Academic literature on the topic 'Mongo (African people)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Mongo (African people)"

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Cornelli, Evaristi Magoti. "Decolonizing African Christian Spirituality." Utafiti 13, no. 1 (March 18, 2018): 77–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26836408-01301006.

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Africa is mired in problems and has been so for a very long time. In their attempts to rescue the situation, our forefathers took upon themselves the task of decolonization. Although this process began in earnest in the early 1960s, it has since stalled. Today there are few Africans, either in the secular realm or in religious orders, who dare to speak about decolonization. It is as if the continent is in a coma, its attendants paralyzed. We all seem to have reached the conclusion that the current worldview, provided by the neo-conservatives in Washington and London, is an unassailable universal, a definitive and final creed. This paper is an attempt to break the deadlock of the world’s current commitment to a monoculture. Focusing on the religious domain, in particular prayer, and using historical and critical methods, I argue that African Christians are alienated from their cultural beliefs, and as such their quest for meaning in life is eschewed. I maintain that the spirituality of individualism characterising Christianity is detrimental to Africa and as such it has to be replaced by the ‘spirituality of community’, which is grounded in African traditions and cultures. I conclude by suggesting that if African people want to find meaning in their life and existence here on earth, then they must do so by looking very carefully into their own cultures and traditions, and not disappear into alien cultures, or into some mono-cultural hybrid we witness today.
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Akhtar Gul, Muhammad Ghulam Shabeer, Rija Ahmad Abbasi, and Abdul Wahab Khan. "Africa’s Poverty and Famines: Developmental Projects of China on Africa." PERENNIAL JOURNAL OF HISTORY 3, no. 1 (June 25, 2022): 165–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.52700/pjh.v3i1.109.

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Poverty exists without any face; it is a multifaceted and complex phenomenon. Poverty and famines existed before human civilization and culture. Human culture existed 0.07 million years ago, and civilization began 6000 years ago. In a modern civilized society, ‘first famine in human history occurred in 1708 B.C. From 1708 BC to 1878 AD, 350 famines occurred in various spheres of the world. The Encyclopedia Britannica listed 31 main famines from prehistoric to the 1960s. The sub-continent has also faced eleven severe famines from 1769-70 to 1943, and about 40.9 million people have died due to these famines. Similarly, more than 2 billion people live below the poverty line. Besides, China left 800 million people due to ‘Open Door Policy’. Now she is changing the world's shape through BRI. Africa is a complex and perplexing region of the world. Because, Africa is facing all the root problems of the world, i.e., poverty, massive unemployment and income inequality, mono-culture political economy, border disputes, intra-state wars, and ethnic and lingual clashes. In the land of Africa, the first famine was recorded 2273 years ago in Ethiopia’. About 2,582 languages[i] and 1,382 dialects are found on the African continent. From 1945 to 1999, humanity faced 25 interstate wars, most of which occurred in Africa. Therefore, 127 civil wars happened among 73 states in the same era, and 16.2 million people died. The Export and Import Bank of China will spend 1US$ trillion on the African continent in 2025. [i] Language which is speaking in Africa, Arabic (170 million) English (130 million), Swahili (100), French (115), Berber (50), Hausa (50), Portuguese (20) and Spanish (10) (Spolsky, 2018)
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book Reviews." New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 77, no. 3-4 (January 1, 2003): 295–366. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002526.

