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Factors associated with nutritional status of children aged six to fifty-nine months in Livingstone, Zambia.Chigali, Lillian Malambo January 2005 (has links)
A matched case-control study was carried out to identify the factors associated with the nutritional status of children in Livingstone district, Zambia. A trained field researcher collected data on demographic, feeding practices and socio-economic factors in matched groups of underweight children and normal weight children from the mothers/caregivers of the children. Interviews, using a structured pre-tested questionnaire, were used to obtain the data. All children aged from six to fifty-nine months admitted at Livingstone General Hospital during the months of October to December, 2003 with a weight for age below &ndash / 2SD from the median of the reference population formed the underweight children (cases). The total was 47 children. The cases were then matched according to sex and age to 47 normal weight children attending the under five clinic at Livingstone General Hospital during the same months, with a weight for age above &ndash / 2SD from the median of the reference population (controls). The final sample was 94 children. Weights were recorded using the same scale in the outpatient&rsquo / s department prior to admission and during the under five clinic session. Interviews then took place in a separate room after the clinic nurse had attended them. A separate visit was then made to the homes of the children on a different day. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were used to measure strengths of associations. Results revealed that the basic causes of underweight were the poor economic state of the country, unfavorable policies and insufficient government support in the areas of health, education, agriculture, housing and employment. Underlying causes were inadequate access to food, inadequate care of children, poor access to health services and unhealthy living environments, while immediate causes were poor food intake and disease. Low educational and literacy levels of the mothers/caregivers, unemployment and lack of sufficient finances to access basic necessities such as food, housing and health contributed to underweight.
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Factors associated with nutritional status of children aged six to fifty-nine months in Livingstone, Zambia.Chigali, Lillian Malambo January 2005 (has links)
A matched case-control study was carried out to identify the factors associated with the nutritional status of children in Livingstone district, Zambia. A trained field researcher collected data on demographic, feeding practices and socio-economic factors in matched groups of underweight children and normal weight children from the mothers/caregivers of the children. Interviews, using a structured pre-tested questionnaire, were used to obtain the data. All children aged from six to fifty-nine months admitted at Livingstone General Hospital during the months of October to December, 2003 with a weight for age below &ndash / 2SD from the median of the reference population formed the underweight children (cases). The total was 47 children. The cases were then matched according to sex and age to 47 normal weight children attending the under five clinic at Livingstone General Hospital during the same months, with a weight for age above &ndash / 2SD from the median of the reference population (controls). The final sample was 94 children. Weights were recorded using the same scale in the outpatient&rsquo / s department prior to admission and during the under five clinic session. Interviews then took place in a separate room after the clinic nurse had attended them. A separate visit was then made to the homes of the children on a different day. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were used to measure strengths of associations. Results revealed that the basic causes of underweight were the poor economic state of the country, unfavorable policies and insufficient government support in the areas of health, education, agriculture, housing and employment. Underlying causes were inadequate access to food, inadequate care of children, poor access to health services and unhealthy living environments, while immediate causes were poor food intake and disease. Low educational and literacy levels of the mothers/caregivers, unemployment and lack of sufficient finances to access basic necessities such as food, housing and health contributed to underweight.
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Experiences of early antiretroviral therapy (art) initiation among people living with HIV in Livingstone district in ZambiaSimuyaba, Melvin January 2018 (has links)
Magister Public Health - MPH / Being healthy (‘feeling fine’) and health deterioration (‘getting sick’) were key health concerns among PLHIV prior to ART initiation. PLHIV often referred living with HIV as ‘being sick’ and experiencing poor health when already infected with HIV as ‘very sick’ and this perception about sickness and wellness partly determined the need and value placed on accessing HIV services. Motivations for starting treatment included needing to maintain or regain health, encouragement from HCWs, relatives and friends and believing in the effectiveness of ART to improve health. Prevention of HIV transmission to others was not cited to influence uptake. The majority of PLHIV reported stringent adherence to ART; even a half-hour delay in taking treatment was sometimes defined by participants as ‘non-adherence’. Initial reminders for taking ART (setting alarm, placing pills where visible) fell away as daily medication became routine. However, daily uptake of treatment had its own psychosocial and economic consequences which PLHIV had to navigate. With few exceptions, when taking the first line regimen, most PLHIV experienced both temporal (hallucinations, vomiting) and long-term (dizziness and irregular heartbeat) side-effects attributed to ART, which although not considered life threatening, could undermine ART adherence. HIV status disclosure was both limited and selective (mainly to spouses, close relatives, friends and co-workers) and deemed as promoting adherence to treatment and access to HIV services. HIV/AIDS stigma persisted even among relatively healthy PLHIV due to links with ‘promiscuity’, hampering disclosure and access to HIV services. Competing demands on participants’ time, especially livelihood activities, also disrupted accessing services. Good relationships between HCWs and PLHIV promoted access to services.
