320 results
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2. The Incidence and Age Distribution of Death: Mortality by Caste, Gender, and Sector of Origin in India in the Mid-2010s.
- Author
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Subramanian, S.
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,DEATH rate ,CASTE ,GENDER ,RURAL-urban differences - Abstract
This paper considers the distribution of mortality across social groups classified by caste, gender and sector of origin in India in the mid-2010s: as such, the essay is intended to be both a methodological/measurement-oriented study and a substantive empirical assessment of an important dimension of human functioning in India. The analysis is carried out employing micro-data on the age-distributions of population and death-rates available in the National Family Health Survey of 2015–16 (NFHS-4). Mortality in the paper is measured in terms of the crude death rate, an indicator of "inefficiency" in the age-distribution of deaths, and an "age-adjusted" death rate which takes account of both the mean and the dispersion of a distribution. The last-mentioned indicator is taken to be the preferred measure of mortality. The analysis in the paper suggests that mortality outcomes across castes replicate the caste hierarchy and that there is a sharp rural-urban divide in the distribution of death. Mortality sex-ratios are found to be relatively more favourable for the lower than the higher castes. The results presented in the paper are not unexpected, but they provide quantitative confirmation of one's worst suspicions regarding the skewed distribution of mortality across social groups in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Behavioural determinants of health-care utilisation among elderly population: a cross-sectional analysis from Punjab.
- Author
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Kansra, Pooja and Khadar, Amiya Abdul
- Subjects
MEDICAL care use ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CROSS-sectional method ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,STATISTICAL sampling ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SEX distribution ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care for older people ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,OLD age - Abstract
Purpose: Population ageing is a demographic transition and burdens every country's health sector. A lack of social security combined with low government health-sector spending has made health-care utilisation difficult among elderly in many developing countries like India. This makes population ageing a global phenomenon for policymakers, researchers and stakeholders to discuss and debate in 21st century. The purpose of this paper is to examine the behavioural determinants of health-care utilisation among elderly population in Punjab. Design/methodology/approach: This study examines health-care utilisation among the elderly population in Punjab. A structured questionnaire was used to collect the data in the state of Punjab, with a multi-stage stratified random sample of 385 respondents. Logit regression was used to analyse the association between several behavioural factors like age, gender, place of residence, source of livelihood, education and frequency of visits with health-care utilisation among elderly aged 60 and above. Findings: This study revealed that gender, age, place of residence, source of livelihood, education and frequency of visits were significant determinants of health-care utilisation among elderly population. Originality/value: This study directs the need to improve health-care utilisation in a country, reducing inequalities that exist among the elderly population with respect to socio-economic and demographic differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Free Papers Compiled.
- Subjects
STROKE ,AGE distribution ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SEX distribution ,RISK assessment ,ANXIETY ,COMORBIDITY ,DISEASE complications - Published
- 2022
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5. Modern Marriage in a Traditional Society: The Influence of College Education on Marriage in India.
- Author
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Vikram, Kriti
- Subjects
WOMEN'S education ,MARRIAGE ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,SELF-efficacy ,SPOUSES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,AGE distribution ,DECISION making ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
India has witnessed a dramatic expansion of higher education, and women have emerged as noteworthy winners in the process. This paper focuses on the role of female college education on four dimensions of marriage: age at marriage, autonomy in the choice of spouse, work and financial empowerment, and quality of marital relationship. The study uses a sample of 35,561 currently married women from the 2011-2012 wave of the nationally representative India Human Development Survey (IHDS). It demonstrates that higher education, particularly college education, enables women to lead lives substantively different from their less-educated peers. College-educated women marry at later ages, enjoy greater autonomy in choosing their husbands, and have a more egalitarian relationship with their spouses. Furthermore, the study finds that educational homogamy and hypogamy afford greater autonomy to women. Even without a concomitant increase in labor force participation, college education among women appears to have a transformative effect on marriage in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Using data mining methods for risk assessment and intervention planning in diabetic patients.
- Author
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Ramanathan, Vanisree, Mhamane, Sharyu, Pawar, Jayesh, K., Nisha P., Kumar, Ujjwal, Tripathi, Shailesh, Pradhan, Keerti B., and Bhattacharya, Sudip
- Subjects
DIABETES risk factors ,TREATMENT of diabetes ,BLOOD sugar analysis ,MEDICAL protocols ,RISK assessment ,PREPROCEDURAL fasting ,PREDIABETIC state ,DATA mining ,MEDICAL informatics ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,FOOD consumption ,SEX distribution ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Introduction: Data mining in healthcare is a nascent arena of research in healthcare. Heterogeneity of Diabetes Mellitus in terms of clinical presentation calls for newer methods of research to study potential risk factors. Aim: The paper aims to use clustering techniques to identify the relationship between the four variables, namely the pre-prandial and postprandial sugar level, age and sex. Methods: The data was taken from a diagnostic laboratory in Wagholi, Pune. We conducted K-mean algorithm, EM algorithm, model-based clustering and t-mixture model. Results: It is evidenced that the data was best fitted to the t-mixture model. Our 50% samples were people with diabetes, 17% had prediabetes. Trivial correlation existed between age and sugar level. Males and females were equally at risk of having diabetes. Data presented concludes that age and sex have no effect on the risk of having diabetes. Data mining can be used to deduce meaningful clusters to drive plan-based interventions in the population. Conclusion: Methods of data mining can be used to deduce meaningful clusters in a heterogeneous dataset thus providing policymakers and healthcare researchers with novel information that will potentially contribute in formulating evidence-based policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. On Feeney's method for correcting age distributions for heaping on multiples of five.
- Author
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Saxena PC and Gogte BH
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- Africa, Africa South of the Sahara, Africa, Eastern, Asia, Asia, Southeastern, Censuses, Demography, Developing Countries, India, Indonesia, Population, Tanzania, Age Distribution, Age Factors, Models, Theoretical, Population Characteristics, Research
- Published
- 1985
8. A Cross-Sectional Study on Pattern of Thoraco-abdominal Injuries in Victims of Fatal Road Traffic Accidents.
- Author
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Yadav, Kapil, Atal, Devinder Kumar, Chawla, Hitesh, Yadav, Renu, Khan, Mustafa, and Yadav, Ravi Prakash
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TRAFFIC safety ,WOUNDS & injuries ,VICTIMS ,CROSS-sectional method ,TRAFFIC accidents ,AUTOPSY ,SEX distribution ,TERTIARY care ,HOSPITALS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,ABDOMINAL injuries ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PELVIC fractures ,PROFESSIONAL licenses ,CHEST injuries ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,RIB fractures ,HUMAN error - Abstract
Background: Road traffic accidents are preventable public health issues and are becoming more common. These accidents can be linked to a number of factors, including an increase in the number of vehicles on the roads, changes in daily life, a nasty habit of breaking traffic laws, anarchic traffic systems, and risky driving practices. Thoraco-abdominal injury in different forms is one of the major causes of mortality in the victims of fatal road traffic accidents. The aim of this study was to know the pattern of thoraco-abdominal injuries in victims of fatal road traffic accident cases. Material & Method: The present study was conducted at the tertiary healthcare centre in southern Haryana. Total of 75 cases of fatal road traffic accident cases were enrolled during one year of study period. The basic information about the deceased like age, gender, mode of travel of the victim was obtained from investigating officer narration and inquest papers. During autopsy, detailed examination of injuries was carried out and the autopsy findings were recorded and analyzed. Results: It was observed that out of 75 cases male outnumbered females in ratio 5.25:1. Majority of the victims belonged to the age group 21-30 years. The commonest injury of the thoracic region was rib fracture (41.3%). It was also observed that 17.3% of victims had pelvic fracture. Conclusion: Human error is a major contributing factor to fatal RTAs, which can be avoided in many cases. A more stringent licensing policy, particularly for four-wheelers, increased knowledge of traffic laws, the reduction of drug abuse and an appropriate road network that is in line with traffic volume can help to reduce the number of fatal road traffic accidents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. "I Don't Want to Have the Time When I Do Nothing": Aging and Reconfigured Leisure Practices During the Pandemic.
- Author
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Tripathi, Ashwin and Samanta, Tannistha
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LEISURE ,SOCIAL participation ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,TIME ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,SOCIAL norms ,RESEARCH methodology ,AGE distribution ,PLEASURE ,INTERVIEWING ,RECREATION ,LIFE ,DIARY (Literary form) ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL classes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HINDUISM ,TELEVISION ,METROPOLITAN areas ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,JUDGMENT sampling ,HOBBIES ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
In this paper, we contend that urban middle-class older Indians engaged in "serious leisure" as a way to reimagine and reconfigure the structure of everyday life during the pandemic-led epochal downtime. In particular, we heuristically show that leisure activity patterns and constraint negotiation strategies among older Indians followed conceptual semblances with the dominant leisure-based typology of Serious Leisure Perspective. By thematically analysing household surveys (n = 71), time-use diaries and in-depth interviews (n = 15) of middle to upper middle-class individuals (55–80 years), we show how both men and women distinguished between serious leisure that is marked by motivation, agency and perseverance with that of unstructured, routinized free-time (or causal leisure). Time-use diaries suggested that despite the changed realities of heightened domestic time available to both genders due to the pandemic, women recorded higher proportion of their daily hours in household management and caregiving. Although women were governed by moral-cultural self-descriptions in their engagement with leisure, it was often associated with an enhanced sense of self-actualisation, self-management and identity. Overall, we show how the social codes of age and gender were inextricably linked with the practice of leisure during the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. COVID-19 outbreak in India: age-wise analysis of patients.
