna Jacoba January 2007 (has links)
In this mini-dissertation the aim was to explore and describe the safety of infant feeding practices. It is argued that safe infant feeding practices can have a positive and long term effect on the health status and growth development of all infants. World wide, countries but more specific developing countries, are faced with the growing dilemma of high mortality and morbidity rates among infants. The need to find a way to eliminate and prevent the causing factors of life-threatening infectious diseases like diarrhoea and HIV/AIDS is now more important than ever before. A sound nutritional foundation together with safe infant feeding methods play a predominant role in ensuring the very survival of the infant. A cross-sectional, descriptive research design was used in this study. Non-probability sampling was used to identify the sample who complied with the set selection criteria. The research took place in a semi-urban community as the community serves a large group of mothers and infants as well as being accessible to the researcher. The semi-urban community was also identified as an area with health care needs that could be addressed in the research project. A questionnaire was adapted from an existing WHO assessment tool. A pilot study was conducted after which the questionnaire was finalised and the questionnaires were completed with the aid of three fieldworkers. Data collection took place until the sample size (n=155) was achieved according to the calculation of the statistician. The data analysis was done by means of descriptive statistics such as frequency, percentage, mean and standard deviation by using the STATISTICA data analysis software system programme. The results of the research study indicated that the majority of participants practice mixed feeding methods which do not comply with safe infant feeding standards. Infant feeding methods are not changed during illness or disease experienced by either the mother or infant, which again may greatly compromise their health status. The uptake of HIV testing and disclosure were relatively high. Recommendations are made for nursing education, nursing research and nursing practice with special focus on establishing safe infant feeding practices. / Thesis (M.Cur.)--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2008.
174

AIDS, the "other plague": a history of AIDS prevention education in Vancouver, 1983-1994

Marjoribanks , Bruce 05 1900 (has links)
This study describes how AIDS prevention education programs were constructed, delivered, and implemented in Vancouver between 1983 and 1994. Biodeterministic models of disease are examined through a historical analysis of documents that include newsletters, minutes of board meetings, policy reviews, annual reports, and personal journals. This study assumes that AIDS is as much a sociocultural phenomenon as it is biological. The findings suggest that present educational guidelines for AIDS prevention are unable to identify what messages should be communicated and fail to identify to whom they should be conveyed. This study does not recommend the use of biodeterministic models of AIDS prevention education which reflect plague metaphors. Instead, culturally relevant strategies need to be developed throughout all aspects of AIDS prevention curricula.
175

Lesbian women and AIDS : a literature review and discussion group for lesbian women on sexual health and safer sex education for prevention of HIV infection.

Shaw, Patricia M. January 1993 (has links)
Research on AIDS and women is recent and focuses almost exclusively on the heterosexual population. Despite research on the sexual behavior of young women which asserts that lesbians are at low risk for exposure to HTV, many lesbians engage in high risk practices and are therefore at risk for infection. In order for AIDS education for this population to be effective, it must be designed spedfically to meet identified needs. [...]
176

Safe Routes to School: Launching the Program at Oak Grove Elementary School

Henderson, Susan 26 March 2010 (has links)
Safe Routes to School is a national program funded by the Department of Transportation. The goal of the program is to increase children’s active transport to and from school, primarily by walking, in response to the epidemic of childhood obesity. Implementation at the state and local level has had varying success. In my capstone presentation, I discuss the creation, implementation, and ongoing success of the program at Oak Grove Elementary, a local public school in Georgia. The program is comprised of the 5 Es: Education, Encouragement, Enforcement, Engineering, and Evaluation. Each of these five components will be focused on, as well as ongoing challenges in the struggle to retrofit a school to make it more walker-friendly in a car-dependent environment.
177

A Systematic Review Examining the Added Value of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Interventions for Preventive Chemotherapy Programs on Reducing the Prevalence of Trachoma

Travers, Anyess R 14 December 2010 (has links)
BACKGROUND: Trachoma is a leading cause of avoidable blindness. Currently, trachoma is endemic in 57 countries, infects approximately 84 million people globally, and continues to threaten over 10 % of the world’s population with the risk of blindness. Caused by the bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis, blindness due to trachoma is caused by repeated eye infection resulting in the inflammation of the upper eyelid eventually leading the upper lid to pull inward scratching and tearing the cornea causing it to become opaque resulting in loss of vision. The World Health Organization recommends eliminating trachoma as a public health problem using the SAFE strategy: Surgery, Antibiotic, Face washing and Environmental control. OBJECTIVES: This review examined the benefits of the added value of water, sanitation, and hygiene education interventions on preventive mass drug administration for trachoma. METHODS: Trials were identified from MEDLINE, PubMed, and LISTA EBSCO databases using a series of search terms. No restrictions were put on study date, location, design, or language of publication. The abstracts were examined from each of the searches, and any abstract describing risk factors, survey results of mass drug administration (MDA), or providing a general overview of trachoma were automatically discarded. Full text of papers including the combined use of key words including SAFE, WASH, intervention, impact, added value, MDA, azithromycin/ Zithromax® were obtained for review. Twelve full texts articles were retrieved all relevant information were placed in a standardized data extraction form. MAIN RESULTS: Three studies met the complete criteria for inclusion. All studies found a significant change in reduction of active trachoma prevalence. One study focused on the added benefit of antibiotic and environmental components on hygiene education delivered by radio. Another trial compared two villages; the control community performed MDA and the surgery while the intervention village added the F and E components. The final study as well focused the added benefit of ‘F’ and ‘E’ on ‘A’. Two of the three studies found this reduction was from the added benefit of face washing ‘F’ and environmental control ‘E’ to antibiotic use. CONCLUSIONS: In order to eliminate blinding trachoma as a public health problem, recurrence of the active form of the disease must be interrupted before repeated scarring leads to trichiasis. The antibiotic component of the SAFE strategy is a quick fix to the immediate problem. The ‘F’ and ‘E’ components are the more sustainable interventions, yet little research has been done on the actual amount of added value the individual ‘A’‘F’&’E’ components have to one another. After thorough review of the articles, articles were found which documented the ‘F’ and ‘E’ components provide significant value to the overall decrease of prevalence of active. However, the limited results of the search suggest more research can better elucidate the ability of the ‘F’ and ‘E’ components to reduce trachoma prevalence and ultimately impact blinding.
178

