Archive for the ‘Population’ Category

Measuring Access to Radio Health Communications in Rural Guatemala

BY KATHRYN JACOBSON, JILL NELSON & KAREN OWEN Limited access to health information and services is one of the many challenges common to rural residents around the world, especially those who live in low income countries.  One way to reach out to isolated populations is through radio communications that can provide timely and locally-appropriate information [...]

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Posted by on March 28th, 2011 No Comments

Establishing the Taiwan Genetic Data Bank

BY TONY YANG The completion of the Human Genome Project marked the dawn of a bold new era — the era of the genome in biology and medicine.  There has been growing biomedical research on relating population-based genomic analyses to diseases.  This is a transformation from investigating a small group of individuals to analyzing the [...]

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Posted by on March 13th, 2010 No Comments

The Interface Between HIV/AIDS Status, Household Nutrition, Agricultural Production & Household Welfare in Uganda

BY DAWN C. PARKER WITH MACTION KOMWA Although HIV/AIDS has no boundaries, the most affected region is sub-Saharan Africa, where 25 of the 40 million people globally living with the virus live. The epidemic has eroded the ability of rural African households to produce food and other agricultural products, generate income, and care for and [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Nutrition Education as a Global Health Intervention: Effects Among Nicaraguan Adolescent Girls

BY LISA PAWLOSKI Adolescent girls in developing countries are often considered a nutritionally at-risk group. Nutritional anthropologists study the impact of nutrition on adolescent growth and development and the sociocultural factors which influence nutritional status. Ten years ago, I examined the nutritional status of adolescent girls living in Mali, West Africa, and found them to [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Population Growth as a Driving Force of Global & Environmental Changes

BY DAVID W. WONG Two recent events attracted different levels of attention nationally and globally. After several decades of debates and rigorous research, and the discovery of hard evidence, climatologists and Earth scientists have come to the conclusion that global warming is not a hypothesis anymore but a fact. Global warming has triggered various policy [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Global Anger

BY LINDSAY IRVINE The cold war is over, but tempers are flaring across the globe. Citizens resent big government, failed government, and repressive government. They resent loopholes for the rich, handouts for the poor, lack of opportunity, and taxes all around. Global anger is on the rise. Susan Tolchin, a professor of public policy in [...]

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Posted by on November 10th, 2004 No Comments