- Author
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Kumar, Rajan
- Subjects
SEX distribution ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to indicate the current situation of the COVID-19 outbreak in India, the world's second-most populous country. India reported its first COVID-19 case in the southern province of Kerala in late January 2020. Since then, the outbreak has spread to other provinces and union territories, with the highest number of cases reported in Maharashtra province as of 24 May 2020. Design/methodology/approach: This paper presents the age- and gender-wise analysis of COVID-19 patients in Maharashtra province and the whole nation. Findings: It shows that 75% of them belong to the age group of 21–60 years and the age above 50 years has a very high fatality rate of 14.52% in Maharashtra. This analysis also shows that 76% of COVID-19 cases are in males in the nation. The data indicates that in the nation, 75.3% of the deaths are in the age group over 60 years and 86% of cases of death had diabetes-related comorbidity, hypertension, chronic kidney problems and heart problems. In India, the case-fatality rate, which estimates the proportion of deaths among identified confirmed cases, is 2.93% as of 24 May, which is significantly less than that many countries. Originality/value: To the best of the author's knowledge, this is the first attempt to indicate the current situation of the COVID-19 outbreak in India based on age and gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. Novice therapist, the client and therapy: Integrating the triad.
- Author
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Bhandari, Anahita and Sriram, Sujata
- Subjects
WORK experience (Employment) ,PROFESSIONS ,COUNSELING ,CLIENT relations ,AGE distribution ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,ENTRY level employees ,SEX distribution ,MEDICAL referrals ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,SUPERVISION of employees ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Therapy process research focuses on understanding how therapy is conducted by professionals in the field. It is a nascent field of psychotherapy enquiry in India. This paper explores how novice therapists in India perceive their clients, and how this influences the process of therapy. In depth interviews were conducted with ten novice therapists, with less than six years of practice experience, from Mumbai, India. The data was thematically analysed. The data revealed that therapists' perceptions of their clients were defined by socio‐demographic features of age and gender, along with presenting complaints and personal attributes. Participants had defined beliefs about good clients as contrasted with difficult ones. Distinct preferences for particular client types were identified. The antecedents to these beliefs were attributed to the therapist's worldview, their training and the supervision received. These views, and the conceptualisation of the client, influenced the choice of client, the process of therapy and how they proceeded with sessions, and their methods of referral. The data from the study has implications for therapist training, supervision and further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. An alternative estimation of the death toll of the Covid-19 pandemic in India.
- Author
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Guilmoto, Christophe Z.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,DEATH rate ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 ,AGE distribution ,AGE groups ,REAL numbers - Abstract
The absence of reliable registration of Covid-19 deaths in India has prevented proper assessment and monitoring of the coronavirus pandemic. In addition, India's relatively young age structure tends to conceal the severity of Covid-19 mortality, which is concentrated in older age groups. In this paper, we present four different demographic samples of Indian populations for which we have information on both their demographic structures and death outcomes. We show that we can model the age distribution of Covid-19 mortality in India and use this modeling to estimate Covid-19 mortality in the country. Our findings point to a death toll of approximately 3.2–3.7 million persons by early November 2021. Once India's age structure is factored in, these figures correspond to one of the most severe cases of Covid-19 mortality in the world. India has recorded after February 2021 the second outbreak of coronavirus that has affected the entire country. The accuracy of official statistics of Covid-19 mortality has been questioned, and the real number of Covid-19 deaths is thought to be several times higher than reported. In this paper, we assembled four independent population samples to model and estimate the level of Covid-19 mortality in India. We first used a population sample with the age and sex of Covid-19 victims to develop a Gompertz model of Covid-19 mortality in India. We applied and adjusted this mortality model on two other national population samples after factoring in the demographic characteristics of these samples. We finally derive from these samples the most reasonable estimate of Covid-19 mortality level in India and confirm this result using a fourth population sample. Our findings point to a death toll of about 3.2–3.7 million persons by late May 2021. This is by far the largest number of Covid-19 deaths in the world. Once standardized for age and sex structure, India's Covid-19 mortality rate is above Brazil and the USA. Our analysis shows that existing population samples allow an alternative estimation of deaths due to Covid-19 in India. The results imply that only one out of 7–8 deaths appear to have been recorded as a Covid-19 death in India. The estimates also point to a very high Covid-19 mortality rate, which is even higher after age and sex standardization. The magnitude of the pandemic in India requires immediate attention. In the absence of effective remedies, this calls for a strong response based on a combination of non-pharmaceutical interventions and the scale-up of vaccination to make them accessible to all, with an improved surveillance system to monitor the progression of the pandemic and its spread across India's regions and social groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. Impact of social isolation and leisure activities on cognition and depression: A study on middle‐aged and older adults in India.
- Author
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Mishra, Bijeta and Pradhan, Jalandhar
- Subjects
COGNITION disorder risk factors ,MENTAL depression risk factors ,LEISURE ,EXECUTIVE function ,ANALYSIS of variance ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,AGE distribution ,CROSS-sectional method ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL isolation ,RISK assessment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE prevalence ,CENTER for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale ,DATA analysis software ,SENILE dementia ,DISEASE risk factors ,MIDDLE age ,OLD age - Abstract
Introduction: Recent studies highlight the negative impact of social isolation and involvement in leisure activities on enhanced well‐being of individuals. However, there is dearth of evidence on relationship between social isolation and leisure activities on cognitive abilities and depression of older adults in the Indian context. The paper reports the impact of social isolation and leisure activities on cognitive functioning and depression of older adults. Methods: Data were collected from the Longitudinal Ageing Study of India (LASI), and 63,806 participants aged 45 years or above were considered for the study with adherence to the exclusion criteria. Multivariate analysis was carried out to analyse the group‐based differences. Results: Social isolation (F = 102.09, p < 0.01; η2 = 0.09) and leisure (F = 224.54, p < 0.01; η2 = 0.07) had a statistically significant impact on the cognition and depressive symptoms of participants. Socially isolated older adults with little involvement in leisure activities had the worst cognitive functioning (M = 32.76, SD = 4.41), whereas middle‐aged adults who were actively involved in leisure activities and experienced the least social isolation exhibited the best cognitive functioning (M = 32.76, SD = 4.41). However, leisure and age as independent factors did not have a significant impact on depression. Conclusion: Socially isolated participants, irrespective of age, and involvement in leisure activities exhibit poor cognitive functioning and are more likely to suffer from depression as compared to their counterparts. The findings of the study can be used to design intervention strategies aimed at reducing social isolation by incorporating leisure activities to ensure the optimal functioning of middle‐aged and older adults. Key points: Socially isolated older adults with least involvement in leisure activities reported the worst cognitive functioning.Socially isolated participants reported a positive association with depressive symptomatology.Both middle‐aged and older adults who engaged in leisure activities reported better cognitive functioning as compared to their counterparts who did not engage in any form of leisure activities.Leisure as an independent factor is not significantly associated with depressive symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Travesty of Life Elders Abuse an Inquiry of Physical and Psychological Abuse.
- Author
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Bajpai, Naval, Kulshreshtha, Kushagra, Dubey, Prince, and Sharma, Gunjan
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PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse ,SOCIAL problems ,ANALYSIS of variance ,RESEARCH methodology ,AGE distribution ,RISK assessment ,SOCIAL isolation ,SEX distribution ,ABUSE of older people ,FACTOR analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Elder abuse is evil in human society. The present paper unveils this social issue from two major factors psychological and physical abuse. The study sensitizes the subject matter of study by examining the effects of demographic variables like gender and age on elders. For achieving the purpose of the study the research is a design by exploring and validating the factors of measuring elder abuse through the mix method approach, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). To test the established hypotheses of the effects of the demographic variable on elders the two-way ANOVA was applied. The present study verdicts the development of a sound measurement scale with two influence factors. The separate and composite effect of aging and gender type on elder abuse was evidenced. These findings are crucial especially when the prevalence of elder abuse is higher during COVID-19. The limited novel understudied variable opens an avenue for further research in behavioral and demographic variables like marital status. The present study has practical insinuation for caring the elders in any human society like physical and psychological treatment of elders to avoid abusive situations. In addition, the study attempts to validate the novel issues like psychological and physical abuse of elders in the dimensions of demographic variables. Some rare studies in the Indian continent established the motivation of conducting the research on this dimension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Demographic study of Khasis.
- Author
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Marbaniang SL
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Asia, Culture, Demography, Developing Countries, Educational Status, India, Marital Status, Marriage, Population, Population Dynamics, Religion, Rural Population, Sex Factors, Urban Population, Age Distribution, Ethnicity, Population Characteristics, Population Density, Population Growth, Sex Distribution
- Published
- 1982
16. Persistent economic inequalities in menstrual hygiene practices in India: a decomposition analysis.
- Author
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Pradhan, Jalandhar, Patra, Kshirabdhi Tanaya, and Behera, Sasmita
- Subjects
LITERACY ,HUMAN rights ,RURAL conditions ,AGE distribution ,MENSTRUATION ,HYGIENE ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SOCIOECONOMIC status ,SOCIOECONOMIC disparities in health ,SOCIAL classes ,TELEVISION ,NEWSPAPERS ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,WOMEN'S health ,READING ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,RELIGION - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the socio-economic inequalities that exist in the use of unhygienic menstrual practices in India and its states, as well as to identify the contribution of various socio-economic factors that leads to these inequalities. Design/methodology/approach: Data from the National Family Health Survey-5 (2019–21) for 240,285 menstruating women aged 15–24 years is used to examine the above objectives. The concentration index for unhygienic menstrual practices is calculated to measure the socio-economic inequalities, which are then decomposed into their determining factors. Findings: The state of Punjab experiencing the highest level of economic inequality, followed by Telangana and Haryana. The results from decomposition analysis suggest that rural residence (13%), illiteracy (7%), poor economic status (53%), not reading newspaper (12%) and not watching TV (14%) contribute 99% to the total socio-economic inequality in using unhygienic menstrual practices in India. The contribution of economic status to total inequalities is more in all the states except for Kerala and Mizoram, where caste and residence play an important role. Originality/value: This paper signifies the role of economic inequality in the use of unhygienic menstrual practices in India as well as the contribution of various socio-economic factors contributing towards these inequalities. The results from decomposition analysis suggest the need for unique health intervention strategies for different states following the evidence of major contributions to total inequalities in the use of unhygienic menstrual practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Provenance and sedimentation age of the Proterozoic clastic succession of the Garhwal‐Kumaon Lesser Himalaya, NW‐India: Clues from U–Pb zircon and Sr–Nd isotopes.
