Manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) and medical abortion were introduced to replace dilation and curettage/evacuation for incomplete abortions, and postabortion contraception was provided in 5 selected public hospitals in Pakistan. In the largest hospital, an Ipas MVA training center since 2007, MVA use reached 21% in 2008. After the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) and UNFPA provided MVA kits, MVA use increased dramatically to 70%-90% in 2010-2013. In 2 of the remaining 4 hospitals in which the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Pakistan trained doctors in May 2012 and January 2013, the target of having 50% of women managed by MVA and medical abortion (MA) was met; however, in the third hospital only 43% were treated with MVA and MA. In the fourth hospital, where misoprostol and electric vacuum aspiration use was 64% and 9%, respectively, before training, an MVA workshop introduced the technique. Postabortion contraception was provided to 9%-29% of women, far below the target of 60%.
Homocystinuria (HCU) due to cystathionine-β-synthase deficiency is generally regarded as a rare disease, but within the Qatari population has an incidence of 1 in 1800 live births. Most newborn screening methods for HCU using dried blood spots (DBS) rely on the detection of an elevated methionine level or a rapid screen for total homocysteine (tHCY). However, screening based on methionine levels alone lacks specificity and rapid liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) methods for tHCY exhibit variable results with high false positive rates. This report describes a LC-MS/MS method for detection of tHCY on DBS, with improved specificity. tHCY was extracted from DBS with a solution containing dithiothreitol and subsequently butylated with hydrochloric acid in n-butanol. The butyl esters were separated by liquid chromatography on a reverse-phase column and the homocysteine (HCY), detected by tandem mass spectrometry. The butyl ester of HCY eluted at 1.8 min. Total analysis time was 6.1 min per sample, including column flush and equilibration. This method allows for the quantification of tHCY over a linear range from 0.3 to 200 µM. Intraassay and interassay imprecision and recoveries were acceptable. Good concordance was observed with another LC-MS/MS method. Application of this method improves specificity and reduces false positive rates in screening for HCU.
It has long been realised that factor accumulation and technological development are only proximate causes of economic development, and the focus has now shifted to investigating the ‘deeper determinants’ of economic growth. Two such forces are highlighted in the literature: institutions and geography. However, it remains controversial as to which of these two is the more important. The “institutions school” assigns primal importance to institutions, whereas the “geography school” considers geographical factors as the primary determinant of the economic performance of countries. This paper reviews the debate surrounding these “deeper determinants” of economic performance. It reviews the work of these two schools of thought and their interpretation of the long-run development. The paper then examines the evidence provided by the respective schools in favour of their hypotheses. It concludes in favour of the Institutions hypothesis as the Geography school does not provide a consistent story of long-run development.
ObjectiveTo assess current access to essential sexual and reproductive health (SRHR) services in Afghanistan and how access has changed with the transition of power.MethodsThis is a cross‐sectional study based on data from an anonymous survey among doctors in Afghanistan in May 2022, analyzed using descriptive statistics. The survey recorded subjective estimates of access to SRHR services, barriers to access, extent of maternal mortality or near miss due to preventable factors, and the effect of the regime change on access.ResultsThe data collection was interrupted after 60 responses. A majority of providers responded that their population went hungry often or always. According to our criteria for “access”, that 75% or more of the population was estimated to have it, no respondents (0%) assessed that access existed for services for gender‐based violence. The corresponding proportion responding that access existed was 3.4% for services after rape, 12.6% for legal abortion, 13.3% for antenatal care, and 20% for labor care. According to 41.7% of respondents, untreated postpartum hemorrhage accounted for a large or very large proportion of preventable maternal mortality or near miss. Almost half of respondents (47.4%) reported the same for lack of skilled providers, 66.2% reported it for the concept “too many pregnancies”, and 55% reported it for malnutrition and poor health. According to 43.3% of respondents, the regime change had reduced access to labor care to a large extent, 33.9% of respondents said this in relation to access to contraceptives, and 43.1% for overall access for internally displaced persons.ConclusionInterim data suggest that women in some settings in Afghanistan have no access to SRHR services, that preventable factors account for a large portion of maternal deaths or near miss, and that access has deteriorated since the transition of power.
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