Until vaccines that are capable of protecting all populations against TB are developed, treatment is the best option to preventing infection.
Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan inspects a military parade following her swearing-in as the country’s first female president on March 19, 2021 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
AFP via Getty Images
Cyrus Sinai, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill e Rob Fetter, Duke University
Solar-powered cold chain technologies can be game-changers in the fight against COVID-19 in resource-limited settings in sub-Saharan Africa and beyond.
Oyewusi Ibidapo-Obe
Courtesy The Nigerian Academy of Science
Nigeria’s academic community is mourning the death of engineering professor and university administrator, Professor Oyewusi Ibidapo-Obe.
An aerial shot of The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam reservoir filling up. Taken in 2020.
Photo by Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2020
Nile communities carefully monitored and recorded the river’s flow. Centuries later these records are still being used by water resource managers around the world to analyse unpredictable river flows.
COVID-19 vaccination is slower on the African continent than in high income countries.
Shutterstock
Due to the poor security response of the Nigerian state, insurgency will continue to pose a serious threat to its northeast border communities.
Members of Ghana’s parliament during a break from electing a new leader of parliament. Only 14% of parliamentarians are women.
Nipah Dennis/AFP via Getty Images
Sustainable financial inclusion in Nigeria requires interventions that strengthen financial capability, participation and well-being of small-scale farmers.
Bank buildings rise above the business district of Lagos. Banks must effectively communicate the impact of their engagement with women.
Tim Graham/Getty Images
Emily B. Wong, Africa Health Research Institute (AHRI) e Alison Grant, Africa Health Research Institute (AHRI)
South Africa’s long-awaited TB prevalence survey results were recently released. They reveal that the country has a much higher burden of TB than previously thought.
Some Nigerians took to mass looting of warehouses containing COVID-19 food palliatives that were not distributed six months into lockdown.
Photo by Kola Sulaimon/AFP via Getty Images
In Nigeria, the unmarried, the unemployed, the less educated and those from the northern parts of the country were most susceptible to psychological challenges associated with COVID-19 lockdown.
Local diets need to be sustainable, linked to human health and environmental sustainability.
shutterstock/ Jaime Garcia M
Indigenous foods such as cowpeas can improve people’s nutrition and help them cope with the hunger brought about by the effects of COVID-19 on foreign food imports.
Two men work their maize crop in Uganda’s Kapchorwa district.
WALTER ASTRADA/AFP via Getty Images
Confusion reigns about Nigeria’s distribution plan for its first batch of COVID-19 vaccines.
South Africans wait in a queue for free food. Understanding the social impact has been key to managing the pandemic.
Photo by Luba Lesolle/Gallo Images via Getty Images
The lead role of public health researchers continues to be important. But there is growing acknowledgement that social scientists have to be present from the very beginning.
Dean Faculty of Health Sciences and Professor of Vaccinology at University of the Witwatersrand; and Director of the SAMRC Vaccines and Infectious Diseases Analytics Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand
Principal Medical Scientist and Head of Laboratory for Antimalarial Resistance Monitoring and Malaria Operational Research, National Institute for Communicable Diseases
Professor and Programme Director, SA MRC Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science - PRICELESS SA (Priority Cost Effective Lessons in Systems Strengthening South Africa), University of the Witwatersrand