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BMC Public Health | 2013

A population-based survey of prevalence of diabetes and correlates in an urban slum community in Nairobi, Kenya.

Richard Ayah; Mark D Joshi; Rosemary Wanjiru; Elijah Kaharo Njau; C Fredrick Otieno; E.K. Njeru; Kenneth Kipyegon Mutai

BackgroundUrban slum populations in Africa continue to grow faster than national populations. Health strategies that focus on non-communicable diseases (NCD) in this segment of the population are generally lacking. We determined the prevalence of diabetes and associated cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors correlates in Kibera, Nairobi’s largest slum.MethodsWe conducted a population-based household survey utilising cluster sampling with probability proportional to size. Households were selected using a random walk method and consenting residents aged 18 years and above were recruited. The WHO STEPS instrument was administered. A random capillary blood sugar (RCBS) was obtained; known persons with diabetes and subjects with a RCBS >11.1 had an 8 hours fasting blood sugar (FBS) drawn. Diabetes was defined as a RCBS of ≥ 11.1 mmol/l and a FBS of ≥ 7.0 mmol/l, or a prior diagnosis or receiving diabetes drug treatment.ResultsOut of 2061 enrolled; 50.9% were males, mean age was 33.4 years and 87% had a minimum of primary education. Only 10.6% had ever had a blood sugar measurement. Age adjusted prevalence of diabetes was 5.3% (95% CI 4.2-6.4) and prevalence increased with age peaking at 10.5% (95% CI 6.8-14.3%) in the 45–54 year age category. Diabetes mellitus (DM) correlates were: 13.1% smoking, 74.9% alcohol consumption, 75.7% high level of physical activity; 16.3% obese and 29% overweight with higher rates in women.Among persons with diabetes the odds of obesity, elevated waist circumference and hypertension were three, two and three fold respectively compared to those without diabetes. Cardiovascular risk factors among subjects with diabetes were high and mirrored that of the entire sample; however they had a significantly higher use of tobacco.ConclusionsThis previously unstudied urban slum has a high prevalence of DM yet low screening rates. Key correlates include cigarette smoking and high alcohol consumption. However high levels of physical activity were also reported. Findings have important implications for NCD prevention and care. For this rapidly growing youthful urban slum population policy makers need to focus their attention on strategies that address not just communicable diseases but non communicable diseases as well.


Acta Tropica | 1997

The effects of malaria control on nutritional status in infancy

Robert W. Snow; Catherine S. Molyneux; E.K. Njeru; J. Omumbo; C.G. Nevill; E. Muniu; Kevin Marsh

Both malaria and undernutrition are major causes of paediatric mortality and morbidity in sub-Saharan Africa. The introduction of insecticide-treated bed nets (ITBN) during a randomized controlled trial on the Kenyan coast significantly reduced severe, life-threatening malaria and all-cause childhood mortality. This paper describes the effects of the intervention upon the nutritional status of infants aged between 1 and 11 months of age. Seven hundred and eighty seven infants who slept under ITBN and 692 contemporaneous control infants, were seen during one of three cross-sectional surveys conducted during a one year period. Standardized weight-for-age and mid-upper arm circumference measures were significantly higher among infants who used ITBN compared with control infants. Whether these improvements in markers of nutritional status were a direct result of concomitant reductions in clinical malaria episodes remains uncertain. Never-the-less evidence suggests that even moderate increases in weight-for-age scores can significantly reduce the probability of mortality in childhood and ITBN may provide additional gains to child survival beyond their impressive effects upon malaria-specific events.


American Journal of Public Health | 1994

Health care-seeking behavior related to the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases in Kenya

Stephen Moses; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; Janet Bradley; E.K. Njeru; Gloria D. Eldridge; Esther Muia; Joyce Olenja; Frank Plummer

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to identify health-care seeking and related behaviors relevant to controlling sexually transmitted diseases in Kenya. METHODS A total of 380 patients with sexually transmitted diseases (n = 189 men and 191 women) at eight public clinics were questioned about their health-care seeking and sexual behaviors. RESULTS Women waited longer than men to attend study clinics and were more likely to continue to have sex while symptomatic. A large proportion of patients had sought treatment previously in both the public and private sectors without relief of symptoms, resulting in delays in presenting to study clinics. For women, being married and giving a recent history of selling sex were both independently associated with continuing to have sex while symptomatic. CONCLUSIONS Reducing the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases in Kenya will require improved access, particularly for women, to effective health services, preferably at the point of first contact with the health system. It is also critical to encourage people to reduce sexual activity while symptomatic, seek treatment promptly, and increase condom use.