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-Edward L. Cox, Judith A. Carney, Black rice: The African origin of rice cultivation in the Americas. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 2001. xiv + 240 pp.-David Barry Gaspar, Brian Dyde, A history of Antigua: The unsuspected Isle. Oxford: Macmillan Education, 2000. xi + 320 pp.-Carolyn E. Fick, Stewart R. King, Blue coat or powdered wig: Free people of color in pre-revolutionary Saint Domingue. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2001. xxvi + 328 pp.-César J. Ayala, Birgit Sonesson, Puerto Rico's commerce, 1765-1865: From regional to worldwide market relations. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications, 200. xiii + 338 pp.-Nadine Lefaucheur, Bernard Moitt, Women and slavery in the French Antilles, 1635-1848. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001. xviii + 217 pp.-Edward L. Cox, Roderick A. McDonald, Between slavery and freedom: Special magistrate John Anderson's journal of St. Vincent during the apprenticeship. Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 2001. xviii + 309 pp.-Jaap Jacobs, Benjamin Schmidt, Innocence abroad: The Dutch imagination and the new world, 1570-1670. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001. xxviii + 450 pp.-Wim Klooster, Johanna C. Prins ,The Low countries and the New World(s): Travel, Discovery, Early Relations. Lanham NY: University Press of America, 2000. 226 pp., Bettina Brandt, Timothy Stevens (eds)-Wouter Gortzak, Gert Oostindie ,Knellende koninkrijksbanden: Het Nederlandse dekolonisatiebeleid in de Caraïben, 1940-2000. Volume 1, 1940-1954; Volume 2, 1954-1975; Volume 3, 1975-2000. 668 pp. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2001., Inge Klinkers (eds)-Richard Price, Ellen-Rose Kambel, Resource conflicts, gender and indigenous rights in Suriname: Local, national and global perspectives. Leiden, The Netherlands: self-published, 2002, iii + 266.-Peter Redfield, Richard Price ,Les Marrons. Châteauneuf-le-Rouge: Vents d'ailleurs, 2003. 127 pp., Sally Price (eds)-Mary Chamberlain, Glenford D. Howe ,The empowering impulse: The nationalist tradition of Barbados. Kingston: Canoe Press, 2001. xiii + 354 pp., Don D. Marshall (eds)-Jean Stubbs, Alejandro de la Fuente, A Nation for All: Race, Inequality, and Politics in Twentieth-Century Cuba. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001. xiv + 449 pp.-Sheryl L. Lutjens, Susan Kaufman Purcell ,Cuba: The contours of Change. Boulder CO: Lynne Rienner, 2000. ix + 155 pp., David J. Rothkopf (eds)-Jean-Germain Gros, Robert Fatton Jr., Haiti's predatory republic: The unending transition to democracy. Boulder CO: Lynn Rienner, 2002. xvi + 237 pp.-Elizabeth McAlister, Beverly Bell, Walking on fire: Haitian Women's Stories of Survival and Resistance. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press, 2001. xx + 253 pp.-Gérard Collomb, Peter Hulme, Remnants of conquest: The island Caribs and their visitors, 1877-1998. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. 371 pp.-Chris Bongie, Jeannie Suk, Postcolonial paradoxes in French Caribbean Writing: Césaire, Glissant, Condé. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. 216 pp.-Marie-Hélène Laforest, Caroline Rody, The Daughter's return: African-American and Caribbean Women's fictions of history. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. x + 267 pp.-Marie-Hélène Laforest, Isabel Hoving, In praise of new travelers: Reading Caribbean migrant women's writing. Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, 2001. ix + 374 pp.-Catherine Benoît, Franck Degoul, Le commerce diabolique: Une exploration de l'imaginaire du pacte maléfique en Martinique. Petit-Bourg, Guadeloupe: Ibis Rouge, 2000. 207 pp.-Catherine Benoît, Margarite Fernández Olmos ,Healing cultures: Art and religion as curative practices in the Caribbean and its diaspora. New York: Palgrave, 2001. xxi + 236 pp., Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert (eds)-Jorge Pérez Rolón, Charley Gerard, Music from Cuba: Mongo Santamaría, Chocolate Armenteros and Cuban musicians in the United States. Westport CT: Praeger, 2001. xi + 155 pp.-Ivelaw L. Griffith, Anthony Payne ,Charting Caribbean Development. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2001. xi + 284 pp., Paul Sutton (eds)-Ransford W. Palmer, Irma T. Alonso, Caribbean economies in the twenty-first century. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2002. 232 pp.-Glenn R. Smucker, Jennie Marcelle Smith, When the hands are many: Community organization and social change in rural Haiti. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press, 2001. xii + 229 pp.-Kevin Birth, Nancy Foner, Islands in the city: West Indian migration to New York. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001. viii + 304 pp.-Joy Mahabir, Viranjini Munasinghe, Callaloo or tossed salad? East Indians and the cultural politics of identity in Trinidad. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press, 2001. xv + 315 pp.-Stéphane Goyette, Robert Chaudenson, Creolization of language and culture. Revised in collaboration with Salikoko S. Mufwene. London: Routledge, 2001. xxi + 340 pp.
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Ramírez Mena, Adrià, Ndeye Fatou Ngom, Judicaël Tine, Kine Ndiaye, Louise Fortes, Ousseynou Ndiaye, Maguette Fall, et al. "Prevalence and Predictors of Liver Fibrosis in People Living with Hepatitis B in Senegal." Viruses 14, no. 8 (July 24, 2022): 1614. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14081614.

