Late presentation of hepatocellular carcinoma highlights the need for a public health programme to eliminate hepatitis B

The Lancet ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 398 (10318) ◽  
pp. 2288
Author(s):  
Richard Nhlane ◽  
Benno Kreuels ◽  
Jane Mallewa ◽  
Karen Chetcuti ◽  
Melita A Gordon ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  

Newborn screening is the most important preventive public health programme of the 21st century. It is implemented in majority of the developed countries. India and many countries in Asia are yet to start any publicly funded programme despite this having been established practice in many countries for over 50 years.


2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-615 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Marini de Carvalho ◽  
H. Pimentel dos Santos ◽  
I. C. G. P. dos Santos ◽  
P. R. Vargas ◽  
J. Pedrosa

Ethnography ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 480-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Branwyn Poleykett

Through an examination of an investigation of commercial sexual practices conducted by an NGO, I explore how a public health programme creates its object on the ground through painstaking fieldwork. This paper is about a particular emplaced, embodied, visual practice; NGO fieldworkers identify and follow through the city women whose bodily dispositions identify them as ‘prostitutes’, although the women themselves vehemently reject this label. A particular politics of recognition emerges around uneven visibilities of women in the city. The fieldworkers labour to make the banality of ‘prostitution’ and its practices visible to the ‘prostitutes’ themselves, while at the same time cultivating a visual expertise in the recognition and classification of a putatively culturally specific bodily repertoire. Paying close attention to the techniques fieldworkers use to read public bodies shows how ordinary practices of urban bodily cultivation, everyday Dakarois technologies of gender, become progressively weighted with risk as they tangle with the evolving categories of a public health programme. Risk emerges here via a series of unequal exchanges within the visual economy of the city. Fieldworkers may find themselves exposed to new forms of reputational risk while they labour to define the social, sexual and semantic complexities of genn (going out).


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