One Health Initiative Forum Uganda-OHIFU

One Health Initiative Forum Uganda-OHIFU OHIFU- is a movement to forge co-equal, all inclusive collaborations amongst different disciplines

WHO WE ARE
One Health Initiative Forum Uganda-(OHIFU),
is a company which presents a platform with the opportunity for health care providers both in human and animals.,students,along with other related scientific and non scientific disciplines to work together,share information,research,enhance coordination,collaboration and maximizing synergies to address complex Health and social challenges through One Health approaches for the betterment of all life in Uganda. VISION
One Health Initiative Forum Uganda sees a great potential for Ugandan societies to become modern, healthier and prosperous societies they aspire to be. Dealing with risks that arise at the interface between humans,animals and Environment, food insecurity,famine,poverty,saving the lives of women and new born are paramount to realizing this potential. ONE HEALTH CONCEPT
The One Health concept is a strategy,a movement for expanding interdisciplinary collaborations and communications in all aspects of health care for humans, animals and the environment. The synergism achieved will advance health care for the 21st century and beyond by accelerating biomedical research discoveries, enhancing public health efficacy, expeditiously expanding the scientific knowledge base, and improving medical education and clinical care. When properly implemented, it will help protect and save untold millions of lives in our present and future generations.One health doesn't change what we do rather it changes how we do it.it encourages us to work together as a team and the application of one health are endless.

Though significant progress has been made, every day 19,000 children under five die, nearly half of these in the first 2...
28/08/2017

Though significant progress has been made, every day 19,000 children under five die, nearly half of these in the first 28 days of life, and 800 women die from causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. Malnutrition is the most important underlying cause of child and maternal deaths, contributing to more than 45% of child deaths and to at least one fifth of all maternal deaths. The majority of these deaths occurs in developing countries, more so in Uganda, and could be prevented however basic healthcare and key related services, particularly water and sanitation, still fail to reach the majority of people living in resource-poor areas. The developing world also bears the brunt of the global burden of infectious diseases with over 95% of tuberculosis cases and people living with HIV in developing countries.

One Health initiative Forum (u) programs aim to improve optimal health for people in Uganda by improving their health, nutrition and water and sanitation conditions. We believe in strengthening local systems, improving peoples’ access to health, nutrition and water and sanitation services, and promoting key behaviors and practices that improve the health and well-being of individuals and communities.

Despite significant progress toward international food security targets, it is estimated that one in nine people, 795 mi...
28/08/2017

Despite significant progress toward international food security targets, it is estimated that one in nine people, 795 million globally, were undernourished in 2015. Progressively complex forces—political instability and conflict, extreme weather and natural disasters, and price volatility to name a few—are intensifying the problem of food insecurity, ruling out the possibility of simple responses. Partnering with the most vulnerable communities to develop comprehensive, integrated programs aimed at building food security resilience is central to food security strategy.

THE POVERTY TRAP   Now, for the first time, scientists have found a way to determine the root causes of this “poverty tr...
02/08/2017

THE POVERTY TRAP
Now, for the first time, scientists have found a way to determine the root causes of this “poverty trap”: , whether of humans, animals, or crops, tends to rob the world’s poorest people of their livelihood, keeping them destitute regardless of how hard they work or how much economic aid they get.

Poor people who live in areas with limited human, animal, and crop disease might be able to lift themselves out of poverty either through their own means or with a bit of economic assistance, such as money to buy more crops and cattle. But in places of high disease and limited means of combating it, people could be stuck in poverty, no matter how much economic aid they receive.

One effective way to break poverty traps may be structural changes such as increasing access to health care by reducing health care costs, and preventing disease transmission through vaccine coverage. Once people are able to get well and safeguard their crops and livestock, they also might be able to dig themselves out of poverty.

Viral hepatitis infection is widely spread, affecting 400 million people worldwide – over 10 times the number of people ...
02/08/2017

Viral hepatitis infection is widely spread, affecting 400 million people worldwide – over 10 times the number of people infected with HIV. Globally, about 1.4 million people die each year from hepatitis. It is estimated that only 5% of people with chronic hepatitis know of their infection, and less than 1% have access to .