- Author
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Negi, Manju, Saha, Subhojit, Ghosh, Sumit K., and Rai, Santosh K.
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ZIRCON ,PROTEROZOIC Era ,NEODYMIUM isotopes ,OROGENIC belts ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,AGE distribution ,ISOTOPES ,CHEMICAL ionization mass spectrometry ,LASER ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry - Abstract
The paper presents data on the U–Pb chronology of detrital zircon grains and radiogenic isotopic composition (87Sr/86Sr, ɛNd) from the Proterozoic clastic successions of the Garhwal‐Kumaon Lesser Himalaya representing the extended northern Indian cratonic margin, NW India. The Proterozoic Lesser Himalayan Basin in Garhwal‐Kumaon Himalaya is divided into two sectors, namely, Inner Lesser Himalaya (ILH) and Outer Lesser Himalaya (OLH) by a tectonic boundary, namely the Tons Thrust (TT). Age distribution from inner and outer sectors of the Lesser Himalaya shows that the U–Pb chronology of most of these zircons provides Palaeoproterozoic (between 1.6 and 1.8 Ga) to Neoproterozoic (800 Ma) ages. The age data suggest sedimentation of the Rautgara Formation (Damtha Group) of ILH continued till the Neoproterozoic (~850 Ma), which was earlier regarded as ≤1.6 Ga. Tracking the detrital U–Pb zircon ages in the near adjacent cratonic parts point towards Aravalli Orogen as the major source region. Whole‐rock ƐNd(0) values for ILH rocks range from −37.6 to −14.6 and for OLH it ranges from −19.6 to −6.7. More negative ƐNd values along with dominance of Neoarchean‐Palaeoproterozoic ages in ILH indicates supply from more evolved protolith or recycled sources and less negative ƐNd values with major Neoproterozic zircon ages from OLH supports for less evolved source rock. The change from more negative ƐNd to less negative ƐNd values progressively upward the stratigraphy can be due to a shift in source with time. Both U–Pb zircon and ƐNd supports for a continuous sedimentation model, rule out the presence of ~500 Ma unconformity within the LH and argues for separate evolution of the Lesser Himalayan Basin on the trailing edge of the extended north Indian craton in "Columbia" configuration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Rising cesarean deliveries in India: medical compulsions or convenience of the affluent?
- Author
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Kumar, Rishi and Lakhtakia, Supriya
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE intervals ,AGE distribution ,POPULATION geography ,ABORTION ,FAMILIES ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,SURVEYS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL classes ,EMPLOYMENT ,CESAREAN section ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,PROPRIETARY hospitals ,ATTITUDES toward pregnancy ,RELIGION ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
From 2005-06 to 2015-16, proportion of cesarean deliveries in total deliveries has almost doubled in India. In this paper, we study changes in prevalence of cesarean deliveries across different social-economic groups and study factors affecting odds of undergoing cesarean delivery. The present paper was based on National Family Health Surveys and employs logistic regression. We find that rise in cesarean deliveries has been across social groups, religions, urban/rural India, wealth groups, though increase has not been uniform. Further, many economically affluent states have high proportion of cesarean deliveries. We find that women delivering at private hospitals had significantly higher odds of opting for cesarean delivery. Further, women belonging to rich households were more likely to go through surgery for birth. In case of earlier terminated pregnancies, odds were higher too. The higher odds of cesarean sections in the relatively affluent geographic regions, richer households and private institutions indicate that these procedures may be driven by non-medical reasons in many cases, pointing toward the use of surgical procedures for the convenience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Knowledge on Use of Diaper and Its Impact on Child Health among Mothers of Infants.
- Author
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Thomas, Jessy
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,HEALTH literacy ,INCOME ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,QUANTITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,CHI-squared test ,MOTHER-infant relationship ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,RESEARCH methodology ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,DIAPERS ,BIRTH order ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
The present study aims to assess the knowledge on use of diaper and its impact on child health among mothers of infants. The objectives of the study was to assess the knowledge on use of diaper and its impact on child health among mothers of infants and to find out the association between the knowledge onuse of diaper and its impact of child health among the mothers of infants and selected socio personal variables. Non experimental descriptive study design was used in the study. The data was collected by using a semi structured questionnaire. The collected data was analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The result shows that out of 50 samples majority of the children are of age range 0-2 months, 52% were male children and was first born (54%). Majority of the sample are at age group 26-30 years (36%), 58% samples are educated upto graduate level, 42% of samples were housewives and 48% have family income above 30,000, 94% of children were using disposable diapers ,42% of children using diapers for 3-4 hours and 80% children had no exposure to diaper rash. Among the samples, 56% of mother had moderate knowledge, 34% of mothers had poor knowledge and, 10% of mothers had good knowledge. There is significant association between the age of mother and occupation of mother and there is no association between age of child, sex of child, birth order of child, education of mother, income of family, type of diaper used, duration of diaper used, previous exposure to diaper rash. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Challenges of diabetes care in India: Results from a Family Cohort Study.
- Author
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Devassy, Saju Madavanakadu, Allagh, Komal Preet, Benny, Anuja Maria, and Scaria, Lorane
- Subjects
BLOOD sugar analysis ,DIAGNOSIS of diabetes ,DIABETES prevention ,TREATMENT of diabetes ,INSULIN therapy ,SPORTS participation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSS-sectional method ,SELF-evaluation ,AGE distribution ,DIABETES ,MEDICAL care costs ,INTERVIEWING ,HYPOGLYCEMIC agents ,CONTINUUM of care ,HEALTH literacy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH behavior ,RESEARCH funding ,DISEASE prevalence ,EXERCISE intensity ,PATIENT compliance ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DISEASE management ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,LONGITUDINAL method ,BEHAVIOR modification ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PREDIABETIC state - Abstract
Objectives: Diabetes is a significant public health concern in India, with Kerala being labeled as the diabetes capital of the country. The study aims to evaluate the prevalence, treatment, and management of diabetes to examine the unmet need for care to propose cost-effective strategies. Design: A cross-sectional study was conducted on a geographically defined cohort population in Ernakulam. Sample: This paper presents diabetes data of adults ≥30 years enrolled from the community cohort. The interviews were conducted with 997 participants at their residence. Measurement: Random blood glucose was assessed for each participant using a finger prick test. Results: The overall prevalence of diabetes was 30.1%, of which 4.1% of participants had undiagnosed diabetes. Among those with diabetes, 86.3% were aware of their diagnosis; among those aware, 86.5% were on treatment. Among those on treatment for diabetes, 54% achieved controlled blood sugar. Conclusion: The challenge in diabetes management is controlling the blood glucose levels of people who adhere to treatment. Younger employed females from lower-income quartiles have the highest risk. The study also raises questions about quality and strategies for medication compliance. The findings inspire future research on care needs, policies, and program responses to reduce the diabetes disease burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A Medical-Legal and Psychological Systematic Review on Vitriolage Related to Gender-Based Violence.
- Author
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Barchielli, Benedetta, Lausi, Giulia, Pizzo, Alessandra, Messineo, Manuel, Del Casale, Antonio, Giannini, Anna Maria, and Ferracuti, Stefano
- Subjects
- *
RISK of violence , *MENTAL illness risk factors , *ONLINE information services , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *CULTURE , *GENDER role , *ACIDS , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *AGE distribution , *DOMESTIC violence , *CRIMINALS , *VIOLENCE , *RACE , *GENDER , *RISK assessment , *CRIME victims , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *SOCIAL isolation , *INTIMATE partner violence , *SEX crimes , *SOCIAL classes , *ALCOHOL drinking , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *MEDLINE , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Attacks perpetrated using acid are a particular form of interpersonal violence, possibly one of the most heinous manifestations of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). Acid attacks are mainly motivated by extramarital cheating, marital conflicts, women's rejection of marriage proposals, and sexual advances. As these attacks are not well understood from a psychological perspective, we conducted a systematic review, following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, of 284 articles identified, 13 were eligible for inclusion. Three main focuses were identified: "Risk and vulnerability factors," "Consequences and implications," and "Interventions and treatments." Acid attacks seem to be more frequent in countries where social and economic development leads to greater tensions over traditional gender roles like Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India. Identified risk factors were young age, low socioeconomic status, low educational attainment, ethnicity, unemployment status of the victim, alcohol, and drug use of the perpetrator. Among the main psychosocial consequences of acid attacks, isolation and social exclusion emerged. Additionally, the paper will discuss the role of mental health consequences and specific treatments from psychological, clinical, and medical-legal points of view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Spatial Pattern of Population Ageing and Household Health Spending in India.