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The structural, thermal, and fluid evolution of the Livingstone Range anticlinorium, and its regional significance to the southern Alberta foreland thrust and fold beltCooley, Michael Ames 08 April 2008 (has links)
The Livingstone Range anticlinorium (LRA) is a long (>65 km) narrow (<5 km) structural culmination that coincides with a major hanging-wall ramp across which the Livingstone thrust cuts ~1000 m up-section eastward from a regional décollement in the upper part of Devonian Palliser Formation to another regional décollement within Jurassic Fernie Formation. The presence of Precambrian basement fluids prior to thrusting and folding is recorded in the LRA by deformed jasper+/-fluorite+/-sphalerite veins, and adjacent haloes of altered dolomitic host rock with high 87Sr/86Sr ratios (0.7094 to 0.7100) relative to most host rocks. Basement fluids are a possible source for anomalously radiogenic strontium that occurs in the diagenetically altered Paleozoic carbonate rocks in the LRA and throughout the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin, but underlying thick shale strata such as the Exshaw Formation are also a possible source. The earliest stages of thrusting deformation involved the development of distinctive chevron-style, flexural-slip thrust-propagation folds that have conspicuous blind thrust faults along their hinge zones. The hinge-zone thrust system of the Centre Peak anticline consists of a series of stacked detachment thrusts, each of which emerges from a different zone of interbed slip in the backlimb of the anticline and deflects the hinge zone eastward. Each successively higher detachment thrust dies out in the hinge zone at approximately the same stratigraphic level at which an overlying detachment thrust fault emerges from a bedding detachment zone in the backlimb. Fluid flow during thrust-propagation folding is recorded by dolomite+/-calcite veins with isotopic compositions that are similar to those of host rocks. Fluid flow occurred along faults related to thrust-propagation folding, and also along many tear faults and larger thrust faults. Veins in these fault zones have slightly higher 87Sr/86Sr ratios relative to adjacent host rocks and are interpreted to have formed from a mixture of formation fluids and hotter basement fluids in a rock-dominated system. Oxygen isotope thermometry of four syn-folding veins indicates they precipitated at anomalously high temperatures (>250°C). The youngest episode of fluid flow along thrust faults and tear faults is recorded by calcite veins with very low δ18O values (-18 to -9‰ PDB), which are interpreted to have precipitated along faults that were active while the LRA was being transported eastward and elevated by underlying thrust faults, and cooled by infiltrating meteoric water. The conduits along which significant meteoric fluid circulation occurred are marked by visibly altered host rocks that have anomalously low δ18O values and slightly lower δ13C values relative to most host rocks.
Rapid cooling due to deep infiltration of meteoric water into the shallow brittle surface of the deforming earth is almost certainly not restricted to thrust and fold belts, nor is its thermal effect necessarily restricted to the upper few kilometers. This model for fluid flow has significant implications for predicting thermal conditions in deep metamorphic rocks that lie beneath the brittle crust, the most obvious effect being to push down the brittle/ductile transition zone, which would enhance even deeper meteoric fluid circulation and cause the deflection of underlying isotherms. / Thesis (Ph.D, Geological Sciences & Geological Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2007-11-01 15:25:23.854
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Determinants of non-adherence to recommended preventative methods for sexual transmission of HIV among 15 - 24 year olds in Livingstone (Zambia)Mungunda, Sitwala 04 1900 (has links)
This qualitative study was done in Livingstone, Zambia, and used focus group discussions to investigate the reasons that youths aged 15 to 24 years see as justifying, or compelling, their non-use of recommended methods for prevention of sexual transmission of HIV. It focused on four methods, namely abstinence, condom use, voluntary counseling and testing, and mutual faithfulness.