Yet, hepatitis is fully preventable and treatable: there are effective vaccines and treatments for hepatitis B, and over 90% of people with hepatitis C can be cured with treatment. The vision of eliminating hepatitis as a public threat by 2030 can be achieved, if people and countries affected by this disease were better equipped and enabled to "know hepatitis" and "act now".

10/12/2016

OHIF-U champions a strategy and an initiative to expand interdisciplinary collaborations in all aspects of Health care for Humans ,Animals,and the Environment. LIKE AND SHARE THE VIDEO.

9 in 10 people breathe air that's not safe.Air Pollution, an invisible killer that we may face on a simple walk home.We ...
18/10/2016

9 in 10 people breathe air that's not safe.
Air Pollution, an invisible killer that we may face on a simple walk home.We may not always see it, but it can be deadly.

19/04/2016

ONE HEALTH: FROM CONCEPT TO ACTION
When properly implemented, it will help protect and save untold millions of lives in our present and future generations.
One health doesnot change what we do rather it changes how we do it.The application of one health concept are endless.

WORLD HEALTH DAY  Diabetes is a chronic disease that occurs either when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin or ...
06/04/2016

WORLD HEALTH DAY
Diabetes is a chronic disease that occurs either when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin or when the body cannot effectively use the insulin it produces. Insulin is a hormone that regulates blood sugar . Hyperglycaemia, or raised blood sugar, is a common effect of uncontrolled diabetes and over time leads to serious damage to many of the body's systems, especially the nerves and blood vessels

In 2014, 8.5% of adults aged 18 years and older had diabetes. In 2012 diabetes was the direct cause of 1.5 million deaths and high blood glucose was the cause of another 2.2 million deaths1.

Type 1 diabetes
Type 1 diabetes (previously known as insulin-dependent, juvenile or childhood-onset) is characterized by deficient insulin production and requires daily administration of insulin . The cause of type 1 diabetes is not known and it is not preventable with current knowledge.

Symptoms include excessive excretion of urine (polyuria), thirst (polydipsia), constant hunger, weight loss, vision changes and fatigue. These symptoms may occur suddenly.

Type 2 diabetes
Type 2 diabetes (formerly called non-insulin-dependent or adult-onset) results from the body’s ineffective use of insulin 3. Type 2 diabetes comprises the majority of people with diabetes around the world 3, and is largely the result of excess body weight and physical inactivity.

Symptoms may be similar to those of Type 1 diabetes, but are often less marked. As a result, the disease may be diagnosed several years after onset, once complications have already arisen.

Until recently, this type of diabetes was seen only in adults but it is now also occurring increasingly frequently in children.

Gestational diabetes
Gestational diabetes is hyperglycaemia with blood glucose values above normal but below those diagnostic of diabetes, occurring during pregnancy 4. Women with gestational diabetes are at an increased risk of complications during pregnancy and at delivery. They and their children are also at increased risk of type 2 diabetes in the future.

Gestational diabetes is diagnosed through prenatal screening, rather than through reported symptoms.

Impaired glucose tolerance and impaired fasting glycaemia
Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and impaired fasting glycaemia (IFG) are intermediate conditions in the transition between normality and diabetes 3. People with IGT or IFG are at high risk of progressing to type 2 diabetes, although this is not inevitable.

What are common consequences of diabetes?

Over time, diabetes can damage the heart, blood vessels, eyes, kidneys, and nerves:

Adults with diabetes have a 2-3-fold increased risk of heart attacks and strokes 5.
Combined with reduced blood flow, neuropathy (nerve damage) in the feet increases the chance of foot ulcers, infection and eventual need for limb amputation.
Diabetic retinopathy is an important cause of blindness, and occurs as a result of long-term accumulated damage to the small blood vessels in the retina. 2.6% of global blindness can be attributed to diabetes 6.
Diabetes is among the leading causes of kidney failure 7.
How can the burden of diabetes be reduced?