- Author
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Panda, Basant Kumar and Mohanty, Sanjay K.
- Subjects
POPULATION aging ,CITY dwellers ,MEDICAL care costs ,PER capita ,HOUSEHOLDS ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,OLDER people ,STATISTICS ,AGE distribution ,POPULATION geography ,AGING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Studies on the association between population ageing and health spending are inconclusive. Though per capita health spending has a strong age gradient, evidence from the developed countries attributes increasing health expenditure to high spending in terminal year of life. In India, though studies have examined the level, trends and determinants of health care spending, no attempt has been made on association of population ageing and per capita health spending across the districts of India. The objective of this paper was to examine the spatial dependencies and heterogeneities of population ageing and per capita health spending across 640 districts of India. Data from the Census of India (2011) and the consumption expenditure rounds of the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) (2009–10 and 2011–2012) were used in the analysis. Univariate and bivariate LISA analysis, ordinary least square regression, and spatial error model were used to decipher the spatial pattern of population ageing and health spending in the districts of India. Results suggest that per capita health expenditure is positively associated with the proportion of the older adults (aged 60 years and above) in the districts of India. Districts with less than 5% older adults have an annual per capita health expenditure of ₹629 compared to ₹2432 in districts with older adults 12% or more. Districts of India also exhibit large spatial heterogeneity in household health spending. Bivariate Moran's I statistic of proportion of older adults and per capita annual health expenditure was 0.48, suggesting spatially association of the share of the older adults and the per capita annual health expenditure in India. Results of the spatial error model confirmed that share of urban population, mean wealth score, and mean household size are significant predictors of per capita annual health expenditure in India. This study is important to monitor the progress of universal health coverage across the disadvantaged districts and to integrate age component in universal health coverage programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Age of consent: challenges and contradictions of sexual violence laws in India.
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Pitre, Amita and Lingam, Lakshmi
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SEX crime prevention , *SEX crime laws , *MARRIAGE , *HUMAN sexuality , *AGE distribution , *SOCIAL norms , *DEBATE , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *LOVE , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *SEXUAL health - Abstract
India enacted a new child sexual abuse law in 2012 and made important changes to the rape law in 2013 to expand the definition of rape and sexual assault, introduce several reforms and improve gender sensitivity in rape trials. However, the child sexual abuse law with its definition of who is a child has increased the age of consent for sex from 16 years to 18 years, echoed by similar changes in the rape law. This paper revisits the debates on the age of consent in India in the late nineteenth century. It reviews them in the light of the new legislative changes, adjudication of cases of sexual assault, and examines the implications of the new laws on adolescents and their sexuality. We contend that the changes in the law have resulted in several challenges: for adolescents exploring their sexuality on the one hand, and for courts to adjudicate on love, romance, and elopement, on the other. Further, in conjunction with raising the age of consent, other changes such as mandatory reporting of sexual activity among adolescents, especially by hospitals, have increased family control on adolescents' sexuality and strengthened regressive social norms linked to marriages. One of the most troubling developments is the resulting barriers to adolescents' access to reproductive and sexual health care. This paper explores how laws devised to address harm and extend protection to children play into dominant social norms and are in the service of protectionist and patriarchal control on young people and their sexuality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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24. Managing depression in India: Opportunities for a targeted smartphone app.
- Author
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Ramnath, Swati and Suri, Gaurav
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PREVENTION of mental depression ,MOBILE apps ,AGE distribution ,USER interfaces ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL stigma ,LANGUAGE & languages ,AUDIOVISUAL materials ,SOFTWARE architecture ,SURVEYS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HEALTH literacy ,NEEDS assessment ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Background: More than forty million people suffer from depression in India. A lack of awareness, stigma related to mental health issues, and limited accessibility to treatment services magnify the profound personal and societal impact of depression. Given the rise of smartphones in India, mobile technology can help alleviate some of these depression-related challenges. Aims and method: The aim of this paper is to investigate the essential features of an India targeted depression smartphone app. We conducted an online survey to profile the needs of individuals with depression in India, which varied based on variables such as socioeconomic background, age, level of awareness toward depression, and the extent of exposure to mental health stigma. We also conducted a systematic evaluation of depression apps currently available to Indian users to investigate the user needs that these apps met and the needs that they failed to meet. Based on our findings, we made a set of recommendations related to the essential features of a future app targeted at managing depression in India. Results: Presently available depression apps fall short in providing some significant features such as local language options, content in audio and video formats, and user location matched resources. These gaps make these apps less than fully relevant to a diverse set of Indian users. Conclusions: It is essential to provide depression-related information in a targeted manner depending upon each user's particular needs and context. Potential customizations, such as offering content in local languages and flexible formats (e.g. audio, video, and text); and providing user-relevant diagnostic tools and location matched treatment resources can help improve the suitability of the app for diverse users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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25. Child marriage and exposure to secondhand smoke among women of childbearing age: evidence from a nationally representative study in India.
- Author
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Datta, Biplab Kumar, Tiwari, Ashwini, and Garner, Jamani
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HOME environment ,STATISTICS ,MARRIAGE ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,AGE distribution ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,WOMEN ,CHILDBEARING age ,PUBLIC health ,RISK assessment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,GOVERNMENT policy ,AT-risk people ,PASSIVE smoking ,ODDS ratio ,TOBACCO - Abstract
Women in low-and-middle income countries (LMICs) are disproportionately exposed to secondhand smoke (SHS), particularly in the home environment. Girls married before the age of 18 are more likely to remain at home and may be at higher risk of SHS exposure. This paper investigates whether women who were married as child brides had a higher risk of SHS exposure than their peers who were married as adults in India, where both burden of smoking and child marriage are critical public health concerns. Data were obtained from the 2015–2016 wave of the nationally representative India National Family Health Survey and included 306,788 married women ages 18 to 35 years. We estimated bivariate and multivariate logistic regressions to obtain odds ratios in favor of SHS exposure. The prevalence of SHS exposure for those who were married as adults was 50.3% while that was 55.2% for those who were married before age 18. After controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, the adjusted odds of SHS exposure for those who were married as child were 1.06 (95% CI: 1.03, 1.09) times that of those who were married as adults. Findings of this study inform policies for coordinated efforts to eliminate child marriage and strengthen tobacco control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Study of Socio-Demographic Profile of Deaths due to Burns in Autopsies Conducted at Gandhi Medical College, Bhopal.
- Author
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Mourya, Rajendra Kumar, Verma, Priyamvada Kurveti, and Verma, Dheeraj Singh
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MORTALITY risk factors ,BURNS & scalds complications ,LITERACY ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,INDUSTRIAL safety ,HEALTH services accessibility ,AUTOPSY ,CROWDS ,AGE distribution ,RURAL conditions ,DISEASE incidence ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SEX distribution ,OCCUPATIONS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH attitudes ,DEMOGRAPHY ,POVERTY ,MARITAL status ,VICTIMS ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
In India, incidence of burn injuries is quite high due to widespread illiteracy, old customs like dowry and use of kerosene for lighting and cooking; poverty, overcrowding and unemployment, other social & emotional factors, lack of safety measures at industrial setup & lack of adequate healthcare services. Although, mortality in cases of burns has been reduced considerably by modern advance healthcare services, yet death due to burns is not an uncommon event. The study was carried out with the aim to study the various demographic parameters related to deaths due to burns such as age, sex, occupation, socio-economic status, marital status, locality and source of fire. It was a 1.6 years prospective study of cases of burns autopsied at the mortuary of Gandhi medical college, Bhopal. The relevant information was obtained from inquest papers, history provided by relatives of the deceased and postmortem examination. On data analysis, it was found that incidence of burns was found to be higher higher in females (55.0%) as compared to males (45.0%). young adults between the age group of 21-30 years have been the major victims of burns (41.00%). In both sexes, majority of the burn cases were married (74%). Most of the burn cases belonged to middle class, were housewives (51 %). and from rural areas (75 %). Hence, steps need be taken by Govt., NGOs and medical professionals to reduce the mortality due to burns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. What kinds of career options do rural disadvantaged youth want to know about? Career needs assessment framework and findings from two different contexts in India.
- Author
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Joshi, Jahnvee and Bakshi, Anuradha J.
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VOCATIONAL guidance ,RURAL conditions ,AGE distribution ,POPULATION geography ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SEX distribution ,OCCUPATIONS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,NEEDS assessment ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In this paper, we present a framework to examine the kinds of careers that rural disadvantaged youth would like to know about in a career guidance intervention as also related findings from two different rural disadvantaged contexts in India. Differences across gender, age group, region, and participation/non-participation in youth programmes are also explored. The results validate the importance of comprehensive career needs assessment and provide specific directions for designing and adapting career guidance interventions for rural disadvantaged youth. Implications for research and practice are discussed in general as well as for the specific contexts included in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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28. RE: "REASSESSING THE GLOBAL MORTALITY BURDEN OF THE 1918 INFLUENZA PANDEMIC".
- Author
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Chandra, Siddharth and Christensen, Julia
- Subjects
INFLUENZA epidemiology ,AGE distribution ,EPIDEMICS ,INFLUENZA ,MORTALITY ,POPULATION geography ,WORLD health - Published
- 2019
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29. A spatio-temporal approach to short-term prediction of visceral leishmaniasis diagnoses in India.