The study found that non-adherence to HIV preventative methods is linked to variables in the process of adolescent growth and development, to contextual variables in society, to characteristics of products and services associated with these HIV preventative methods, and to disease characteristics of HIV itself. A key conclusion of this study is that to improve the effectiveness of HIV prevention programs among the youths it is essential that factors that hinder adherence to preventative methods are recognized and addressed. / Social Work / M.A.(Social Work)
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Determinants of non-adherence to recommended preventative methods for sexual transmission of HIV among 15 - 24 year olds in Livingstone (Zambia)Mungunda, Sitwala 04 1900 (has links)
This qualitative study was done in Livingstone, Zambia, and used focus group discussions to investigate the reasons that youths aged 15 to 24 years see as justifying, or compelling, their non-use of recommended methods for prevention of sexual transmission of HIV. It focused on four methods, namely abstinence, condom use, voluntary counseling and testing, and mutual faithfulness.
The study found that non-adherence to HIV preventative methods is linked to variables in the process of adolescent growth and development, to contextual variables in society, to characteristics of products and services associated with these HIV preventative methods, and to disease characteristics of HIV itself. A key conclusion of this study is that to improve the effectiveness of HIV prevention programs among the youths it is essential that factors that hinder adherence to preventative methods are recognized and addressed. / Social Work / M.A.(Social Work)
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Characterisation in isiXhosa drama with specific reference to two isiXhosa dramasNweba, Lena 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The main aim of study is to investigate characterisation in two of Ngewu's dramas.
Ngewu's dramas are contemporary and many scholars have not yet had time to research
them. The story in the drama Amadada la afunani ezintsaneni ?( 1998), is about the
sexual abuse of children. This is new because the abuse of small children is not seen to
indicate culture especially now that even fathers abuse their children. In the olden days
children used to look to grown -ups for protection of every kind.
The story in the second drama Yeha Mfazi Obulala Indada (1997) , is about a wife who
hires assassins to kill her husband. In the past wives were submissive to their husbands.
It was unheard of a wife challenging the husband's authority, let alone hiring assassins to
kill him.
Chapter 1 introduces the aim, the scope, the theories and the methods of the study.
Chapter 2 deals with the plot structure of the dramas Amadada la afunani
ezintsaneni? (1998) and Yeha Mfazi Obulala Indada (1997)
Chapter 3 deals with characterisation in isiXhosa dramas, Amadada la afunani
ezintsaneni(1998) and Yeha Mfazi Obulala lndoda (1997)
Chapter 4 deals with language and the pattern of stylistic devices
Chapter 5 concludes the findings of the study. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die hoofdoel van hierdie studie is om die karakterisering in twee van Ngewu se
dramas te ondersoek. Ngewu se dramas is hedendaagse daarom is daar nog veel
navorsing daaroor
ezintsaneni (1998)
gedoen nie. Die storie in die drama Amadoda la afunani
handel hoofsaaklik oor die seksuele molestering van kinders.
Seksuele kindemolestering is In relatiewe nuwe versknser want dit is taboe in kultuur veral
nou dat die bekend is dat kinders deur hulle vaders gemolesteer word. In vroeer jare was
kinders van volwassens afhanklik vir beskermering en welvaart.
Die tweede drama Yeha Mfazi Obulala lndoda (1997) handeloor I vrou wat
sluipmoordenaars huur om haar man om die lewe te bring. In vroeer jare was vroue aan
hul mans onderdaning. Dit was ongewoon dat I vrou haar man se gesag sou ondermyn, en
nog meer ondenkbaar die huur van sluipmoordenaars om hom om die lewe te bring.
In hoofstuk 1 vind ons die doel van die studie, die omvang ,teoretiese raamwerk en
metode van die studie.
Hoofstuk 2 handeloor die struktuur van die twee Amadoda la afunani ezintsaneni
(1998) en Yeha Mfazi Obulala Indoda ( 1997)
Hoofstuk 3 handeloor die karakterisering in die isiXhosa dramas, Amadoda la afunani
ezintsaneni (1998) en Yeha Mfazi Obulala Indoda (1997)
Hoofstuk 4 handeloor die taal en skryfstyl van die skrywer.
