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Institution

University of Nigeria, Nsukka

EducationNsukka, Nigeria
About: University of Nigeria, Nsukka is a education organization based out in Nsukka, Nigeria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 10211 authors who have published 13685 publications receiving 138922 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that malaria was the illness that most people had and policy measures should establish targeted mechanisms to protect the general population, especially rural dwellers and poorer households, against the financial burden of direct healthcare payments.
Abstract: especially in resource-poor settings that lack effective health insur- ance policies. The method of financing healthcare is linked to household treatment-seeking patterns, 2 and the strategies for coping with payments can increase a household's suscep- tibility to impoverishment. Abstract. This study investigated the costs of illness to households in different socio-economic status (SES) groups and geographic places of abode in addition to the mechanisms that the different population groups used to pay for health services and cope with payments. A cross-sectional descriptive study of 3,200 households selected from six communities in two states was conducted using interviewer-administered pre-tested questionnaires. An SES index was used to divide the households into quartiles, and χ 2 analysis was used to determine the relationship of SES and geographic abode of households with cost of illness, payment mechanism, and coping strategies. The results show that malaria was the illness that most people had. The average cost of transportation for malaria was 86 Naira ($0.6 US), and the total cost of treat- ment was 2,819.9 Naira ($20 US); of this cost, drug costs alone contributed more than 90%. Out of pocket was the main method of payment. Treatment costs differed by geographic location and socio-economic status. Policy measures should establish targeted mechanisms to protect the general population, especially rural dwellers and poorer households, against the financial burden of direct healthcare payments.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the aggregate outcome of an 8-year multi-stakeholder engagement in municipal solid waste management (MSWM) in Nigeria is presented, which draws on insights from firsthand qualitative engagement with informal waste workers, interviews with key stakeholders, policy documents, and relevant literature to situate the Nigerian informal waste economy within current international development discourse.
Abstract: The problem of municipal solid waste has remained intractable in Nigeria despite the state’s central role in municipal solid waste management (MSWM). Policy and reforms of the MSWM system have invariably excluded the informal economy, with this exclusion frequently reinforced by uncritical implementation of neo-liberal development policies. Yet, the informal economy fortuitously remains active in solid waste collection, recycling, and disposal. This article is the aggregate outcome of an 8-year multi-stakeholder engagement in MSWM in Nigerian cities. It draws on insights from first-hand qualitative engagement with informal waste workers, interviews with key stakeholders, policy documents, and relevant literature to situate the Nigerian informal waste economy within current international development discourse. While highlighting the implications of social acceptance and inclusion of the waste economy in post-2015 MSWM and development policy, the study notes the lack of an articulate policy on MSWM ...

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study revealed the existence of different morphotypes corresponding to two botanical species found unequally distributed throughout Benin and the vegetable was reported to possess special nutritional and medicinal values.
Abstract: Thirty five villages randomly selected across ethnic and agro-ecological zones of Benin were surveyed to document the indigenous knowledge associated with the domestication (bringing into cultivation), production and utilization of vegetable Gbolo (Crassocephalum spp.). The study revealed the existence of different morphotypes (1–4 per village) corresponding to two botanical species (Crassocephalum rubens (Juss. ex Jacq.) S. Moore) and (Crassocephalum crepidioides (Benth.) S. Moore) found unequally distributed throughout the country. The domestication (bringing into cultivation from the wild) of Gbolo was started in many villages and with some tribes in southern Benin, the vegetable is already being produced in sole cropping for commercial purposes. Regular consumption (49.90 % of responses) and scarcity (20.30 % of responses) were the two main reasons attributed by the interviewees for domestication of the vegetable. The cultural practices recorded were of five categories. The commonest cropping system found was mixed or inter-row cropping (92.31 % of producers) with either vegetable crops (53.85 % of producers) or non-vegetable crops (38.46 % of users). Sauce prepared with either fresh or dried leaves was the main type of preparation of Gbolo and the vegetable was reported to possess special nutritional and medicinal values. For further promotion, important researches directions are suggested.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The adsorption of heavy metals (HMs) onto CBAs is reviewed, finding that chemical treatment produced CBAs most efficient for As(V), Pb(II) and Fe(III), while ionic liquid CBA was more efficient for Cu( II) and Ni(II), and nano-based treatment was suitable for the uptake of Co(II).

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: N -(2-chloroethyl)morpholine-4-carboxamide (NCMC), N -( 2-chlorosethyl)tiomorpholine 4 carboxamide(NCTC) and N, N -bis(1,4-dicarboxamide)-piperazine-1, 4-dicoarboxamides (NCPD) were studied as corrosion inhibitors for mild steel using atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS) and gravimetry and thermometry.

44 citations


Authors

Showing all 10333 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh118102556187
Peter J. Houghton6322814321
Alessandro Piccolo6228414332
R. W. Guillery6010613439
Ulrich Klotz5621310774
Nicholas H. Oberlies522629683
Brian Norton493229251
Adesola Ogunniyi4727211806
Obinna Onwujekwe432828960
Sanjay Batra393297179
Benjamin Uzochukwu381639318
Christian N. Madu361345378
Jude U. Ohaeri361213088
Peter A. Akah331643422
Charles E. Chidume331533639
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202360
2022129
20211,654
20201,560
20191,191
2018884