Vaikams su negalia saugios aplinkos kūrimo teisinio reguliavimo veiksmingumas / The Effectiveness of Legal Regulation of Creation of Safe Environment for Children with Disabilities

Laureckienė, Žaneta 25 February 2010 (has links)
Magistro darbe nagrinėjamas vaikams su negalia saugios aplinkos teisinio reglamentavimo veiksmingumas. Saugios aplinkos sukūrimas vaikams turintiems negalią Lietuvoje XXI amžiaus pradžioje įžengia į naują kokybinį raidos etapą. Saugi aplinka vaikams su negalia turi būti neatskiriamas nuo mokymo įstaigų, nes šiose įstaigose vaikai ir jaunimas praleidžia didžiąją dalį laiko. Todėl neįgaliųjų vaikų socialinės integracinės politikos svarbiausioji dalis turi apimti formalųjį ikimokyklinį, pradinį, vidurinį, profesinį bei aukštąjį išsilavinimą. Kokybiškų švietimo paslaugų specialiųjų poreikių vaikams ir jaunimui, besiugdantiems drauge su bendraamžiais vieningoje švietimo sistemoje, teikimo užtikrinimas nėra vienalaikis (politiniai lozungai, deklaratyvios teisinės nuostatos, visuomenės narių pasisakymai, teigiami pavyzdžiai ir t.t.), bet sudėtingas, ilgai trunkantis procesas, ne tik reikalaujantis konstruktyvių ir koordinuotų valstybės valdymo ir švietimą administruojančių bei jam talkinančių institucijų veiksmų, bet ir pačios visuomenės sąmoningumo. Lietuvos teisės sistema ir teisės doktrina iš esmės suteikia pakankamai teisinių priemonių apsaugoti neįgaliųjų vaikų ir paauglių teises mokymo įstaigose, tačiau egzistuoja norminio reglamentavimo, teisės normų įgyvendinimo praktikoje neatitikimas. Lietuvos teisinėje sistemoje minėta situacija gali būti detaliau atskleista išskiriant šias problemas susijusias su negalią turintiems vaikams saugios aplinkos kūrimu, mokymo įstaigose... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / In Master’s work analysed children’s with disabilities a safe environment for the legal regulation effectiveness. Creation of a safe environment for children with disabilities in Lithuania is entering a new qualitative stage of development of twenty-first century. A safe environment for children with disabilities must be inseparable from the educational institutions because in these institutions children and young people spend most of the time. Therefore, the disabled children's social integration policy must cover the most important part of formal pre-school, primary, secondary, vocational and higher education. Quality education services for children with special needs and young people, studying together with their peers within a single system of education, the provision of protection is not simultaneous (political slogan, declaratory legal provisions, members of the public speeches, the positive examples, etc.), but complex, lengthy process, requiring not only a constructive and coordinate the public administration and education in managing and assisting the authorities of his actions, but also the public awareness. Lithuanian’s legal system and legal doctrine in principle provide sufficient legal instruments to protect disabled children and adolescents in educational establishments, but there is prescriptive regulatory, legal norms practice non-compliance. Lithuanian legal system, said the situation may be disclosed in more detail distinguishing these problems associated... [to full text]
179

The Modification, Design and Development of a Scaled-down Industrial Furnace with Interchanging Burners for Academic Use

Mendes, Antonio 19 July 2010 (has links)
Industry is heavily dependent on the process of combustion and with a projected rapid increase for the demand of combustion-derived energy it is imperative to expose a new age of engineering professionals to the discipline of combustion engineering. One purpose of this study was to modify an existing scaled-down industrial furnace and to retrofit it with the ability to interchange burners for academic application and combustion testing. A number of available industrial burners are presented and their qualities and drawbacks discussed. The modification of an existing scaled-down industrial tunnel furnace is proposed in this work with the objective of providing users with exposure to the control and safe operating strategies associated with industrial combustion. The furnace system simulates a square-shaped tunnel geometry commonly found in industrial applications. A single nozzle mix burner is mounted along the furnace axis and operated with supporting equipment such as a burner control safeguard, a gas train, and an air supply. Details of the furnace are provided in this work. The concept of radiative heat transfer within a combustion enclosure is demonstrated through furnace simulation with Hottel’s Zone Method. / Thesis (Master, Chemical Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2010-07-19 09:50:22.797
180

Sexual behaviors and knowledge of AIDS among undergraduate students

Khehra, Nina January 1989 (has links)
This study surveyed the sexual behaviors and knowledge of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) among 117 undergraduate students from McGill University, Montreal. The sample consisted of 32 men and 85 women ranging from 18 up to 24 years of age. The total sample was split into three knowledge groups, Low, Medium, and High, based on answers provided to questions about AIDS. The data were analyzed separately for the total sample, men, women, and the three knowledge groups. The findings indicated that these students were relatively knowledgeable about AIDS (73.23% correct responses out of 21 items), but were engaging in high risk sexual activities. It appears that personal concern about contracting AIDS, not knowledge of this disease, is related to behavior change among undergraduate students. It was recommended that AIDS education programs focus more on increasing the personal concern than the AIDS knowledge of adolescents.

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