Social Science & Medicine | 1994

Sexual behaviour in Kenya: Implications for sexually transmitted disease transmission and control

Stephen Moses; Esther Muia; Janet Bradley; Nico Nagelkerke; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; E.K. Njeru; Gloria D. Eldridge; Joyce Olenja; Kay Wotton; Francis A. Plummer; Robert C. Brunham

Sexual behaviour in Kenya in relation to STD transmission was investigated with a view to forming a basis for the more rational design of STD/HIV control interventions. Questionnaires were administered to a sample of 762 men and women attending eight health facilities in two urban centres. Equal numbers of STD patients (cases) and non-STD related clinic attenders (clinic controls) were selected, matched by gender and clinic. Another sample of 427 men and women was obtained from a random sampling of households in a slum area in Nairobi (community controls). Male STD patients who were unmarried, or married but living apart from their wives, reported a higher mean number of sex partners in the previous three months than did male clinic or community controls. Unmarried female STD patients reported a higher mean number of sex partners in the previous three months than did unmarried female clinic or community controls. Both male and female STD patients were more likely to report having been involved in commercial sex transactions in the previous three months than clinic or community controls. Considerable heterogeneity in sexual behaviour was apparent. In multivariate analysis, the most important predictor of STD acquisition for both men and women was the number of reported sex partners in the previous three months. In addition, for men only, marital status (unmarried, or married but living apart from their wives) and purchasing sex were significant predictors of being an STD patient. These data confirm the importance of commercial sex in STD transmission, and suggest that men play a bridging role between female sex workers and the general population of women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 1995

Std Partner Notification and Referral In Primary Level Health Centers in Nairobi, Kenya

E.K. Njeru; Gloria D. Eldridge; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; Francis A. Plummer; Stephen Moses

Background: Controlling sexually transmitted diseases requires that partners of patients with a sexually transmitted disease be notified and treated. However, many countries in the developing world lack the infrastructure and resources for effective partner referral. Goal of this Study: To provide information on rates of partner referral in primary-level health centers in Kenya, to identify characteristics of patients with sexually transmitted diseases who inform their partners about the need for treatment, and to evaluate the impact of a brief counseling intervention on rates of partner notification. Study Design: Two-hundred-fifty-four patients presenting for treatment of a sexually transmitted disease were given 5 to 10 minutes of additional counseling on the importance of referring partners for sexually transmitted disease treatment. All patients who returned for follow-up 1 week later were interviewed to determine whether they had notified their sex partners. Results: Sixty-eight percent of patients who returned for follow-up reported they had referred their partners for treatment of a sexually transmitted disease. The highest rates of partner notification occurred among women attending maternal child health/family planning clinics and married men and women attending general outpatient clinics. Conclusion: Strengthening and directing counseling toward women in maternal child health/family planning clinics and married men and women in general clinics may be an effective and inexpensive way to increase partner notification in the developing world.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1992

Epidemic Meningococcal Disease in Nairobi, Kenya, 1989

Robert W. Pinner; Onyango Fe; Bradley A. Perkins; Nazir B. Mirza; Dorothy M. Ngacha; Michael W. Reeves; Wallis E. DeWitt; E.K. Njeru; Naphtali N. Agata; Claire V. Broome


East African Medical Journal | 1996

Migraine headaches in a group of medical students at the Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi

Eo Amayo; Jowi Jo; E.K. Njeru


African Health Sciences | 2009

Severe road traffic injuries in Kenya, quality of care and access

William Macharia; E.K. Njeru; F Muli-Musiime; V Nantulya


BMC Public Health | 2014

Prevalence of hypertension and associated cardiovascular risk factors in an urban slum in Nairobi, Kenya: A population-based survey

Mark D Joshi; Richard Ayah; Elijah Kaharo Njau; Rosemary Wanjiru; Kayima Jk; E.K. Njeru; Kenneth Kipyegon Mutai


East African Medical Journal | 2002

Headache associated disability in medical students at the Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi

Eo Amayo; Jowi Jo; E.K. Njeru

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Eo Amayo

University of Nairobi

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