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Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is the first cause of liver cirrhosis and cancer in West Africa. Although the exposure to additional environmental and infectious risk factors may lead to the faster progression of liver disease, few large-scale studies have evaluated the determinants of HBV-related liver fibrosis in the region. We used transient elastography to evaluate the prevalence of liver fibrosis and assessed the association between HBV markers and significant liver fibrosis in a cohort of people living with HBV in Dakar, Senegal. The prevalence of significant liver fibrosis was 12.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] 9.6%–15.9%) among 471 people with HBV mono-infection (pwHBV) and 6.4% (95% CI 2.6%–12.7%) in 110 people with HIV/HBV co-infection (pwHIV/HBV) on tenofovir-containing antiretroviral therapy (p = 0.07). An HBV viral load > 2000 IU/mL was found in 133 (28.3%) pwHBV and 5 (4.7%) pwHIV/HBV, and was associated with significant liver fibrosis (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 1.95, 95% CI 1.04–3.66). Male participants (aOR 4.32, 95% CI 2.01–8.96) and those with elevated ALT (aOR 4.32, 95% CI 2.01–8.96) were especially at risk of having significant liver fibrosis. Our study shows that people with an HBV viral load above 2000 IU/mL have a two-fold increase in the risk of liver fibrosis and may have to be considered for antiviral therapy, independent of other disease parameters.
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Mbah, Emmanuel Ukaobasi, Calistus Keke, and Eme Godswill Ogbonnaya Ogidi. "Agronomic and productivity efficiency of two animal manure sources on intercropped maize-groundnut in the derived savannah." Agricultura Tropica et Subtropica 53, no. 4 (December 1, 2020): 215–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ats-2020-0022.

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AbstractTwo animal manure sources (swine and sheep / goat manures) each at 5 Mt·ha−1, were applied in mono- and intercropped maize (Zea mays L.) and groundnut (Arachis hypogea L.). A general control (no manure treatment of the component crops was established) for productivity assessment. The trial, conducted at the Federal College of Agriculture, Ishiagu (04º 30′ N, 06º 45′ E, 150 m above sea level), in the derived savannah plains, Ishiagu, Nigeria in 2012 and 2013 mid-cropping seasons used a randomised complete block design with three replications. It assessed the agronomic performance, cropping system (CS) and plant nutrient (PN) productivity of maize-groundnut in mono-and intercrop as influenced by two animal manure sources. The two-year combined analysis indicated that animal manure sources significantly (P < 0.05) increased growth and yield components of the crop species in the systems. Swine manure application gave the significantly (P < 0.05) highest maize grain yield in both mono- and intercropped strategies in contrast to sheep / goat manure that had the highest grain yield in both cropping strategies in groundnut. The biological and economic productivity indices of the cropping system (CS) and plant nutrient (PN) indicated that the application of sheep / goat manure in the maize / groundnut mixture exhibited greater intercrop advantage whose total CS and PN land equivalent ratios (LERs) were higher by 4.79% and 13.57%, respectively, relative to swine manure application. Therefore, the application of animal manure demands encouragement in maize-groundnut intercrop, especially sheep / goat manure as it enhances crop yield, food security and protein intake of people living in Sub-Saharan Africa practicing different strokes of farming system technology. The results of this study showed that intercropping system exhibited positive growth, yield, biological and economic advantages over monocropping of the component species. The study further indicated that intercropped maize / groundnut that received sheep / goat manure exhibited the highest cropping system and plant nutrient yield advantage and agronomic efficiency compared to swine manure alone under the same environment.
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Di Cristanziano, Veronica, Monika Timmen-Wego, Nadine Lübke, Rolf Kaiser, Herbert Pfister, David Di Cave, Federica Berrilli, Yolande Kaboré, and Rossella D´Alfonso. "Application of Luminex Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel to human stool samples from Côte d’Ivoire." Journal of Infection in Developing Countries 9, no. 08 (August 29, 2015): 884–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.6460.