- Author
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Nightingale, Emily Sara, Chapman, Lloyd A. C., Srikantiah, Sridhar, Subramanian, Swaminathan, Jambulingam, Purushothaman, Bracher, Johannes, Cameron, Mary M., and Medley, Graham F.
- Subjects
VISCERAL leishmaniasis ,FORECASTING ,STATISTICAL models ,AGE distribution ,CLINICAL drug trials - Abstract
Background: The elimination programme for visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in India has seen great progress, with total cases decreasing by over 80% since 2010 and many blocks now reporting zero cases from year to year. Prompt diagnosis and treatment is critical to continue progress and avoid epidemics in the increasingly susceptible population. Short-term forecasts could be used to highlight anomalies in incidence and support health service logistics. The model which best fits the data is not necessarily most useful for prediction, yet little empirical work has been done to investigate the balance between fit and predictive performance. Methodology/Principal findings: We developed statistical models of monthly VL case counts at block level. By evaluating a set of randomly-generated models, we found that fit and one-month-ahead prediction were strongly correlated and that rolling updates to model parameters as data accrued were not crucial for accurate prediction. The final model incorporated auto-regression over four months, spatial correlation between neighbouring blocks, and seasonality. Ninety-four percent of 10-90% prediction intervals from this model captured the observed count during a 24-month test period. Comparison of one-, three- and four-month-ahead predictions from the final model fit demonstrated that a longer time horizon yielded only a small sacrifice in predictive power for the vast majority of blocks. Conclusions/Significance: The model developed is informed by routinely-collected surveillance data as it accumulates, and predictions are sufficiently accurate and precise to be useful. Such forecasts could, for example, be used to guide stock requirements for rapid diagnostic tests and drugs. More comprehensive data on factors thought to influence geographic variation in VL burden could be incorporated, and might better explain the heterogeneity between blocks and improve uniformity of predictive performance. Integration of the approach in the management of the VL programme would be an important step to ensuring continued successful control. Author summary: This paper demonstrates a statistical modelling approach for forecasting of monthly visceral leishmaniasis (VL) incidence at block level in India, which could be used to tailor control efforts according to local estimates and monitor deviations from the currently decreasing trend. By fitting a variety of models to four years of historical data and assessing predictions within a further 24-month test period, we found that the model which best fit the observed data also showed the best predictive performance, and predictive accuracy was maintained when making rolling predictions up to four months ahead of the observed data. Since there is a two-month delay between reporting and processing of the data, predictive power more than three months ahead of current data is crucial to make forecasts which can feasibly be acted upon. Some heterogeneity remains in predictive power across the study region which could potentially be improved using unit-specific data on factors believed to be associated with reported VL incidence (e.g. age distribution, socio-economic status and climate). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Subclinical Vitamin A Deficiency and Anemia among Women and Preschool Children from Northeast India.
- Author
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Meshram, Indrapal I., Kumar, B. Naveen, Venkaiah, K., and Longvah, T.
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,ANEMIA ,CHILDREN'S health ,MOTHERS ,PREGNANT women ,VITAMIN A deficiency ,WOMEN'S health ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Micronutrient deficiencies such as iron, Vitamin A, and iodine are important public health problems in India. Objective: The objective of the study was to assess subclinical Vitamin A deficiency (VAD) and anemia among women and preschool children from Northeast India. Methodology: A community-based cross-sectional study was carried out by adopting systematic sampling in Phek district of Nagaland. Data were collected from women on sociodemographic particulars, and finger prick blood was collected for hemoglobin and free-flowing drop for Vitamin A estimation on Whatman no. 1 filter paper. Results: The overall prevalence of anemia was 27%, 40%, 44%, and 52% among preschool children, nonpregnant nonlactating women, lactating mothers, and pregnant women, respectively, whereas VAD was 37% among preschool children and 24%-32% among adult women. The prevalence of VAD was observed high among those living in kutcha house, illiteracy of head of households, big family size, and low per capita income. Conclusions: Anemia and VAD are important public health problems among tribal population in spite of the rich biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Design and Rationale of the HAPIN Study: A Multicountry Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess the Effect of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Stove and Continuous Fuel Distribution.
- Author
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Clasen, Thomas, Checkley, William, Peel, Jennifer L., Balakrishnan, Kalpana, McCracken, John P., Rosa, Ghislaine, Thompson, Lisa M., Boyd Barr, Dana, Clark, Maggie L., Johnson, Michael A., Waller, Lance A., Jaacks, Lindsay M., Steenland, Kyle, Miranda, J. Jaime, Chang, Howard H., Dong-Yun Kim, McCollum, Eric D., Davila-Roman, Victor G., Papageorghiou, Aris, and Rosenthal, Joshua P.
- Subjects
INDOOR air pollution prevention ,COOKING equipment ,AERODYNAMICS ,AGE distribution ,BIOMARKERS ,LOW birth weight ,BLOOD pressure measurement ,CARBON monoxide ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STATISTICAL correlation ,GASES ,GROWTH disorders ,HEATING ,HOUSEHOLD supplies ,INDOOR air pollution ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MOTHERS ,PETROLEUM ,PNEUMONIA ,PREGNANCY ,PREGNANT women ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,WORLD health ,DATA analysis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Globally, nearly 3 billion people rely on solid fuels for cooking and heating, the vast majority residing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The resulting household air pollution (HAP) is a leading environmental risk factor, accounting for an estimated 1.6 million premature deaths annually. Previous interventions of cleaner stoves have often failed to reduce exposure to levels that produce meaningful health improvements. There have been no multicountry field trials with liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) stoves, likely the cleanest scalable intervention. OBJECTIVE: This paper describes the design and methods of an ongoing randomized controlled trial (RCT) of LPG stove and fuel distribution in 3,200 households in 4 LMICs (India, Guatemala, Peru, and Rwanda). METHODS: We are enrolling 800 pregnant women at each of the 4 international research centers from households using biomass fuels. We are randomly assigning households to receive LPG stoves, an 18-month supply of free LPG, and behavioral reinforcements to the control arm. The mother is being followed along with her child until the child is 1 year old. Older adult women (40 to <80 years of age) living in the same households are also enrolled and followed during the same period. Primary health outcomes are low birth weight, severe pneumonia incidence, stunting in the child, and high blood pressure (BP) in the older adult woman. Secondary health outcomes are also being assessed. We are assessing stove and fuel use, conducting repeated personal and kitchen exposure assessments of fine particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter =2.5 ηm (PM
2.5 ), carbon monoxide (CO), and black carbon (BC), and collecting dried blood spots (DBS) and urinary samples for biomarker analysis. Enrollment and data collection began in May 2018 and will continue through August 2021. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02944682). CONCLUSIONS: This study will provide evidence to inform national and global policies on scaling up LPG stove use among vulnerable populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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32. Maternal Health Situation in North-East India: A Case Study of the Khasis.
- Author
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Singh, Varsha
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,BREASTFEEDING ,CHILD health services ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,IMMUNIZATION ,INFANT mortality ,INTERVIEWING ,CASE studies ,PRENATAL care ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,FIELD research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
This paper is focused on few trajectories of mother and child health in the north eastern India taking Khasis as a case. Data on reproductive performance of mother and child healthcare practices were collected from 399 women in their reproductive ages; ANC and PNC practices, child immunization and breastfeeding behavior were obtained along with awareness level of HIV-AIDS and RTIs; 239 women were also screened for iron-deficiency. Anemia is found to be one the factors affecting maternal health. The age is found to be non-significant with respect to perceptions on pregnancy and child care. Common fertility and mortality indicators such as crude birth rate (CBR) and infant mortality rate (IMR) are lower than the average figures of Indian and rest of northeastern states. There is clear indication for lack of awareness particularly with respect to reproductive tract infections. Socio-economic status and cultural barriers might have played crucial role in accessing available healthcare utilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
33. Social isolation and loneliness among urban older people: a study of Cooch Behar municipal town, West Bengal, India.
- Author
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Debnath, Angana and Roy, Piyal Basu
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,LONELINESS ,MARITAL status ,METROPOLITAN areas ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SATISFACTION ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL classes ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL networks ,SOCIAL participation ,STATISTICS ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors ,OLD age - Abstract
Purpose: Alienation and isolation is an off-seen social aspect of gerontological crises. The purpose of this paper is to focus on the social isolation and loneliness of older people that emerge from inadequate integration with the social network, coupled with increasing social chasm between the aged and the young. The sample population is Cooch Behar municipal town, West Bengal, India. Design/methodology/approach: To conduct the study, data have been collected through a questionnaire followed by purposive random sampling and analyzed with the help of loneliness scale and correlated variables. Findings: The study reveals that marital status, social network, social class and health are some of the parameters that influence the level of social isolation and loneliness among the older people. Originality/value: The result highlights the importance of social relationships and interaction on the ageing process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Prevalence of Depression Among Indian Population.