Hoofstuk 5 bevat die samevatting van die studie.
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Exploring economics neo-pentecostalism and scientific rationality: a critical reflection on imagining a better pentecostal theologyMapani, Paul Simandala 01 1900 (has links)
Abstracts in English and Tsonga / This study explored the lack of integrating a scientific imagination and rationality in the
hermeneutic and theological practices of neo-Pentecostal churches in the town of Livingstone,
Zambia. Although the vantage point of the study was primarily practical theology, the
researcher adopted both an interdisciplinary and a multidisciplinary approach. This assisted the
researcher in understanding the different theoretical nuances that inform neo-Pentecostal
theological practices as propagated by its proponents. An in-depth scientific analysis premised
on the critical theory approach was conducted to find out whether or not neo-Pentecostal
communicative practices contribute positively to the economic conditions of local church
members in Livingstone. The theological framework for this study was based on the “pastoral
cycle”, which ought to be at the very heart of any contemporary practical theology (Ballard &
Pritchard 2006). The research methodology consisted of data collection, interpretation and
analysis (comparing and contrasting primary sources in the light of the data collected). Research
participants' personal narratives of their experience of neo-Pentecostal practices were heard in
a semi-structured format. These aided in establishing ecclesiastical views on the causes of the
lack of integrating a scientific imagination and rationality in neo-Pentecostal spiritual
experience; and consequently informed the study on whether the current theological
orientations of neo-Pentecostal congregations in Livingstone have a positive or negative impact
on the economic conditions of members. Two forms of data collection were employed, namely
qualitative interviews and observation instruments. / Ndzavisiso lowu wu langutisa ku pfumaleka ka vuanakanyi hi vuntshwa bya xisayense na ku
va na ngqhondo eka mamfambiselo ya vulavisisi na vuxopaxopi ku hlamusela matsalelo na
mafambiselo ya swa vugandzeri eka tikereke ta Pentakosta leyintshwa edorobeni ra Livingston,
eZambia. Hambileswi masungulo ya ndzavisiso a ku ri mafambiselo ya vugandzeri, mulavisisi
u tirhise fambiselo ra interdisciplinary na multidisciplinary. Leswi swi pfunete mulavisisi ku
twisisa ku hambana eka swa thiyori leyi yi nga xiseketelo xa Pentakosta leyintshwa ya swa
vugandzeri na mafambiselo ya kona tanhilaha swi endliwaka hi lava nga vachumayeri va yona
pentakosta leyintshwa. Vuxopaxopi bya xisayense byi seketeriwe hi thiyori yo xopaxopa leyi
nga endliwa ku kuma leswo xana mafambiselo ya Pentakosta leyintshwa ya pfuneta eka
swiyimo swa ikhonomi eka swirho swa kereke swa yona eLivingston. Rimba ra swa vugandzeri
eka ndzavisiso lowu wu seketeriwe hi ndzhenzheleko wa vurisi bya kereke ku nga "pastoral
cycle", lowu wu faneleke ku va mbilu ya mafambiselo wahi na wahi ya vugandzeri (Ballard &
Pritchard 2006). Methodoloji ya ndzavisiso a yi katsa ku hlengeletea vutivi, ku byi toloka no
byi xopaxopa (ku kotlanisa na ku pimanisa swihlovo swa vutivi hi ku landza data leyi yi nga
hlengeletiwa). Lava a va ri na xiavo eka ndzavisiso, va endle marungula ya vona na ntokoto wa
vona hi mafambiselo ya Pentekosta leyintshwa ya yingiseriwile hi fomati yo ka yi nga
kunguhatiwangi swinene ku nga semi-structured format. Leswi swi pfunete ekusunguleni
mianakanyo ya kereke ya vukreste hi swivangelo swa ku pfumaleka ka ku hlanganisa na ku
anakanya hi vuntshwa mavonelo na ntokoto eka swa moya hi swa Pentekosta leyintshwa; hi ku
landza swona leswi, swi pfunete ndzavisiso hi leswo xana mavonelo yo hambana hi swa
vugandzeri bya Pentakosta leyintshwa eka nhlengeletano eLivingston leswo xana yi na vuyelo
lebyinene kumbe lebyi nga ri ku lebyinene eka swiyimo swa ikhonomi ya swirho. Ku tirhisiwe
minxaka mimbirhi ya nhlengeleto ya vutivi, ku nga qualitative interviews na xitirho xa ku
languta kunene leswi endlekaka (observation instruments). / Practical Theology / D. Th. (Practical Theology)
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Livingstone's 'Lives' : a metabiography of a Victorian iconLivingstone, Justin David January 2012 (has links)