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Introduction: Gastrointestinal infections caused by viruses, bacteria, and parasites are endemic in most developing countries due to inadequate provision of safe water supplies, sanitation, and hygiene. To investigate the enteric pathogens infecting people living in Côte d’Ivoire, the Luminex Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel (xTAG GPP) assay was used to analyze 34 human fecal samples. This study represents the first application of this technology to samples from a sub-Saharan African country. Methodology: Thirty-four stool samples from asymptomatic and symptomatic patients, 1–15 years of age, were analyzed by xTAG GPP. The Luminex assay represents a qualitative bead-based multiplexed molecular diagnostic test able to identify concurrently 15 enteric pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Results: Overall, 22 out of 34 (64.7%) fecal specimens were detected to be positive by xTAG GPP. Sixteen were from asymptomatic subjects, and 10 patients (45.4%) showed co-infections. G. duodenalis was detected in 15 patients, in both mono- and co-infections, representing the most frequent pathogen, followed by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) LT/ST. Four norovirus isolates were also detected and assigned to genogroups I and II. Conclusions: Considering the burden of enteric infections in developing countries, particularly among children, and the high rate of co-infections in asymptomatic subjects, this study shows the need for diagnostic tools such as xTAG GPP to improve diagnosis and treatment of these infections in endemic areas.
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Shiluli, Clement, Collins Ouma, Jeremiah Khayumbi, Wilfred Murithi, Albert Ochieng, and Susan Musau. "PO 8182 INVESTIGATING TREATMENT RESPONSE OF PATIENTS WITH CONFIRMED DRUG-RESISTANT TUBERCULOSIS IN AN HIV-1-ENDEMIC POPULATION IN WESTERN KENYA." BMJ Global Health 4, Suppl 3 (April 2019): A21.2—A21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2019-edc.53.

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BackgroundIn 2015, 10.4 million people worldwide had tuberculosis (TB) and 1.4 million deaths occurred, 400 000 of whom were HIV-positive. Sub-Saharan Africa accounted for 81% of these cases. In western Kenya, current data on the distribution of rifampicin (RIF) and isoniazid (INH) mutations is not available. The association of gene mutations with HIVinfection and the treatment response of HIV-infected and -uninfected patients with TB are not known. This study „determined the proportion of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in sputum isolates and investigated the association of RIF and INH gene mutations with HIV status and monitored the treatment response of TB/HIV-co-infected patients.MethodsThe present study was longitudinal, and enrolment was done between 2012 and 2014 after the revision of the TB treatment regimen. Patients with confirmed drug-resistant TB were followed up for one year to establish the TB treatment response as confirmed by sputum smear microscopy.ResultsA total of 1381 new and 18 previously treated TB patients were enrolled. Sputum samples were cultured on Mycobacteria-growth indicator tubes; drug susceptibility tests and line probe assay were performed to identify drug resistance and specific mutations on the rpo B, kat G and inh A’genes. Discordant samples were sequenced. Conversion rate was calculated by finding the percentage of smear-negative and -positive patients at follow-up and initial visit, respectively. Regression analysis showed that RIF resistance was associated with HIV status (p=0.025). Mann-Whitney tests revealed that the conversion time of HIV-infected and -uninfected patients with TB drug mutations was comparable (p=0.180).ConclusionThe study showed that INH mono-resistance was common. Detection of INH mono-resistance in TB-endemic areas should be scaled-up as well as TB contact investigation studies to increase early detection of resistant strains.
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Annison, Lawrence, Henry Hackman, Paulina Franklin Eshun, Sharon Annison, Peter Forson, and Samuel Antwi-Baffour. "Seroprevalence and effect of HBV and HCV co-infections on the immuno-virologic responses of adult HIV-infected persons on anti-retroviral therapy." PLOS ONE 17, no. 11 (November 23, 2022): e0278037. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278037.

