Health Experts Warn Against Drug Resistance Super-Bugs

Global health experts said on Thursday that the world’s most powerful drugs are losing the battle against drug-resistant strains of malaria, HIV, gonorrhea and tuberculosis

According to Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antimicrobial resistance is robbing us of the certainty that antibiotics will always be there to fight infections and new drug-resistant pathogens are emerging. “It’s not enough to hope that we’ll have effective drugs to combat these infections. We must all act now to safeguard this important resource,” Frieden said

What you need to know about Anti-Microbial Resistance

What is Anti-Microbial Resistance:

Antimicrobial resistance occurs when germs change in a way that reduces or eliminates the effectiveness of drugs to treat them. This happens when antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals and other medications are used too liberally. About half of antimicrobial drugs — antibiotics in particular — are used unnecessarily or inappropriately prescribed in U.S. hospitals and in doctors’ offices, the CDC says. The best approach to preserving those drugs is to use them only when needed.

How Anti-Microbial Resistance affects developing world, especially Africa

HIV: Studies show that up to 20 percent of newly diagnosed HIV patients have transmitted a drug-resistant infection. Approximately 22 million people live with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa. In the US and other developed countries, Doctors can test or resistance before prescribing drugs, but such luxury may be too hard to come by in under-privileged communities

Malaria: Plasmodium falciparum, the most dangerous of the malaria parasites, has developed resistance in nearly all areas of the world where it is transmitted. Annually, there are about 225 million malaria infections and nearly 800,000 deaths. Women and children are the most affected, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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Chromosome-Dependent Justice: The Pervasiveness of ‘Legal’ Violence Against African Women

John 8:10: When Jesus had lifted up himself, and saw none but the woman, he said unto her, Woman, where are those thine accusers? hath no man condemned thee?”

If you have been to church once in your lifetime, you would probably be familiar with the story behind the verse quoted above. A woman was brought to Jesus to be sentenced for adultery. The men who brought the woman to Jesus emphasized that the woman was ‘caught in (the heat of) the act’, perhaps to demand a more severe sentence from Jesus, which would be death by stoning. Jesus gave the permission to go ahead with a condition: “If any one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.” He then bowed down his head. When he lifted up his head some minutes later, only the woman was left standing.

Late last week, we posted an article here about a Ghanaian woman, Amina, who was sexually molested by male students of the Mensah Sarbah Hall of the University of Ghana for stealing a laptop and cell phone from one of the dormitories. Amina was stripped naked, fondled and physically maltreated by the college rogues. According to news sources, the University Police who came to the scene arrested the battered woman and put her into custody while the male accusers were let go.

This was not an isolated case of violence against women and chromosome-dependent justice but a well-rooted tradition of male aggression against vulnerable women in most African communities. The village of Gambaga in Ghana has been a sanctuary for women accused of witchcraft. These women are ostracized and exiled from society by their accusers in a disturbing narrative while the Government of Ghana and local authorities watch on. Most of these women are elderly and through decades of neglect, want and lack of medical care are going through physiological and psychiatric disturbances that require counseling and therapy. However, in the absence help, medical or behavioral, the women are beaten and threatened with death and starvation until they confess to be witches under duress. In November of 2010, we reported the atrocious murder of a 72-year-old woman, Ama Hemmah, who was suspected of witchcraft in Ghana. She was beaten, tripped naked and doused with kerosene and then set aflame by her accusers who were also self-professed spiritual healers. The Foreman for the crusade, Pastor Samuel Fletcher Sagoe, asserted Ms. Hemmah was a witch who wished to do him and his family harm. A Gallup survey in Sub-Saharan African found that the belief in witchcraft is widespread. In the Ivory Coast 95% of people surveyed personally believe in witchcraft. In Ghana, the number is 77%, in Niger 75%, Zimbabwe 63% and South African 46%, just to mention a few. Changing these beliefs is a long journey, but changing the way suspects are treated should be attainable.