Dr. David Livingstone, the Victorian “missionary-explorer”, has attracted more written commentary than nearly any other heroic figure of the nineteenth century. In the years following his death, he rapidly became the subject of a major “biographical industry” and indeed he continues to sustain an academic industry as well. Yet, out of the extensive discourse that has installed itself around him, no single unified image of Livingstone emerges. Rather, he has been represented in diverse ways and put to work in a variety of socio-political contexts. This thesis interrogates the heterogeneous nature of Livingstone’s legacy and explores the plurality of identities that he has posthumously acquired. In approaching Livingstone’s “Lives” the methodology employed is that of metabiographical analysis, essentially a biography of biographies. This framework does not aim to uncover the true nature of the “biographee” but is rather concerned with the malleability and ideological embeddedness of biographical representation. The first chapter considers Livingstone’s own self-representation by critically analysing Missionary Travels, his best-selling travelogue. I argue that the text is more ambivalent than has hitherto been acknowledged and that its heterogeneity facilitated the diversity of Livingstone’s posthumous interpretations. The second chapter discusses Livingstone’s Victorian commemoration, exploring a body of hitherto unexamined remembrance literature, a wealth of obituaries and elegiac poetry. Focusing on a brief historical juncture, the year of his national memorial, presents an opportunity to reflect on some of the foundation stones of his legacy. The next chapter concerns itself with Livingstone’s imperialist construction, certainly his most persistent image. It discusses the way in which he was routinely re-presented in order to meet the evolving demands of empire. Yet, Livingstone was never constructed homogenously at any one colonial moment and so I argue that we should speak of his imperial legacies. The penultimate chapter considers the Scottish dimension of Livingstone’s reputation in a range of contexts, from the Celtic Revival to Kailyard. While some ignored his northern heritage, his national identity was of vital importance for others who used him to negotiate a Scottish national consciousness. The final chapter extends the concept of life-writing to include fictional portrayals of Livingstone. The focus here is primarily on postcolonial literature in which, as a cherished icon of empire, he became a focal point for critique and imaginative violence. The thesis contributes to the growing body of scholarship on life-writing and directs further attention to the changing nature and political efficacy of historical lives. Livingstone emerges as a site of competing meanings; the Victorian hero has himself become a colonised space.
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"Symbiosis or death" an ecocritical examination of Douglas Livingstone's poetryStevens, Mariss Patricia January 2005 (has links)
As the quotation in the title of this thesis indicates, Douglas Livingstone states that unless humankind can learn to live in mutuality with the rest of the natural world, the human race faces extinction. Using the relatively new critical approach of ecological literary criticism (ecocriticism) this thesis explores Livingstone's preoccupation with "symbiosis or death" and shows that the predominant theme in his ecologically-orientated poetry is one of ecological despair. Countering this is a tentative thread of hope. Possible resolution lies in the human capacity to attain compassion and wisdom through the judicious use of science, creativity, the power of art and the power of love. Livingstone's ecological preoccupation is thus informed by the universal themes which have pervaded literature since its recorded beginnings. The first chapter examines the concepts of ecology and literary ecocriticism, followed by a chapter on the life and work of Douglas Livingstone, and a review of the critical response to the five collections of poetry which predate A Littoral Zone, his final work. The remaining four chapters offer an analysis of his ecologically-orientated poetry, with the majority of the space given to an examination of A Littoral Zone. The following ecological themes are used in the analysis of the poems: evolutionary theory, humankind's relationship to nature, ecological equilibrium, and ecological destruction. The latter two themes are shown to represent Livingstone's view of the ideal and the real, or the opposites of hope and despair. The analysis interweaves an argument with the existing critical response to this collection. This thesis demonstrates that Livingstone's crucial message – the need for humankind to attain ecological sensibility or “the knowledge of right living” (Ellen Swallow) and so obviate its certain extinction – has largely been ignored in previous critical works.
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