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Chronic hepatitis negatively affects persons living with HIV. While varying in their transmission efficiency, HIV, HBV, and HCV have shared routes of transmission. Available data suggest widely variable rates of HBV and HCV infections in HIV-infected populations across sub-Saharan Africa. With prolonged survival rates due to increased accessibility to antiretroviral drugs, HBV and HCV have the potential to complicate the prognosis of HIV co-infected patients by contributing significantly to continued morbidity and mortality. The study sought to determine the seroprevalence of HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV co-infections among HIV patients on antiretroviral therapy and to evaluate the effect of HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV co-infections on the immunologic and virologic responses of patients. A cross-sectional study in which samples were taken from 500 people living with HIV and attending ART clinic at the Fevers unit of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital and tested for Hepatitis B Surface Antigen (HBsAg) and Hepatitis C virus antibody (HCV). CD4 cell counts and HIV-1 RNA levels were estimated as well. Data generated were analysed using IBM SPSS version 22. The seroprevalence of HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV co-infections among people living with HIV was 8.4% and 0.2% respectively. HIV/HBV coinfection included 15/42 (35.7%) males and 27/42 (64.3%) females out of which the majority (97.6%) were in the 21–60 years old bracket. HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV co-infections have varied effects on the immunological and virological response of HIV patients on ART. The mean CD cell count was 361.0 ± 284.0 in HIV/HBV co-infected patients and 473.8 ± 326.7 in HIV mono-infected patients. The mean HIV-1 RNA level was not significantly different (X2 [df] = .057 [1]; P = .811) among HIV/HBV co-infected patients (Log102.9±2.0 copies/mL), compared to that of HIV mono-infected patients (Log102.8±2.1 copies/mL) although HIV mono-infected patients had lower viral load levels. One-third (14/42) of HIV/HBV co-infected patients had virologic failure and the only HIV/HCV co-infected patient showed viral suppression. 336/500 (67.2%) patients had HIV-1 viral suppression (females [66.1%]; males [33.9%]) while 164/500 (32.8%) had virologic failure (females [67.7%]; males [32.3%]). The mean CD4 count of patients with viral suppression and patients with virologic failure was 541.2 cells/μL (95% CI 508.5–573.8) and 309.9 cell/μL (95% CI 261.9–357.9) respectively.The study concludes that, HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV coinfections do not significantly affect the immunologic and virologic responses of patients who have initiated highly active antiretroviral therapy, and treatment outcomes were better in females than in males. There was no HBV/HCV co-infection among patients.
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Mouinga-Ondémé, Augustin, Larson Boundenga, Ingrid Précilya Koumba Koumba, Antony Idam Mamimandjiami, Abdoulaye Diané, Jéordy Dimitri Engone-Ondo, Delia Doreen Djuicy, et al. "Human T-Lymphotropic virus type 1 and human immunodeficiency virus co-infection in rural Gabon." PLOS ONE 17, no. 7 (July 22, 2022): e0271320. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271320.