The introductory Biblical story suggests that this practice is a prehistoric custom that has lived 1000s of years. In the same vein that the men at Jesus time brought only the woman who was “caught in the act”, the University of Ghana Police apprehended the accused Amina and none of the law-breaking, irresponsible college students. When a person’s chromosomes determine how the law is applied to him or her in our time, Martin Luther King would probably not complain if the color of a person’s skin does the same.


For students in higher education to strip a suspected thief naked, insert their fingers into her private parts, fondle her breast and make fun of it on video is difficult to comprehend. I expect it to carry a more severe punishment that the theft because it was an assault on the woman’s personality and the dignity of more than 50% of human population. Our society needs to realize that illegality will never solve the problem evil.

I implore you to join hands in raising a loud voice against violence towards women in our society. Amina, Ama Hemmah and any of 1000s of the women in the Gambaga Witches Sanctuary could be my sister and your mother.

If you are interested in joining to fight these evils, please send an email to info@talkafrique.com or editorial@talkafrique.com find out how you can help.

We are sending a petition to the University Authorities and other influential sources to press the University to bring the rogues to justice immediately. Please click HERE to sign the petition.

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Warriors in Pink: Women in African Politics-Video

Dora Akinyuli, Nigerian Political Candidate

With the exception of few isolated cases, the participation of women in African politics is marginal but things are beginning to change, somehow. Currently, women constitute 49% of the parliament in Rwanda, the highest percentage in world rankings of women in national parliaments. The world average is about 15% women.

The video below shows how some women in Nigeria are hoping to change the statistics in the West African country.

“Study after study has shown that there is no effective development strategy in which women do not play a central role,” says UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. When women are fully involved, he notes, the benefits are immediate – families are healthier and better fed and their income, savings and investments go up. “And what is true of families is also true of communities and, in the long run, of whole countries.”

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Suspected Woman Thief Stripped Naked by Legon Students: Lawlessness Hall of Fame

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[ad#Caricature-text]Every form of lawlessness should be treated with the same displeasure and students of higher institutions should know better.  Some male students of the premier university, University of Ghana, Legon, are making news for a shameful reason, intended to indulge their lust and lack of self restrain.  In summary, a female suspect accused of stealing from one of the dormitories was sexually abused by the male students and recorded on video. In the video, you could see some of the students inserting their fingers into the woman’s vagina and fondling her breast as the woman begged them to forgive her trespasses. It is shameful that students at this level of ‘enlightenment’ would ignore the rule of law and embark on such despicable behavior. KAM

Video

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The alleged thief being covered by some male students of the Mensah Sabah Hall.

Update:

The Crime officer at the Legon Police command, ASP Emmanuel Basin-Tale says the police are hunting for the students who molested Amina, the alleged female thief suspected to have stolen a laptop and other gadgets belonging to some female students. Details soon.

Full Story from CitiFM

Authorities of the University of Ghana are yet to react to the molestation of a suspected female thief at one of the halls of residence by male students on the dawn of Thursday March 31.

Some male Students of the Mensah Sarbah Hall annex B arrested Amina at about 3:00am for allegedly stealing a laptop and other gadgets belonging to a female student of the mixed hall.

Instead of handing her over to the University police, the students many of whom are males stripped her naked and physically abused her and recorded the act.

In the ‘nasty video’ obtained by Citifmonline.com, Amina could be seen weeping severely as she pleaded with the students to forgive her. But the men without mercy tore her into pieces to expose her naked body.

They opened her legs wide and some of the guys could be seen inserting their fingers into her vagina.

The students, after molesting the victim, handed her over to the police who are investigating the incident.

Citi News understands the University authorities are investigating the situation and will come public in the coming days.

The Crimes Officer at the Legon Police command, ASP Basim, who confirmed the incident to Citi News, said the suspect has been on the police wanted list before Thursday’s alleged thievery.

He however condemned the molestation of Amina.

“She was apprehended and brought to Legon and handed over to the police for investigation so she is in custody. About two months ago, she committed a similar offence and she was arrested and cautioned but because of her circumstance she was granted Court bail to report at the Court. Unfortunately she failed, and the case was presented in her absence and a bench warrant was obtained. So we were looking for her when she committed this recent theft”.

