Background: Heterosexual contact is the most common mode of HIV transmission in India that is largely linked to sex work. We assessed the non-use of condoms in sex work and with regular sex partners by female sex workers (FSWs), and identified its associations that could assist in planning HIV prevention programmes.
Metabolic programming and metabolic imprinting describe early life events, which impact upon on later physiological outcomes. Despite the increasing numbers of papers and studies, the distinction between metabolic programming and metabolic imprinting remains confusing. The former can be defined as a dynamic process whose effects are dependent upon a critical window(s) while the latter can be more strictly associated with imprinting at the genomic level. The clinical end points associated with these phenomena can sometimes be mechanistically explicable in terms of gene expression mediated by epigenetics. The predictivity of outcomes depends on determining if there is causality or association in the context of both early dietary exposure and future health parameters. The use of biomarkers is a key aspect of determining the predictability of later outcome, and the strengths of particular types of biomarkers need to be determined. It has become clear that several important health endpoints are impacted upon by metabolic programming/imprinting. These include the link between perinatal nutrition, nutritional epigenetics and programming at an early developmental stage and its link to a range of future health risks such as CVD and diabetes. In some cases, the evidence base remains patchy and associative, while in others, a more direct causality between early nutrition and later health is clear. In addition, it is also essential to acknowledge the communication to consumers, industry, health care providers, policy-making bodies as well as to the scientific community. In this way, both programming and, eventually, reprogramming can become effective tools to improve health through dietary intervention at specific developmental points.Imprinting or programming as a result of early life experience is becoming an accepted scientific phenomenon. Implicit in this is the concept of a 'stage of developmental plasticity, where specific conditions give rise to later life outcomes'. The most significant aspect is metabolic imprinting, in which maternal undernutrition, obesity and diabetes during gestation and lactation can contribute towards obesity in the offspring (1) . Other endpoints that seem to be affected by early life exposure include neurodevelopment and immune modulation.The concept of fetal growth affecting adult disease was explained by Barker (2,3) in his seminal papers. Programming later evolved to mean alterations in nutrition and growth at specific developmental points, resulting in long-term or even permanent effects (4) . Observation is the first step and the initial link between health and early diet is often found from epidemiological investigations. One of the most exemplary studies is the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) cohort (5) . This has been the source for a host of publications in which early diet is linked to later obesity and to other health endpoints, as outlined in Table 1.Other cohorts include the Helsinki study, which showed a link between prenatal and postnatal factors and ...
Cash transfers (CTs), for all their evident success in relieving poverty, have been criticised for failing to incorporate transformative elements into their programme design. In recent years changes have been introduced into the design of CT programmes that go some way towards addressing this concern. This article critically engages the meaning of transformative social protection and introduces a collection of papers that examine whether and under what conditions cash transfers can be 'transformative'. Among the issues addressed are whether CTs can be catalysts leading to positive changes, material, subjective and relational in the lives of poor people; what are the social effects of CTs for beneficiaries, their households and communities; and can they foster horizontal relationships within communities and vertical relationship with the state through developing forms of social accountability and citizenship engagement?
Background: The majority of sex work in India is clandestine due to unfavorable legal environment and discrimination against female sex workers (FSWs). We report data on who these women are and when they get involved with sex work that could assist in increasing the reach of HIV prevention activities for them.
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