Literature DB >> 537128

Seasonal dimensions to rural porverty: analysis and practical implications.

R Chambers, R Longhurst, D Bradley, R Feachem.   

Abstract

This paper reports on a conference on seasonal dimensions to rural poverty. Presentations included specialised papers on climate, energy balance, vital events, individual tropical diseases, nutrition, rural economy, and women, and also multi-disciplinary case studies of tropical rural areas from the Gambia, Nigeria, Mali, Kenya, Tanzania, India and Bangladesh. While care is needed in generalising, the evidence suggested that for agriculturalists in the tropics, the worst times of year are the wet seasons, typically marked by a concurrence of food shortages, high demands for agricultural work, high exposure to infection especially diarrhoeas, malaria, and skin diseases, loss of body weight, low birth weights, high neonatal mortality, poor child care, malnutrition, sickness and indebtedness. In this season, poor and weak people, especially women, are vulnerable to deprivation and to becoming poorer and weaker. Seasonal analysis is easily left out in rural planning. When applied, it suggests priorities in research, and indicates practical policy measures for health, for the family, for agriculture, and for government planning and administration.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 537128

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0022-5304


  1 in total

1.  Seasonal variation in water use for hygiene in Oromia, Ethiopia, and its implications for trachoma control: An intensive observational study.

Authors:  Katie Greenland; Alexandra Czerniewska; Meseret Guye; Demitu Legesse; Asanti Ahmed Mume; Oumer Shafi Abdurahman; Muluadam Abraham Aga; Hirpha Miecha; Gemechu Shumi Bejiga; Virginia Sarah; Matthew Burton; Anna Last
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2022-05-13
  1 in total

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