“But if you suspect anybody for committing any offense, the best is to apprehend the person and hand him or her over to the police but not to molest or beat the person up. That will mean taking the law into your own hands” the Crimes Officer lamented.

The sexually molested lady has not been confirmed to be a student of the University.
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How Did Evangelicalism and Tolerance Become Incompatible?

Over the weekend, I was reading a column in the February issue of the magazine Drug Discovery News when I came across  a question which led me to write this article . On page 10 of the magazine, Prof. Peter T. Kissinger, CEO of Prosolia and Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University, asked “How can one be tolerant and evangelical simultaneously”? At first, I thought the question was superfluous and misplaced because I have never thought of evangelicalism and tolerance be to irreconcilable. In fact, I thought of evangelical as the most tolerant among Christian denominations because of their zeal to bring outsiders into the folk. When I was a student at the University of Ghana a few years ago, it was cool to be called an evangelical. The Ghana Fellowship of Evangelical Students (GHAFES) was the organization you would want to be part of to be considered hot and up-to-date. In those days, I thought Evangelicalism was the direct opposite of fundamentalism. Evangelicals were the type of Christians who did not want to appear intolerant or closed-minded.

In the West, especially in the United States, an evangelical is not the most welcome of Christians in some places and Prof. Kissinger’s question got me thinking about this situation. Again, I remember when I was a graduate student at the University of Florida, Gainesville, a friend of mine once suggested the name of the student group Graduate Evangelical Fellowship (GEF) be changed to Graduate Christian Fellowship (GCF) in order to attract newcomers because of the negative connotation the term ‘Evangelical’ carries on campus. I didn’t understand it then, because I had just come from the University of Ghana where being an ‘Evangelical’ was sexy. So when did evangelicalism become synonymous to extreme fundamentalism? The latter is surely taking over the concept of old-time common sense evangelicalism and growing rather surprisingly fast. And it scares me because whatever originates in the US eventually becomes a global fashion and supplants venerable time-honored systems, especially in parts of Africa and other places where sophistication to sift the good from the bad is less than adequate.

Several reasons can be attributed to the deteriorating image of the term ‘Evangelical’ and discussing each of these is surely beyond the scope of this article. I will rather briefly touch on the intrusion of ‘extreme fundamentalism’, often cloaked in the garments of evangelicalism, into politics. As I have written before, politics mixed with religion is always explosive, and can be very destructive. Those of you who follow US politics will have no problem understanding why “Evangelical” carries such a negative stereotype. When media persons and politicians with hazardous and extreme views on important issues of the day are collectively classified as ‘Evangelicals’, then where is the coolness in being an Evangelical? In a society where being adamantly intolerant is equated to being evangelical, defining everything absolutely  based only on one’s views is a perfect description of an evangelical, and giving a simplistic answer to the most complicated question of society is described as the classic evangelical way, we have come just too far.

Why do I care about this? I’m not worried about who calls himself or herself an evangelical. People have the right to call themselves whatever they want. I am afraid of the impact on vulnerable societies, especially those from where I come from. In November of last year, one Ugandan MP, with financial and other support from a fundamentalist Christian organization in the US, proposed the death penalty for suspected gay people.  I mean the death penalty, not jail time. Again, the Prime Minister of Kenya, on Nov 29, 2010, declared a national crackdown on homosexuals and called upon the police to arrest and jail anyone suspected to be a homosexual. It is not the desire to fight what these people see as unhealthy intrusion of western lifestyles that bothers me. What I am afraid of, and you should be worried about also, is when a group from a powerful country such as the US, is allowed to use their financial power and politicians influences to dictate legislation in other countries by bribing gullible politicians. This cannot be labeled Evangelicalism; it is extreme right-wing fundamentalism which should be condemned by all Christians.

Malaria kills a child every 30 seconds, and I think what ‘evangelicals’ need to ask is “What Would Jesus Do?

