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1.
Afr. j. disabil. (Online) ; 2(1): 1-6, 2013. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1256819

ABSTRACT

The Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) region is the epicentre of the global HIV epidemic and also home to a large number of people with disabilities. Both HIV and Disability are significant public health issues. While they are generally viewed as distinct and unrelated phenomena data seems to suggest that they are particularly closely intertwined in ESA. For the first time in history, by using the same disability indicator consistently, the publication of the World Report on Disability in 2011 has allowed for the comparison of disability data between countries, and across regions. This has the potential to shed some light on the relationship between disability and socio-economic markers and other health conditions in a way that was not possible previously. In the absence of disability and HIV-specific population-based surveys, this paper uses global socio-economic and HIV datasets and compares them to data contained in the most recent World Report on Disability. The analysis suggests that disability prevalence may be related to HIV-prevalence in ESA (Pearson 0.87). It identifies research and policy gaps and seeks to shed light on the relationship between the two phenomena. It concludes that, more than any other region in the world, ESA needs to ensure better data collection on disability and the inclusion of disability throughout its HIV programmes in order to provide a comprehensive and appropriate response to the epidemic


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons , HIV Infections , Public Health/economics
2.
Afr. j. disabil. (Online) ; 1(1): 1-7, 2012.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1256808

ABSTRACT

Poor people with disabilities who live in poor rural societies experience unique problems in accessing health services. Their situation is influenced by multiple factors which unfold and interplay throughout the person's life course. The difficulties do not only affect the person with a disability and his or her family, but also impact on the relevant care unit. The barriers are rooted in a life in poverty, upheld and maintained by poverty-reinforcing social forces of the past and the present, and reinforced by the lack of the person's perspective of the health services. This article explores how difficulties may interact and influence access to and utilisation of health services, and how this may render health services out of reach even when they are available. The study reveals that non-compliance is not necessarily about neglect but could as well be a matter of lived poverty. The study was based on in-depth interviews with people with disabilities and family members, and semi-structured interviews with health personnel. The data analysis is contextual and interpretive. When offering health services to people with disabilities living in resource-poor settings, services should take into consideration the person's history, the needs, and the resources and abilities of the family group. Rethinking access to health services should transcend a narrow medical institutionalisation of health professional's training, and include a patient's perspective and a social vision in understanding and practice. Such rethinking requires health service models that integrate the skills of health professionals with the skills of disabled people and their family members. Such skills lie dormant at community level, and need to be recognised and utilised


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons , Health Promotion , Health Services Accessibility , Healthcare Financing , Poverty , Public Health/economics , South Africa
3.
J. R. Soc. Health ; 111(3): 101-4, 1991.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1263287

ABSTRACT

The explosion in the number of refugees throughout the world has led to the development of a new medical speciality; Migration Medicine. Such a speciality has a strong public health dimension. Addressing the public health needs of refugees especially in developing countries is one of the few challenges of practising public medicine which gives measurable results in weeks rather than years. Whilst I was a trainee in Public Health Medicine in Glasgow; UK; I was seconded to Medecins Sans Frontieres ('doctors without borders') to act as Medical Co-ordinator of a relief operation for refugees from Sudan. This paper discusses some of the lessons that the experience taught me which have application to many refugee situations throughout the world


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/prevention & control , Food Supply/standards , Health Services Needs and Demand , Health Status , Immunization/standards , Public Health/economics , Sanitation/standards
4.
Nairobi; Ministry of Health - Republic of Kenya; .
Non-conventional in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1276437
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