Several studies in sub-Saharan Africa have associated infant and child mortality with the AIDS epidemic in the region. The paper uses retrospective survey data of six districts in the east, south and west of Uganda to study infant and child mortality, which increased in the 1980s probably because of the AIDS epidemic and started declining in the early 1990s, a period when the epidemic was reported to be subsiding. Deeper analysis of data indicates that children whose parents are polygamous, educated, formally employed and in business are at a higher risk of death from AIDS and related illness. Although AIDS as a direct cause of death is the fourth leading killer of children, other serious diseases such as diarrhoea, respiratory infection an...
OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of HIV on child mortality and explore potential risk factors for...
OBJECTIVE: To analyse the contribution of maternal survival and HIV status to child (under-5 years) ...
Provisional estimates from a Save the Children Fund enumeration study in four Ugandan districts indi...
HIV/AIDS is a serious problem in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease affects the most sexually active ad...
The profile of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Uganda can be summarized in the following terms: by December...
The problem of orphans is serious in sub-Saharan Africa and has been increasing with the deaths of b...
Increased AIDS mortality in northern Uganda is worrying. This paper used data from a base line surve...
Extended families and clans in African societies have extensive systems of treatment and patient man...
BACKGROUND: The steady decline in child mortality observed in most African countries through the 196...
Due to high prime-age mortality in Uganda, a result of the HIV/AIDS scourge, the number of children ...
Background: The steady decline in child mortality observed in most African countries through the...
The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) has been spreading rapidly worldwide for the past two decades...
BACKGROUND: Although there has been substantial global progress in decreasing child mortality over t...
This paper examines the effect of parental death on the mobility of 39,163 children aged 0-17 in rur...
Few studies have documented the contribution of HIV/AIDS to mortality among children under 15 years....
OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of HIV on child mortality and explore potential risk factors for...
OBJECTIVE: To analyse the contribution of maternal survival and HIV status to child (under-5 years) ...
Provisional estimates from a Save the Children Fund enumeration study in four Ugandan districts indi...
HIV/AIDS is a serious problem in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease affects the most sexually active ad...
The profile of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Uganda can be summarized in the following terms: by December...
The problem of orphans is serious in sub-Saharan Africa and has been increasing with the deaths of b...
Increased AIDS mortality in northern Uganda is worrying. This paper used data from a base line surve...
Extended families and clans in African societies have extensive systems of treatment and patient man...
BACKGROUND: The steady decline in child mortality observed in most African countries through the 196...
Due to high prime-age mortality in Uganda, a result of the HIV/AIDS scourge, the number of children ...
Background: The steady decline in child mortality observed in most African countries through the...
The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) has been spreading rapidly worldwide for the past two decades...
BACKGROUND: Although there has been substantial global progress in decreasing child mortality over t...
This paper examines the effect of parental death on the mobility of 39,163 children aged 0-17 in rur...
Few studies have documented the contribution of HIV/AIDS to mortality among children under 15 years....
OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of HIV on child mortality and explore potential risk factors for...
OBJECTIVE: To analyse the contribution of maternal survival and HIV status to child (under-5 years) ...
Provisional estimates from a Save the Children Fund enumeration study in four Ugandan districts indi...