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Why S/he Is Not All That Into You

You tried every trick your Mom taught you. You’ve practiced every skill you learnt from your room-mates in college but this girl is not budging. The guy doesn’t just seem to notice you. Well, before you take it personal, you may have to read a new scientific discovery that may be responsible for your situation.

Scientists have identified a chemical in the brain that controls sexual preference in mice. The chemical is called Serotonin. Researchers in China report that Male mice bred without serotonin lose their preference for females.

Serotonin belongs to a group of compounds called neurotransmitters, which are chemical substances that carry impulses from one nerve cell to another. It is the first time a neurotransmitter has been credited with playing a role in sexual preference in mammals, the scientists claim. The report is available in the Journal Nature.

Now Summary of the experiments:

The scientist bred male mice whose brains were not receptive to serotonin. They also had control mice that were not modified and have the brains receptive to serotonin.

They conducted a series of experiments on the two group of mice. The results undeniably showed that the first group had lost the preference for females shown by unmodified males.

When presented with a choice of partners, they could not show any preference for either males or females.

In fact the modified males were as ready to mount on the fellow males and mate with them as they do to female mice. When serotonin was later injected into the brain of mice which lacked the tryptonphan hydroxylase-2 gene (a gene needed to produce serotonin), their preference for the girl mice was restored. They were now chasing and working hard to mount on the females and mate with them.

You’ve tried the valentine day teddy bear thing, the birth card with red arrows, and the invitation to youth program at church but none of these worked. But you think you’re hot and, in fact, people say you’re hot. It may be a good idea not to take it personal but attribute it to the lack of Serotonin in his or her brain. Doesn’t that make you feel good?

Disclaimer: This is a high level scientific discovery but I have tried to simplify the report for your comprehension. Please note that there are dangers in drawing conclusions about human sexuality from such a study. It is provided for your information only.
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In Africa, 10% of Pregnancies Experience Pre-eclampsia, But New Findings Bring Hope

In African, pre-eclampsia occurs in 10% of pregnancies

Scientists say they have identified genetic errors that appear to increase a pregnant woman’s chance of getting the condition called pre-eclampsia.

Pre-eclampsia is an abnormal state of pregnancy characterized by hypertension, fluid retention and albuminuria. If not detected and managed early it can be potentially life-threatening.

Approximately four in every 100 women develops this problem of high blood pressure and leaky kidneys during pregnancy. Black women are more likely to get high blood pressure and preeclampsia than white women. In African, pre-eclampsia occurs in 10% of pregnancies, which is significantly higher than the global average of approximately 4%.

Now researchers have found a faulty DNA which may be blamed in some cases. The report is presented in the journal PLoS Medicine. It is a discovery that could lead the way to identify and treat women at risk before it becomes life-threatening.

The US researchers from the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis analyzed DNA from over 300 pregnant women.

Sixty of these were healthy women but were hospitalized because they developed severe pre-eclampsia. The remaining 240 were women were under surveillance for other health complications. Forty of these also went on to develop pre-eclampsia.

Researchers analyzed the DNA from the subjects and found that some genetic errors were shared by five of the 60 healthy women and seven of the 40 “higher-risk pregnancy” women who developed pre-eclampsia.

The faulty DNA were located on genes that play a role in regulating immune response, confirming the suspicion that scientists had that pre-eclampsia could be provoked by hitches in the immune response. Generally, women with autoimmune diseases such as lupus have an increased risk of pre-eclampsia

The researchers plan to study more pregnant women and other genes to further their understanding.

Currently, the best way to stop the progress of pre-eclampsia is to deliver the baby. This contributes to the statistics of pre-mature babies who are at increased risks of several complications.

Further studies into these faulty genes may help to establish a protocol to identify women at increased risk of pre-eclampsia and put them on increased surveillance as early as possible in their pregnancy.

In communities where access to medical services is limited or unaffordable such as common in most African countries, these findings reveal promising potential for women in their pregnancies.