Prevention
Simple lifestyle measures have been shown to be effective in preventing or delaying the onset of type 2 diabetes. To help prevent type 2 diabetes and its complications, people should:

achieve and maintain healthy body weight;
be physically active – at least 30 minutes of regular, moderate-intensity activity on most days. More activity is required for weight control;
eat a healthy diet, avoiding sugar and saturated fats intake; and
avoid to***co use – smoking increases the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.
Diagnosis and treatment
Early diagnosis can be accomplished through relatively inexpensive testing of blood sugar.

Treatment of diabetes involves diet and physical activity along with lowering blood glucose and the levels of other known risk factors that damage blood vessels. To***co use cessation is also important to avoid complications.

Interventions that are both cost-saving and feasible in developing countries include :
blood glucose control, particularly in type 1 diabetes. People with type 1 diabetes require insulin, people with type 2 diabetes can be treated with oral medication, but may also require insulin;
blood pressure control; and
foot care.
Other cost saving interventions include:
screening and treatment for retinopathy (which causes blindness);
blood lipid control (to regulate cholesterol levels);
screening for early signs of diabetes-related kidney disease and treatment.

GIANT RATS TRAINED TO SNIFF OUT TUBERCULOSIS (TB) Rats will enable early detection of TB in risk populations such as pri...
01/04/2016

GIANT RATS TRAINED TO SNIFF OUT TUBERCULOSIS (TB)
Rats will enable early detection of TB in risk populations such as prisoners and prison staff.
The 3-feet-long rats are quicker, better, and cheaper than lab technicians when it comes to screening for TB.
It takes one lab technician four days to screen 100 samples; a rat can screen that many in 20 minutes.

FIGHTING CANCER BY PUTTING TUMOR CELLS ON DIET. “Nature supplies us with an abundance of foods rich in molecules with po...
31/03/2016

FIGHTING CANCER BY PUTTING TUMOR CELLS ON DIET.
“Nature supplies us with an abundance of foods rich in molecules with powerful anti-cancer properties, capable of engaging with the disease (cancer) without causing any harmful side effects,
Specific food-borne bioactive molecules can accomplish the following:

1.Decreased free-readical damage to DNA, which is known to produce cancerous mutations:
2.Strengthen immune system function, as various immune cells are known to destroy cancer cells ( e.g., macrophages and killer-T cells);
3.Inhibit angiogenesis (growth of new blood vessels) of developing tumors;
3.Block key signal transduction pathways required for cancer cell replication;
4.Stimulate pathways that induce programmed cell death (known as apoptosis of existing and emerging cancer cells;
5.Enhance detoxification, helping to neutralize and eliminate carcinogens in the body;
6.Promote cellular differentiation, which decreases the risk that healthy cells will become cancer cells;
Block the formation of nitrosamines (chemical compounds, some of which can cause cancer) in the body;
7.Block the synthesis of dangerous forms of estrogen and testosterone, which are associated with reproductive organ cancers;
8.Slow the rate of cell replication, which is a key factor in reducing the frequency of genetic mutations that may occur:
9.Blocking receptor sites on cells to prevent overstimulation of hormones and growth factors, which, in turn slows down the rate of cell division; and
10.Reduce the synthesis of inflammatory prostaglandin, hormone-like chemical messengers, which are also linked to increased cancer risk.

A recent meta-analysis of epilepsy attributable to neurocysticercosis indicated that more than 30% of epilepsy cases in ...
08/03/2016

A recent meta-analysis of epilepsy attributable to neurocysticercosis indicated that more than 30% of epilepsy cases in sub-saharan Africa may be due the parasitic zoonotic diseases.like 1.cysticercosis due to Taenia solium (pork tape worm) in which man is afinal host,and apig an intermediate host.
2.Trichinellosis, caused by eating raw or undercoooked pork or wild game infected with the larvae.
Seroprevalence of 8.6% was found in kamuli and kaliro Districts.
RISK FACTORS:
1.poor latrine coverage in Uganda
2.poor disposal of feaces
3.poor hand washing behavior
4.poverty
5.use of dirty utensils.
This has become abig public health burden in uganda.
However improving sanitation,thorough cooking of pork and Educating the public to awareness are paramount to discontinue the trend of the diseases.

There is no vaccine or treatment for zika. But it can be prevented.
29/02/2016

There is no vaccine or treatment for zika. But it can be prevented.

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