- Author
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Meitei, Khangembam Taibanganba and Singh, Huidrom Suraj
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,AGE distribution ,COLLEGE students ,MENTAL depression ,FAMILIES ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,LITERACY ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,ONLINE information services ,SEX distribution ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Depression becomes one of the most serious global health problems affecting at every stage of an individual life, thereby imparting the ability to function one's daily activities. India was accounting for about 13.98 % of the total population with depression in the world. The present paper attempts to understand the prevalence of depression among the Indian population. Relevant studies were identified using an electronic database such as PubMed, Medline, PsycINFO, and Google Scholar and included those studies which show the prevalence of depression among the Indian population for the last fifteen years. The overall prevalence of depression was pooled using random-effect models. The prevalence rate of depression varied from adolescents (6.7 to 79.21 %), college students (16.5 to 71.3 per cent), elderly population (8.9 to 77 %) and general population (6 to 52.7 per cent) with an overall pooled prevalence of depression 36.2 per cent (95% CI 31.6 to 41.8 %). Poor academic performance, family problems, and female gender are highly associated with depression among adolescents and college students. Among Elderly and General population groups increasing age, illiterate, unemployment, female gender, and medical comorbidities are highly associated with depression. Depression can be controlled by giving public awareness about its health consequences and educate people that mental illness is the same as other types of illnesses like diabetes, heart attack, liver problems, and one's need to take counseling or medications with the advice of mental health professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
35. Decoding India's Child Malnutrition Puzzle: A Multivariable Analysis Using a Composite Index.
- Author
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Shah, Gulzar, Siddiqa, Maryam, Shankar, Padmini, Karibayeva, Indira, Zubair, Amber, and Shah, Bushra
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,CHILDREN'S health ,CROSS-sectional method ,INFANTS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,SANITATION ,ANEMIA ,MALNUTRITION ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,MATERNAL age ,BODY mass index ,NUTRITIONAL assessment ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SEX distribution ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,QUANTITATIVE research ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,CHILD nutrition ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,AGE distribution ,SURVEYS ,ODDS ratio ,INFANT nutrition ,ECONOMIC impact ,RELIGION ,WOMEN'S health ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,BIRTH weight ,OBESITY ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background: This study examines the levels and predictors of malnutrition in Indian children under 5 years of age. Methods: Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure was applied to data from the India National Family Health Survey 2019–2021. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to assess the predictors. Results: 52.59% of children experienced anthropometric failure. Child predictors of lower malnutrition risk included female gender (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 0.881) and average or large size at birth (AOR = 0.729 and 0.715, respectively, compared to small size). Higher birth order increased malnutrition odds (2nd-4th: AOR = 1.211; 5th or higher: AOR = 1.449) compared to firstborn. Maternal predictors of lower malnutrition risk included age 20–34 years (AOR = 0.806), age 35–49 years (AOR = 0.714) compared to 15–19 years, normal BMI (AOR = 0.752), overweight and obese BMI (AOR = 0.504) compared to underweight, and secondary or higher education vs. no education (AOR = 0.865). Maternal predictors of higher malnutrition risk included severe anemia vs. no anemia (AOR = 1.232). Protective socioeconomic factors included middle (AOR = 0.903) and rich wealth index (AOR = 0.717) compared to poor, and toilet access (AOR = 0.803). Children's malnutrition risk also declined with paternal education (primary: AOR = 0.901; secondary or higher: AOR = 0.822) vs. no education. Conversely, malnutrition risk increased with Hindu (AOR = 1.258) or Islam religion (AOR = 1.369) vs. other religions. Conclusions: Child malnutrition remains a critical issue in India, necessitating concerted efforts from both private and public sectors. A 'Health in All Policies' approach should guide public health leadership in influencing policies that impact children's nutritional status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Understanding healthy ageing in India: insights from multivariate regression trees.
- Author
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Das, Ayushi and Dhillon, Preeti
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH status indicators ,EMPIRICAL research ,SEX distribution ,FUNCTIONAL status ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,GENDER inequality ,HEALTH behavior ,MARITAL status ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,MACHINE learning ,HEALTH equity ,NEEDS assessment ,ACTIVE aging ,SOCIAL classes ,COGNITION ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,REGRESSION analysis ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,SOCIAL participation ,WELL-being ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Population ageing represents a significant global challenge, particularly pronounced in countries like India. Aims: This study aims to explore how factors such as socio-economic status, behaviour, and health influence healthy ageing across the Indian older population. Methods: In this study, we utilized the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India – wave 1 dataset for analysis purposes. Scores were generated for five dimensions of healthy aging, including physical, functional, mental, cognitive, and social aspects and these scores were treated as the target variables. Multivariate Regression Trees analysis was employed to identify the behavioural and socio-demographic factors associated with each dimension of healthy ageing. Results: Years of education emerge as crucial across all dimensions, positively impacting cognitive health and mitigating age-related decline in healthy ageing. Marital status, engagement in household activities, spiritual practices, and living arrangements impacts the scores of different aspects of healthy ageing. Gender disparities in healthy aging are noticeable in the 60–74 age group, with women generally having lower scores. Safety of the living environment is a crucial determinant of the mental health of the elderly across all age groups.These findings highlight the complex interplay of factors in healthy ageing outcomes. Conclusion: Our study emphasizes the pivotal role of education in fostering healthy ageing in India. Factors such as environmental safety and social participation also influence well-being. Targeted interventions addressing education, gender equality, safety, and healthcare access are vital for enhancing the ageing experience and overall well-being of older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Psychophysical correlates of musicality in musically untrained children: evidence for musical sleepers in children.
- Author
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Sampath, Sridhar and Neelamegarajan, Devi
- Subjects
MUSIC ,PROMPTS (Psychology) ,DATA analysis ,SEX distribution ,LEARNING ,MUSICAL perception ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,AGE distribution ,STATISTICS ,MEMORY ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,AUDITORY perception ,PSYCHOACOUSTICS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,HUMAN voice ,MUSICAL pitch ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Music learning induces significant neural changes, enhancing auditory, verbal, and visuospatial skills, IQ, and speech perception. Research studies reveal structural and functional brain plasticity due to music training in adults and children. While musical abilities are linked to formal training, the existence of "musical sleepers" with heightened speech perception without formal training is noteworthy in adults. This study addresses the gap in understanding such phenomena in children, exploring psychophysical abilities in musically adept children, and aiming to impact rehabilitation models. Materials and method: A pre-experimental study involved 164 typically developing children (mean age: 9.93) without musical training. Musical abilities were evaluated using the abbreviated version of Montreal Battery for Evaluation of Musical Abilities (MBEMA) test in DMDX software, covering melody, rhythm, and memory subtests. Psychophysical tests in MATLAB assessed temporal, frequency, intensity, timbre, and binaural resolution. Results: Using a median split based on MBEMA test scores (median: 42), 84 children exhibited poor musical abilities, while 80 showed good ones. Descriptive statistics for MBEMA scores and psychophysical tests were conducted. As data did not follow normal distribution, non-parametric inferential statistics were employed. Mann–Whitney U tests revealed significant differences favouring good musical abilities in all assessments: gap deduction (p = 0.01), pitch discrimination at 500 Hz and 4 kHz (p = 0.00), intensity discrimination at 500 Hz (p = 0.00) and 4 kHz (p = 0.01), profile analysis (p = 0.01), interaural level difference (p = 0.023), and interaural time difference (p = 0.038). Spearman correlation showed highest correlation with pitch discrimination at 500 Hz (r = − 0.538), 4 kHz (− 0.416), intensity discrimination at 4 kHz (r = − 0.367), and 500 Hz (r = − 0.311), profile analysis (r = − 0.313), interaural level difference (r = − 0.276), and gap deduction (r = − 0.235). All were significant (p < 0.01), except for the interaural time difference. Conclusion: Children excelling in music surpassed those with weaker abilities in psychophysical tasks. This echoes past research, underscoring auditory discrimination's influence on musical skills in untrained children. These results potentially support the concept of musical sleepers in children. Key predictors include pitch discrimination, while interaural time difference exhibited minimal correlation. Utilising such assessments may predict musical training outcomes for children with auditory disorders, but additional robust statistical investigation is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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38. Profile of Medico-Legal Deaths Due to Thermal Burn Injury in Tertiary Care Centre of Northern Madhya Pradesh.
- Author
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Soni, Jai Prakash and Juglan, Sarthak
- Subjects
BURNS & scalds prevention ,PREVENTION of injury ,VICTIMS ,BODY surface area ,BURNS & scalds ,AUTOPSY ,FORENSIC medicine ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CAUSES of death ,TERTIARY care ,AGE distribution ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,FORENSIC toxicology ,SEPSIS ,SUICIDE ,DATA analysis software ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) - Abstract
Introduction: Fire is one of the greatest discoveries in the history of mankind. It fully transforms the way of living of humans. But just like a double edged sword it also affects the human life in a negative way. Fire is easy and dangerous weapon in kitchen to be used for suicide for females in developing country like India. Due to this, thermal burn is a big problem and have significant share in medico-legal autopsies. Aim and objective: The aim of present study is to provide a brief analysis of thermal burn mortality across all age group brought in the mortuary of GRMC, Gwalior and to study the various medico-legal aspects of fatal thermal burn cases. Material & Method: This is a retrospective analysis of 82 cases of thermal burns which were brought for medicolegal autopsy at Forensic Medicine & Toxicology department in Gajra Raja Medical College, Gwalior (Madhya Pradesh) during the whole year. The data was complied, tabulated and analysed statistically. Results: 3.6% of total medico-legal autopsies are of thermal burn. Most of the thermal burn cases fall in the age group of 21-30years. 57.3% victims are female.81.1% of the victims are married. Most of the victims (64.6%) showed total body surface area involvement between 71-100%. Most of the cases (39%) survived for 7 days or more. Most common cause of death (74.4%) in this study is Septicaemia. About 69.5% of thermal burn cases were accidental manner. Conclusion: In most of the cases thermal burn is totally preventable and manageable. Education at school level plays a key role. Most of the accidental thermal burns can be avoided if, people know the proper safety measures for using fuels for cooking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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39. Demographic Profile of Pattern of Railway Injuries in Warangal Municipal Limits, A. P.