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Practical Steps to Reduce The Risk and Vulnerability of The African Woman to HIV

Volunteers who participated in a study on reducing the risk of HIV infection in women listened as the test results were announced during a meeting in Vulindlela, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa. Photo by (Joao Silva for The New York Times)

K. Amponsah-Manager

Among the estimated 22.5 million people living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa, women and girls continue to be disproportionately represented. In South Africa, for instance, it is estimated that one-in-three women aged 25-29 are living with HIV (Human Sciences Research Council (2009). Another estimate puts the proportion of maternal orphans – those who have lost their mother – orphaned by AIDS as over 70 percent (Budlender, D. et al., 2008). This is surely a dispiriting statistic. Several reasons can be attributed to this trend including rape and other sexual abuses, cultural practices and societal expectations of women. There are also biological factors that contribute to this inclination. For instance, the female genitals have a more exposed surface area than the male genitals have. Also, there are higher amounts of HIV in semen than in vaginal fluids while again more semen is exchanged during sex than vaginal fluids. These together with the social and cultural factors above precipitate a situation that places the woman at a more disadvantage point of view.

There are several steps communities and policy makers can take to reduce the women’s vulnerability to the epidemic and reverse this distressful trend. These include:

Involving men: In a typical African relationship, the man controls when and how sex happens. The man decides the frequency of sex and whether any protection is used during sexual relationship. The current education targeting men to use condoms should continue but it should place a bigger accent on educating men to respect the women’s choice and needs in sexual relationships. Gender-based violence and stereotypes should be core of any anti-HIV campaigns in African communities.

Accessibility to healthcare needs: Past anti-HIV and family planning campaigns have focused on the man, but it is time to pay attention to the needs of the woman if we can really cut the percentage of women that continue to be afflicted by the HIV epidemic. While the female condom (FC) is available to most women in the developed countries who want to use it, FC is merely another indulgence that the African woman cannot just afford. The situation gets even more challenging as the female condom can be several times more expensive than the male condom. It is therefore crucial for health policy makers and private organization to step in and offer to make these products accessible to the women at a cost that they can afford. Also, women who are abused sexually should have free access to blood tests and other medical services to determine their status. This will halt the further spread of HIV and other sexually-transmitted diseases (STDs) they might have contracted during the assault. Studies show that women with other untreated STDs are more likely to contract the HIV virus than their STD-free counterparts or those who have access the reproductive healthcare needs.

Economic Opportunities and Education: It is sad fact that in the African society, the bread-winner is automatically self-empowered to call the shots and since in most cases, it is the man who holds that title, the women in these societies are the always at the receiving end when it comes to decisions affecting sexual intercourse. A journey to economic empowerment will be relatively long, but in the long run, it is the surest strategy that will place women in positions that they can influence decisions that affect their own lives. According to the UNAIDS, women without education are four times more likely to have the belief that there is no way to prevent HIV. These women do not expect and do not demand any protection during sex even when they know their partners have multiple sexual partners. Early sexual intercourse and early marriages are big factors in predicting a girl’s vulnerability to HIV. In Niger, for example, 50% of girls get married by the age of 15. However, studies show that girls with more education tend to delay marriage and tend to delay their first sexual intercourse. Providing every girl child with at least the basic education will certainly make a dent.

Campaign against social and cultural practices harmful to the woman: Some practices are ‘universally’ classified as sexual violence but are accepted practices in some communities across African and other parts of the world. These include female genital mutilation or female circumcision, marital rape and girl trafficking. In a survey in Kenya, 14% of women said their own husbands (most of whom have multiple sexual partners) had raped them in the past. All these practices disproportionately expose women and girls to HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases. According to the UN, women who have experienced any of such abuses are three times more likely to be infected by HIV.

Reducing the woman’s vulnerability to HIV is vital in curbing the prevalence and saving the unborn. In fact 390 000 out of the global 430 000 children newly infected with HIV during 2008 were from sub-Saharan Africaas a result of mother-to-child transmission (USAIDS). Why should we wait any longer in tackling the woman’s sexual health needs?

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