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Introduction Human T-cell lymphotrophic virus type-1 (HTLV-1) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) co-infection occur in many populations. People living with HIV-1 and infected with HTLV-1 seem more likely to progress rapidly towards AIDS. Both HTLV-1 and HIV-1 are endemic in Gabon (Central Africa). We investigated HTLV-1 and HIV-1 co-infection in the Haut-Ogooué province, and assessed factors that may favor the rapid evolution and progression to AIDS in co-infected patients. Methods Plasma samples from HTLV-1 patients were tested using ELISA, and positive samples were then tested by western blot assay (WB). We used the polymerase chain reaction to detect HTLV-1 Tax/Rex genes using DNA extracted from the buffy coat of ELISA-positives samples. Results We recruited 299 individuals (mean age 46 years) including 90 (30%) men and 209 (70%) women, all of whom are under treatment at the Ambulatory Treatment Centre of the province. Of these, 45 were ELISA HTLV-1/2 seropositive. According to WB criteria, 21 of 45 were confirmed positive: 20 were HTLV-1 (44%), 1 was HTLV-1/2 (2%), 2 were indeterminate (4%) and 22 were seronegative (49%). PCR results showed that 23 individuals were positive for the Tax/Rex region. Considering both serological and molecular assays, the prevalence of HTLV-1 infection was estimated at 7.7%. Being a woman and increasing age were found to be independent risk factors for co-infection. Mean CD4+ cell counts were higher in HTLV-1/HIV-1 co-infected (578.1 (± 340.8) cells/mm3) than in HIV-1 mono-infected (481.0 (± 299.0) cells/mm3) Individuals. Similarly, the mean HIV-1 viral load was Log 3.0 (± 1.6) copies/ml in mono-infected and Log 2.3 (± 0.7) copies/ml in coinfected individuals. Conclusion We described an overall high prevalence of HTLV-1/HIV-1 co-infection in Gabon. Our findings stress the need of strategies to prevent and manage these co-infections.
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Richey, Lauren E., Yussef Bennani, and Maria Frontini. "912. Expansion of Hepatitis C Treatment with New Medicaid Subscription Model in Louisiana." Open Forum Infectious Diseases 8, Supplement_1 (November 1, 2021): S547—S548. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.1107.

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Abstract Background It is estimated that nearly 80,000 people with hepatitis C are living in Louisiana, many with Medicaid coverage. Previously, only Medicaid patients free from drugs and alcohol with a fibrosis score of F3 or F4 were eligible for treatment, resulting in few patients receiving treatment. Beginning in July 2019, generic sofosbuvir/velpatasvir was made available through the Medicaid program in a subscription model, allowing unlimited hepatitis C treatment in Louisiana’s Medicaid program for 5 years at a set price to the program. This has dramatically expanded access to Hepatitis C treatment for people with Medicaid in Louisiana. Methods Patients with Hepatitis C seen in the Infectious Diseases Center at University Medical Center in New Orleans, in 2020 by the 5 main hepatitis C providers were included. Demographics and laboratory data were collected to determine outcomes. Results Most patients with a hepatitis C (HCV) viral load and insurance data had Medicaid (80%, N=275). Twenty-two (8%) were HIV co-infected. Most were men (75%) and African-American (77%). Among the mono-infected patients with Medicaid and an HCV viral load, 216 (85%) had an undetectable viral load by the beginning of June 2021. Of the remaining 37 patients, 30 patients were prescribed treatment; but did not take it (n=4), didn’t follow-up (n=23), or followed-up but never got labs (n=3). One was treated but had a treatment failure (n=1). Six of the 37 were not prescribed medications due to a short life expectancy or significant drug interactions. The percentage of patients with an undetectable viral load was similar by gender and race, however younger age groups had lower viral suppression. In those aged less than 35, only 47% had an undetectable viral load and among those aged 36 to 44, it was 66%. Using the previous criteria of requiring a fibrosis score of F3 or F4, only 20% (n=44) would have been eligible for medicine to treat hepatitis C. Conclusion The new hepatitis C treatment subscription model with resultant removal of previous barriers has dramatically expanded treatment for people with Medicaid in Louisiana. More than five times the number of Medicaid patients received treatment in 2020 in our academic medical clinic. Disclosures Yussef Bennani, MD, MPH, Gilead Sciences (Scientific Research Study Investigator)ViiV Healthcare (Scientific Research Study Investigator)
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Mongo (African people)"

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Kondemo, Marthe Maleke. "Women’s security through heterosexual marriage in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: an African woman’s reading of the book of Ruth." Diss., 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4827.

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In Congolese society, heterosexual marriage is a highly regarded institution that is viewed as contributing significantly to the true identities of women. In this study, I use Masenya’s terminologies, “idolization of marriage” and “marriage at all costs”, as springboards to re-read the story of Ruth in the Hebrew Bible in light of the experiences of Congolese women who tend to regard marriage as a norm. I have analysed and critiqued patriarchy as it has shaped the lives of biblical women (cf the Ruth character in the Hebrew Bible) as well as it continues to shape the lives of many Congolese women. Although in some sense, the Ruth character can be emulated in terms of her sense of independence, in terms of her commitment to seeking marriage at all costs though, Ruth, cannot be a helpful model to the lives of many poor Anamongo women who today trapped in poverty, continue to regard heterosexual marriage as the norm in their search for survival, security, and value.
Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies
M. Th. (Old Testament)
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Kondemo, Marthe Maleke. "In search of affirming identities and role models : a gender-sensitive re-reading of the Vashti and Esther characters in the book of Esther among the Mongo of the Democratic Republic of the Congo." Thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/21675.

