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Institution

University of Zimbabwe

EducationHarare, Harare, Zimbabwe
About: University of Zimbabwe is a education organization based out in Harare, Harare, Zimbabwe. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The organization has 4378 authors who have published 6800 publications receiving 160720 citations. The organization is also known as: UZ & University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: HIV service providers are urged to consider the obstacles that prevent many men from accessing their services and argue for community-based and driven initiatives that facilitate safe and supportive social spaces for men to openly discuss social constructions of masculinity as well as renegotiate more health-enabling masculinities.
Abstract: Background: A growing number of studies highlight men’s disinclination to make use of HIV services. This suggests there are factors that prevent men from engaging with health services and an urgent need to unpack the forms of sociality that determine men’s acceptance or rejection of HIV services. Methods: Drawing on the perspectives of 53 antiretroviral drug users and 25 healthcare providers, we examine qualitatively how local constructions of masculinity in rural Zimbabwe impact on men’s use of HIV services. Results: Informants reported a clear and hegemonic notion of masculinity that required men to be and act in control, to have know-how, be strong, resilient, disease free, highly sexual and economically productive. However, such traits were in direct conflict with the ‘good patient’ persona who is expected to accept being HIV positive, take instructions from nurses and engage in health-enabling behaviours such as attending regular hospital visits and refraining from alcohol and unprotected extra-marital sex. This conflict between local understandings of manhood and biopolitical representations of ‘a good patient’ can provide a possible explanation to why so many men do not make use of HIV services in Zimbabwe. However, once men had been counselled and had the opportunity to reflect upon the impact of ART on their productivity and social value, it was possible for some to construct new and more ART-friendly versions of masculinity. Conclusion: We urge HIV service providers to consider the obstacles that prevent many men from accessing their services and argue for community-based and driven initiatives that facilitate safe and supportive social spaces for men to openly discuss social constructions of masculinity as well as renegotiate more health-enabling masculinities.

283 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: T. vaginalis infection is strongly associated with an increased risk for HIV infection in this general population of African women and may have a substantial impact on preventing HIV acquisition among women.
Abstract: Trichomoniasis vaginalis is the most common nonviral sexually transmitted infection (STI) worldwide with a particularly high prevalence in regions of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) endemicity. However its impact as a cofactor for HIV acquisition is poorly understood. Samples from 213 women who experienced HIV seroconversion (cases) during a longitudinal study involving 4450 women in Uganda and Zimbabwe were matched with samples from HIV-uninfected women (controls). All samples underwent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis for Trichomonas vaginalis DNA. For cases analyzed samples were from the visit in which HIV seroconversion was detected and the visit preceding detection of seroconversion; for controls one analyzed sample was from the visit matched by follow-up duration to the cases seroconversion visit and the other sample was from the visit immediately preceding the matched visit. The prevalence of T. vaginalis infection before HIV infection was 11.3% in cases and 4.5% in controls (P = .002). In multivariable analysis controlling for hormonal contraception other STIs behavioral and demographic factors the adjusted odds ratio for HIV acquisition was 2.74 (95% confidence interval 1.25-6.00) for T. vaginalis-positive cases. The presence of behavioral risk factors for HIV infection study recruitment from a referral population at high-risk for HIV primary sex partner-associated risk for HIV infection and herpes simplex virus type 2 seropositivity were also predictive of incident HIV infection. T. vaginalis infection is strongly associated with an increased risk for HIV infection in this general population of African women. Given the high prevalence of T. vaginalis infection in HIV-endemic areas T. vaginalis control may have a substantial impact on preventing HIV acquisition among women. (authors)

283 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of increasing concentration of potato waste expressed as percentage of total solids and the initial inoculum-to-substrate ratio (ISR) on methane yield and productivity were investigated.

278 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Iron overload in Africa may be caused by an interaction between the amount of dietary iron and a gene distinct from any HLA-linked gene.
Abstract: Background and Methods. In contrast to hemochromatosis, which in white populations is inherited through a gene linked to the HLA locus, iron overload in sub-Saharan Africa is believed to result solely from increased dietary iron derived from traditional home-brewed beer. To examine the hypothesis that African iron overload also involves a genetic factor, we used likelihood analysis to test for an interaction between a gene (the hypothesized iron-loading locus) and an environmental factor (increased dietary iron) that determines transferrin saturation and unsaturated iron-binding capacity. We studied 236 members of 36 African families chosen because they contained index subjects with iron overload. Linkage to the HLA region was tested with use of lod scores. Results. In the index subjects, increased iron was present in both hepatocytes and cells of the mononuclearphagocyte system. Among family members with increased dietary iron due to the consumption of traditional beer, transferrin saturation in...

268 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The formation of Archean crust appears to in- volve processes unique to early earth history as mentioned in this paper, and the crust structure is typically thin (35-40 km), unlayered, and characterized byastrongvelocity contrast with post-Archean geologic terranes.
Abstract: The formation of Archean crust appears to in- volve processes unique to early earth history. Initial results from receiver function analysis of crustal structure beneath 81 broadband stations deployed across southern Africa re- vealsignicantdierences inthenatureof thecrustandthe crust-mantle boundary between Archean and post-Archean geologic terranes. With the notable exception of the colli- sional Limpopo belt, where the crust is thick and the Moho complex, the crust beneath undisturbed Archean craton is typically thin ( 35{40 km), unlayered, and characterized byastrongvelocitycontrastacrossarelativelysharpMoho. Thiscrustalstructurecontrastsmarkedlywiththatbeneath post-ArcheanterranesandbeneathArcheanregionsaected bylarge-scaleProterozoicevents(theBushveldcomplexand the Okwa/Magondi belts), where the crust tends to be rel- atively thick (45{50 km) and the Moho is complex.

256 citations


Authors

Showing all 4433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Didier Raoult1733267153016
Roy M. Anderson11652665549
Vikram Patel11665459717
Richard M. Cowling9639230042
Ken E. Giller9255536374
Leif Bertilsson8732123933
Johan Rockström8523657842
Alex Aiken7729520254
Frances M. Cowan7645619984
Robert J. Biggar7323118474
Charles A. Thornton7118217195
David Wilson6961818780
David Katzenstein6928021239
Bruce M. Campbell6722717616
David Sanders6549217119
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202327
202289
2021485
2020393
2019291
2018326