East African medical journal
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Editorial Comment Review
Safe motherhood in Africa: achievable goal or a dream?
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Review
Complementary factors contributing to the rapid spread of HIV-I in sub-Saharan Africa: a review.
To examine and establish complementary factors that contribute to the alarmingly high prevalence of HIV-1 in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) in order to create awareness and suggest possible measures to avert the spread of the pandemic. ⋯ There are many reasons why the spread of HIV-1 in SSA has not been declining over the years. Main risk factors for HIV-1 infection and AIDS disease in SSA were found to include poverty, famine, low status of women in society, corruption, naive risk taking perception, resistance to sexual behaviour change, high prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STI), internal conflicts and refugee status, antiquated beliefs, lack of recreational facilities, ignorance of individual's HIV status, child and adult prostitution, uncertainty of safety of blood intended for transfusion, widow inheritance, circumcision, illiteracy and female genital cutting and polygamy. It is suggested that control programmes both local and donor-driven seeking to mitigate the spread of HIV-1 in SSA should take into account the apparent multiplicity of sub-Saharan African cultures and beliefs, some of which augment the spread of HIV-1.
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To investigate the optimal surgical management of patients with hepatic trauma. ⋯ Patients with major exanguinating injuries will not survive complex procedures such as formal hepatic resection or complex procedures such as formal hepatic resection or pancreaticoduodenectomy. The operating team must undergo a radical shift in their "surgical ideology" if the patient is to survive such devastating injuries. The central principle of damage control surgery is that patients died of the triad of coagulopathy, hypothermia and metabolic acidosis. Damage control surgery can be thought of in three distinct phases: initial truncated laparotomy, resuscitation phase and definitive operation.