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Raghavendra, D. Vijaya, Ravimuni, K., and Rani, K. Usha
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,AGE distribution ,CAUSES of death ,MARITAL status ,FORENSIC medicine ,MOTOR vehicle safety measures ,POPULATION geography ,RAILROADS ,SEX distribution ,TRAFFIC accidents ,FUNERAL industry ,MOTOR vehicle occupants ,DISEASE incidence - Abstract
Accident is an unexpected, unplanned occurrence which may involve injury or it may be defined as an unpremeditated event resulting in recognizable damage. Railway related injuries are not those uncommon occurrences in forensic practice. Among the varied presentation of injuries, superficial injuries along with fractures were commonly observed. Over the last 15 years many railway accidents have happened in Andhra Pradesh and in India. Following these train accidents, there has been a large amount of public debate about safety management on the Indian railways. These accidents have raised issues regarding the effectiveness of the safety management of the railway system. This paper presents a summary of the results of a preliminary systemic analysis of several rail accidents in and around Warangal City. The present study was conducted in the Department of Forensic Medicine, Warangal Medical College, Warangal, from January 2013 to June 2014 i.e., 18 months, during which the total postmortem cases were 74 occurred in the jurisdiction of the Govt. Railway Police Station, Warangal. The factors taken to enumerate the study are the incidence of deaths month wise, age and sex, marital status, scene of offence and habitat during railway accidents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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40. Foreign Body Ingestion in Children: An Experience of 99 Cases in a Tertiary Care Center in Delhi.
- Author
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Kinjalk, Meghna, Sehgal, Mehak, Ratan, Simmi K., Jain, Nitin, Gupta, Chiranjiv Kumar, Neogi, Sujoy, Kumar, Prafull, Bhoria, Dhruv, Arora, Vanshika, and Chellani, Gautam
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EDUCATION of parents ,PEDIATRIC surgery ,SEX distribution ,FOREIGN bodies ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ENDOSCOPIC surgery ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COUNSELING ,ENDOSCOPY ,SURGERY ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Accidental ingestion of foreign bodies in children is critical, as the inability to effectively communicate can potentially lead to devastating consequences. We aimed to determine the epidemiology of foreign body ingestion and variability according to age, gender, type, and location of foreign body, and describe its management. Aim and Objective: The aim was to study the various types of foreign body ingestions in children admitted to pediatric surgery and their management. Materials and Methods: A retrospective study was conducted from January 2020 to June 2022 on children under the age of 12 years with a confirmed diagnosis of foreign body ingestion. Patients were clinically and radiologically assessed, after which standard protocols were followed wherein patients were followed by either observation or emergent management. Emergent management included removal of the foreign body by either endoscopy or surgery. Comparisons among multiple age groups, gender, type of foreign body, location of foreign body, and their management were analyzed. Results: Out of 99 subjects in our study, there were 76 boys and 23 girls. The median age of presentation was 5 years. Most children were asymptomatic at presentation. The most frequently ingested foreign body was a coin in all age groups. The majority of the foreign bodies were suspected to be in the small bowel. The foreign bodies that had crossed the duodenojejunal flexure (n = 74, 74.7%) were managed conservatively with the observation of a variable period of a minimum of 24 h and a maximum of 48 h. 21 cases were managed by endoscopic removal, while three cases required surgical intervention. Conclusions: Overall, the most common gastrointestinal foreign body was a coin in all age groups. Button battery is the most worrisome foreign body; however, depending on its position, it can be managed conservatively. Upper GI foreign bodies can be safely removed endoscopically. Parental counseling is very important for the prevention of ingestion of foreign bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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41. An Epidemiological Profile of Medico-legal Autopsies at a Tertiary Care Center.
- Author
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Yadav, Kapil, khan, Mustafa, Kumar, Rajeev, Chawla, Hitesh, Jowel, Tony, and Yadav, Renu
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AUTOPSY laws ,VICTIMS ,TRAFFIC accidents ,HEALTH ,SEX distribution ,HEALTH policy ,CAUSES of death ,TERTIARY care ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,INFORMATION resources ,AGE distribution ,MARITAL status ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PUBLIC health ,SUDDEN death ,POISONING ,COGNITION ,PREVENTIVE health services - Abstract
Background: An essential and necessary component of any investigation into a sudden, suspicious death is the medico-legal autopsy. It's critical to understand the profile of medico-legal autopsy cases in order to ascertain the mortality rate from non-natural causes in a given area and addressing the demographic requirements in accordance with the region's unique mortality statistics. Material & Method: The present study was a retrospective study of autopsies performed at a tertiary care centre in southern Haryana, from January 2018 to December 2023. During this period a total of 886 medico legal autopsies were conducted. Relevant information and subjective data like age, gender, marital status & manner of death have been collected from medico legal autopsy register from January 2018 to December 2023. Results: It was observed that out of 886 cases male outnumbered females in ratio 2.06:1. Majority of the victims belonged to the age group 21-30 years. Majority of the deaths occurred due to poisoning (n=264, 29.79%), followed by road traffic accidents 26.74%. Conclusion: Majority of cases were in the 3rd decade of life, males outnumbered females. Poisoning and road traffic accidents were the leading cause of death. Public attention, awareness, preventive and remedial strategies should be undertaken to reduce similar incidents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
42. Adolescent Childbearing in India: Causes and Concerns.
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Bhakat, Priya and Kumar, Yatish
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RISK assessment ,HEALTH literacy ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,TEENAGE pregnancy ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIAL factors ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CULTURE ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SEX education ,SOCIOECONOMIC status ,CHI-squared test ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEX customs ,SURVEYS ,ODDS ratio ,UNPLANNED pregnancy ,STATISTICS ,MOTHERHOOD ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONTRACEPTIVE drugs ,COUNSELING ,SOCIAL classes ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Globally, adolescent pregnancy is one of the key issues in women's reproductive health. Adolescent mothers face a higher risk of obstetrical concerns, and motherhood in adolescence is strongly influenced by lower education level and lower socioeconomic status. The present study was carried out across all Indian states and Union Territories using the National Family Health Survey, rounds 1 to 5 (1992–1993 to 2019–2021) in which various socioeconomic and cultural factors associated with adolescent pregnancies was examined in detail. The article uses univariate, bivariate with chi-square test, and multivariate logistic regression models to understand the extent of which socioeconomic factors and sexual behavior of the couple are related to early motherhood experiences. It was found that age at marriage, respondent education, employment, age gap between partners, and religion are some of the important variables that affect the likelihood of adolescent pregnancy among females in Indian states. Comprehensive institutional efforts like free contraceptives and counseling services should be provided to address the increasing risk of pregnancy among adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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43. Age- and Gender-Specific Prevalence of Intellectually Disabled Population in India.
- Author
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Kapoor, Mudit, Ambade, Mayanka, Ravi, Shamika, and Subramanian, S. V.
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GENDER specific care ,INCOME ,MEDICAL care ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,SEX distribution ,AGE ,SEX discrimination ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,DISEASE prevalence ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,RURAL conditions ,METROPOLITAN areas ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Intellectual disability in India is substantially under-reported, especially amongst females. This study quantifies the prevalence and gender bias in household reporting of intellectual disability by estimating the age-and-gender specific prevalence of the intellectually disabled by education, Socio-Demographic Index (SDI) score, place of residence, (rural/urban) and income of household head. We estimated prevalence (per 100,000) at 179 (95% CI: 173 to 185) for males and 120 (95% CI: 115 to 125) for females. Gender differences declined sharply with increased education, was higher for lower ages and low income and varied little by state development. Under-identification and under-reporting due to stigma are two plausible reasons for the gender differences in prevalence that increase with age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Estimating the number of people living with dementia at different stages of the condition in India: A Delphi process.
- Author
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Farina, Nicolas, Rajagopalan, Jayeeta, Alladi, Suvarna, Ibnidris, Aliaa, Ferri, Cleusa P, Knapp, Martin, and Comas-Herrera, Adelina
- Subjects
CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,STATISTICAL models ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,AGE distribution ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DEMENTIA ,DELPHI method ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DEMENTIA patients ,HEALTH care rationing ,MEDICAL care costs ,OLD age - Abstract
Introduction: Numerous studies have previously estimated the dementia prevalence in India. However, as these estimates use different methodologies and sampling strategies, generating definitive prevalence estimates can be difficult. Methods: A Delphi process involving eight clinical and academic experts provided prevalence estimates of dementia within India, split by sex and age. The experts were also asked to estimate the number of people potentially living at different stages of the condition. A priori criteria were used to ascertain the point in which consensus was achieved. Results: Our consensus estimates generated a dementia prevalence of 2.8% (95% CI = 1.9 to 3.6) for those aged 60 years and above in India. Consensus was achieved across age and sex prevalence estimates, with the exception of one (females aged 60–64). Our experts estimated that 42.9% of people living with dementia in India had a mild severity. Conclusions: The findings indicate that there could be approximately 3.9 million people living with dementia in India, of which 1.7 million could be living with dementia of mild severity. Such estimates can better help researchers and policy makers to estimate the true cost and impact of dementia in India and can inform resource allocation decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. 15-Year Suicide Trends Using Media Reporting Methodology from the Tricity Region of Chandigarh: A Brief Analysis.