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The main question that this dissertation seeks to answer is, “If the character of Vashti on the one hand and that of Esther on the other are re-read from a gender-sensitive perspective which possibilities can the reading offer for the liberation and reconstruction of affirming identities for the Mongo women in the DRC today?” The study undertaken here challenges the fact that Mongo women of the DRC remain attached to their roles as wives and mothers which is viewed as a hindrance to their self-definition. The two characters Esther and Vashti from the book of Esther are examined in light of the experiences of Mongo women using the bosadi (womanhood) approach to deconstruct and problematize oppressive ideologies in the biblical text as well as in the Mongo context. It is argued that Vashti and Esther are not opposite characters but should be viewed in the light of each other as complementary characters. Despite the positive examples that the two women offer, both characters also offer oppressive possibilities for modern DR Congolese women. Therefore, they do not fully represent ideal role models for Mongo women in their efforts to affirm their identities.
Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies
D.Th. (Old Testament)
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Books on the topic "Mongo (African people)"

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Mpeya, Eyala Mbwakama Isese ya. Le prix de la paix en Afrique: À la lumiére des pactes de sang. Kinshasa: Presses universitaires du Congo, 2005.

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Fama, Joseph Onema. Gospel and culture in an African context: The Tetela-Kusu-Anamongo people and the church. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006.

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Fama, Joseph Onema. Gospel & culture in an African context: The Tetela-Kusu-Anamongo people and the church. Nashville, TN: Methodist Publishing House, Church, 2007.

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E, Boelaert, ed. Nsong'a Lianja: L'épopée des Nkundo. 3rd ed. [Mbandaka, Zaïre]: Centre Æquatoria, 1986.

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Bongango, Joseph. L'organisation sociale chez les Mongo de Basankusu et sa transformation. Paris: Publibook, 2008.

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Brandstetter, Anna-Maria. Leben im Regenwald: Politik und Gesellschaft bei den Bolongo (Demokratische Republik Kongo). Hamburg: Lit, 1998.

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Vokouma, Jocelyne Karimatou Boussari. Les techniques du tissage au Moogo: Origines et évolution. Lille: A.N.R.T., Université de Lille III, 2000.

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Caravita, Giovanni. Il mondo dei Dinka: Aspetti di vita individuale, sociale, religiosa. Como: P. Cairoli, 1989.

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Boni, Stefano. Le strutture della disuguaglianza: Capi, appartenenze e gerarchie nel mondo Akan dell'Africa occidentale. Milano, Italy: FrancoAngeli, 2003.

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Izard, Michel. Moogo: L'émergence d'un espace étatique ouest-africain au XVIe siècle : étude d'anthropologie historique. Paris: Karthala, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Mongo (African people)"

1

Salvatici, Silvia. "La cooperazione prima della cooperazione. Il movimento dei volontari per il Terzo mondo nei lunghi anni Sessanta." In L’Italia repubblicana e gli aiuti internazionali, 155–78. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/979-12-215-0389-0.08.

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Abstract:
This essay examines the Third World volunteer movement that developed within the Catholic world in the late 1950s and the following decade. Groups and associations selected applications from dozens of young people, trained aspiring lay missionaries, and sent them to religious missions in Africa and Latin America to work as volunteers in the fields of education, health care, and construction. The essay reconstructs the activities of the organisations, but also the way in which aid to "poor countries" was conceived, in terms of the ethical values it invoked and the effects it hoped to produce. The history of Italian cooperation is placed in an international context, going beyond the measurement of Italy's backwardness in the field of aid policy, to capture some elements of specificity through the categories of analysis provided by the historiographic debate on contemporary humanitarianism.
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