S
Said A. H. Vuai
Researcher at University of Dodoma
Publications - 58
Citations - 497
Said A. H. Vuai is an academic researcher from University of Dodoma. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Tanzania. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 42 publications receiving 318 citations. Previous affiliations of Said A. H. Vuai include University of the Ryukyus & State University of Zanzibar.
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Determinants of undernutrition among women of reproductive age in Tanzania mainland
TL;DR: Developing countries, including Tanzania, are increasingly characterised by undernutrition, affecting a large proportion of the country’s population, and women in Tanzania are particularly affected.
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Delineation of groundwater provenance in a coastal aquifer using statistical and isotopic methods, Southeast Tanzania
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the various sources of groundwater and the major factors affecting the groundwater quality by means of multivariate statistical analyses, using chemical tracers and stable isotope signatures.
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Trend of trace metals in precipitation around Okinawa Island, Japan
Said A. H. Vuai,Akira Tokuyama +1 more
TL;DR: Okinawa island is located between mainland Japan to the northeast, Taiwan to the southwest and China to the west and the results showed that the trace metal contamination was low comparable to rural areas of less industrialized countries as discussed by the authors.
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Reliability analysis of roof rainwater harvesting systems in a semi-arid region of sub-Saharan Africa: case study of Mekelle, Ethiopia
TL;DR: In this article, the reliability of domestic rainwater harvesting (RWH) systems in semi-arid regions in sub-Saharan Africa was investigated and the authors found that RWH systems in Mekelle city were unreliable due to inefficient design.
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Strontium isotopes as tracers for quantifying mixing of groundwater in the alluvial plain of a coastal watershed, south-eastern Tanzania
TL;DR: The results illustrate the strength of combining isotopic measurements with more conventional water chemistry data in order to obtain a better understanding of groundwater flow systems and the geochemical processes governing their chemistry as discussed by the authors.