- Author
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Chauhan, Nidhi, Chavan, Bir Singh, and Gupta, Nitin
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SUICIDE prevention ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,LIFE ,SUICIDAL ideation ,SEX distribution ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,AGE distribution ,NEWSPAPERS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MASS media ,FINANCIAL stress ,SCHOOL failure ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SUICIDE ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,DATA analysis software ,MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Introduction: Suicide has become a societal crisis owing to the recent increasing trends globally. Of the total suicide deaths globally, two-thirds occur in the developing countries including India. The available data on suicide in India reflect a rate of 11% (according to the National Crime Records Bureau 2013) with the highest rates in older adult males and an increasing trend of suicide deaths in younger age groups. Much of the literature is from the southern part of India with a relatively sparse data from North India. Aim and Methodology: The aim was to examine the 15-year (2004-2019) trend of suicide (age and gender distribution, methods used, and reasons) in an urban city in North India. Information was collected from the leading newspapers (English, Hindi, and Punjabi) of the area. Duplication of information was avoided, and statistical analysis was done using SPSS version 20. Results: Fluctuations in the total number of suicide cases over the 15-year period were observed with nearly 63% of people committing suicide being younger than 30 years of age, of whom 53% were male. More females in the younger age group and more males in the older age group were suicide victims. Of all the methods used, hanging was the most common (70%), followed by consuming poisonous substance, jumping from height, shooting self, and stabbing in the descending order. A ceiling fan was used for hanging by 32% of victims who hanged themselves, of whom 65% were male. Among the cited reasons, stress/depression was experienced by 19% of victims. Discussion and Conclusion: The trends with respect to age distribution, gender, and method used that is reported in the current study are in line with the trends reported globally. The preventive measures, especially using technological advances in designing fans not suitable for tying noose around it, can be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Vocational education and training in India: challenges, status and labour market outcomes.
- Author
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Agrawal, Tushar
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education ,POSTSECONDARY education ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,TECHNICAL education ,AGE distribution ,LABOR market - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of vocational education and training (VET) system in India, and discusses various challenges and difficulties in the Indian VET system. The paper also examines labour market outcomes of vocational graduates and compares these with those of general secondary graduates using a large-scale nationally representative household survey. We find quite a high rate of unemployment (11%) for VET holders in the age group 15–29 years. Although unemployment rate of VET holders is higher than the overall unemployment rate in the same age group, the rate is lower than that for general secondary graduates. We show that average daily wages are higher, both for regular and casual workers, for VET holders. There has been a considerable increase in the number of Industrial Training Institutes/Centres in the last decades, but the coverage of the system is disparate in terms of institutes’ vis-à-vis states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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47. Trends in condom use among female sex workers in Andhra Pradesh, India: the impact of a community mobilisation intervention.
- Author
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Toller Erausquin, Jennifer, Biradavolu, Monica, Reed, Elizabeth, Burroway, Rebekah, and Blankenship, Kim M.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,SEX work ,AGE distribution ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CONDOMS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION of medical care ,POWER (Social sciences) ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL networks ,TIME ,COMMUNITY support ,DATA analysis ,HOME environment ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,REPEATED measures design ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Community mobilisation interventions for HIV prevention among female sex workers (FSWs) aim to organise FSWs for collective action and challenge the structures of power that underlie HIV risk. Assessing intervention impact is challenging because the importance of direct individual exposure to intervention components may decrease over time as change occurs at social-normative, policy and other structural levels. In this paper, the authors examine changes over time in consistent condom use among FSWs in Rajahmundry, Andhra Pradesh, the location of a long-standing community mobilisation intervention. Methods The authors analyse cross-sectional data collected among FSWs at three time points (n=2276) using respondent-driven sampling. Multiple logistic regression was used to assess the association of programme exposure with consistent condom use and whether this association varied over time. Results The proportion of FSWs having no exposure or only receptive exposure to the intervention decreased over time, while active utilisation increased from 19.4% in 2006 to 48.5% in 2009-2010. Consistent condom use with clients also increased from 56.3% in 2006 to 75.3% in 2009-2010. Multivariate analysis showed that age, age at start of sex work, venue, living conditions and programme exposure were significantly associated with condom use. The positive association between programme exposure and consistent condom use did not vary significantly over time. Conclusions Findings indicate improvements in HIV risk reduction behaviour among FSWs and suggest that the intervention has substantial reach in the FSW population. The intervention's strategies may be contributing to population-level HIV risk reduction among FSWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The New Zealand gaming and betting survey: Chinese and Indian people's experience.
- Author
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Tse, Samson, Rossen, Fiona, and Hoque, Ekramul
- Subjects
COMPULSIVE behavior ,ASIANS ,SURVEYS ,AGE distribution ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,CHINESE people ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STATISTICAL correlation ,GAMBLING ,HELP-seeking behavior ,INCOME ,INTERVIEWING ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIAL skills ,T-test (Statistics) ,WHITE people ,SECONDARY analysis ,SOCIAL attitudes ,HARM reduction ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to analyse attitudes, understanding of gambling and gambling related harm among Asians in New Zealand using secondary data from the New Zealand 2006/07 Gaming and Betting Attitudes Survey (GBAS). Design/methodology/approach -- This survey interviewed 1,973 nationwide randomly selected youths and adults ($18 years) using structured questionnaire. Chinese (N = 113) and Indian (N = 122) data were analysed separately to compare between them and with NZ Europeans (N = 792). Descriptive analysis was carried out and was subsequently tested for significant correlations by weighted (p < 0.01) and un-weighted (p < 0.05) variables. Findings -- A higher proportion of Chinese males (66.8 percent) represented in the survey compared to Indian (43.0 percent) and NZ European (48.9 percent) where Chinese consisted of more youthful age structure. Chinese respondents were more likely to be in the lowest income bracket (NZ$10,000) compared to others. Among the ten gambling activities "casino table gambling" and "casino electronic machines" (slot-style machine) were most popular among the Chinese where Indians preferred "gambling/casino evening". A significant proportion of Chinese were unwilling to refer family or friends to gambling help services despite believing that gambling does more harm than good. Pre-committed gambling sum was the most common harm minimising strategy suggested by participants. They believed education and consultation could deter youths from harmful gambling. Research limitations/implications -- This survey highlighted gambling behaviours and thoughts of the ethnic minority population in New Zealand. Study outcomes would be valuable in formulating ethnic specific preventative programme and may have policy implication. Originality/value -- There has been limited research on gambling behaviour of ethnic minorities in New Zealand. This paper fills some of the gaps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Diabetes mellitus medication use and catastrophic healthcare expenditure among adults aged 50+ years in China and India: results from the WHO study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE).
- Author
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Gwatidzo, Shingai Douglas, Williams, Jennifer Stewart, and Stewart Williams, Jennifer
- Subjects
TREATMENT of diabetes ,CHRONIC disease treatment ,MEDICAL care costs ,DRUG utilization ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,DISEASES in older people ,AGE distribution ,CHRONIC diseases ,DEVELOPING countries ,DIABETES ,HYPOGLYCEMIC agents ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Expenditure on medications for highly prevalent chronic conditions such as diabetes mellitus (DM) can result in financial impoverishment. People in developing countries and in low socioeconomic status groups are particularly vulnerable. China and India currently hold the world's two largest DM populations. Both countries are ageing and undergoing rapid economic development, urbanisation and social change. This paper assesses the determinants of DM medication use and catastrophic expenditure on medications in older adults with DM in China and India.Methods: Using national standardised data collected from adults aged 50 years and above with DM (self-reported) in China (N = 773) and India (N = 463), multivariable logistic regression describes: 1) association between respondents' socio-demographic and health behavioural characteristics and the dependent variable, DM medication use, and 2) association between DM medication use (independent variable) and household catastrophic expenditure on medications (dependent variable) (China: N = 630; India: N = 439). The data source is the World Health Organization (WHO) Study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE) Wave 1 (2007-2010).Results: Prevalence of DM medication use was 87% in China and 71% in India. Multivariable analysis indicates that people reporting lifestyle modification were more likely to use DM medications in China (OR = 6.22) and India (OR = 8.45). Women were more likely to use DM medications in China (OR = 1.56). Respondents in poorer wealth quintiles in China were more likely to use DM medications whereas the reverse was true in India. Almost 17% of people with DM in China experienced catastrophic healthcare expenditure on medications compared with 7% in India. Diabetes medication use was not a statistically significant predictor of catastrophic healthcare expenditure on medications in either country, although the odds were 33% higher among DM medications users in China (OR = 1.33).Conclusions: The country comparison reflects major public policy differences underpinned by divergent political and ideological frameworks. The DM epidemic poses huge public health challenges for China and India. Ensuring equitable and affordable access to medications for DM is fundamental for healthy ageing cohorts, and is consistent with the global agenda for universal healthcare coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Construction of nuptiality tables for the single population in India: 1901-1931.
- Author
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Malaker, C. R.
- Subjects
MARRIAGE ,POPULATION ,MARRIAGE age ,SINGLE men ,SINGLE women ,AGE distribution ,CULTURE ,LEGISLATION ,LIFE expectancy ,MORTALITY ,SINGLE people ,VITAL statistics - Abstract
In this paper abridged nuptiality tables for the single population of India have been constructed for the three consecutive decades 1901-1911, 1911-1921 and 1921-1931. No significant time trend has been observed in the nuptiality rates among the single Population of India. The rates are initially small, but increase rapidly until they reach a maximum at ages 25-30 for bachelors and 15-20 for spinsters, following which they gradually decline. During 1901-1931, unlike Western countries, India had not experienced any revolution in marriage habits encompassing traditional child marriages. The distinctive marks of the Indian age patterns of marriage are higher age-specific marriage rates combined with lower ages at marriage and lower proportions of people who never marry with relative stability of marriage habits during the early part of the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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