1.Child adoption in the Western Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea
H. R. Peters ; A. D. Kemiki ; J. D. Vince
Papua New Guinea medical journal 2000;43(1-2):98-104
This study investigated the epidemiology of child adoption in the Western Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea. A prospective case-control study of 100 adopted and 100 control children matched by age and sex was done in 1995. The age at the time of adoption ranged from 7 days to 8 years with 64 being adopted in the neonatal period. 28 were adopted because the biological mother had died, 23 because the adoptive mothers had been unable to bear children and 16 because the biological mother was unmarried or 'too young'. Only 11 adopted children were not blood relatives of the adoptive mother; 10 children had been abandoned and 1 had been bought for cash. 97 adoptive mothers were married. The majority (61%) had no formal education and 95% were not in paid employment. Compared with the mothers of the control children fewer adoptive mothers had received any formal education and more of them smoked cigarettes, drank alcohol or chewed betelnut. Social characteristics of the adoptive fathers were similar to the fathers of the control children. Of the 66 living biological mothers for whom information was available, 39 (59%) were married, 16 (24%) single, 8 (12%) divorced and 3 (5%) widowed. For 21 (32%) of the biological mothers the adopted baby was their first. 19 adopted babies were breastfed, 8 exclusively, 6 with the addition of non-human milk and 5 with additional solid feeds. Two-thirds of the adopted children and only 5 controls were bottle-fed. There were no significant differences in nutritional status between the two groups and immunization status was similar. There was widespread ignorance about legal adoption procedures. Only 8 adoptive mothers had any knowledge of and only 2 had followed formal adoption procedures. In this group of adopted children it appeared that most were well cared for, as their nutritional status and immunization status were similar to non-adopted children. There have, however, been suggestions that adoption is a risk factor for child abuse in Papua New Guinea and adoption has recently been associated with severe malnutrition and mortality in a highlands hospital inpatient population. Information relating to formal adoption processes should be more widely disseminated throughout Papua New Guinean communities to protect the rights of adopted children and their adoptive parents.
Adoption
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Female
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Infant
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Infant, Newborn
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Male
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Nutritional Status
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Papua New Guinea
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Socioeconomic Factors
2.Etiology, 3-Month Functional Outcome and Recurrent Events in Non-Traumatic Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Martina B. GOELDLIN ; Achim MUELLER ; Bernhard M. SIEPEN ; Madlaine MUELLER ; Davide STRAMBO ; Patrik MICHEL ; Michael SCHAERER ; Carlo W. CEREDA ; Giovanni BIANCO ; Florian LINDHEIMER ; Christian BERGER ; Friedrich MEDLIN ; Roland BACKHAUS ; Nils PETERS ; Susanne RENAUD ; Loraine FISCH ; Julien NIEDERHAEUSER ; Emmanuel CARRERA ; Elisabeth DIRREN ; Christophe BONVIN ; Rolf STURZENEGGER ; Timo KAHLES ; Krassen NEDELTCHEV ; Georg KAEGI ; Jochen VEHOFF ; Biljana RODIC ; Manuel BOLOGNESE ; Ludwig SCHELOSKY ; Stephan SALMEN ; Marie-Luise MONO ; Alexandros A. POLYMERIS ; Stefan T. ENGELTER ; Philippe LYRER ; Susanne WEGENER ; Andreas R. LUFT ; Werner Z’GRAGGEN ; David BERVINI ; Bastian VOLBERS ; Tomas DOBROCKY ; Johannes KAESMACHER ; Pasquale MORDASINI ; Thomas R. MEINEL ; Marcel ARNOLD ; Javier FANDINO ; Leo H. BONATI ; Urs FISCHER ; David J. SEIFFGE ;
Journal of Stroke 2022;24(2):266-277
Background:
and Purpose Knowledge about different etiologies of non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and their outcomes is scarce.
Methods:
We assessed prevalence of pre-specified ICH etiologies and their association with outcomes in consecutive ICH patients enrolled in the prospective Swiss Stroke Registry (2014 to 2019). Results We included 2,650 patients (mean±standard deviation age 72±14 years, 46.5% female, median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale 8 [interquartile range, 3 to 15]). Etiology was as follows: hypertension, 1,238 (46.7%); unknown, 566 (21.4%); antithrombotic therapy, 227 (8.6%); cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), 217 (8.2%); macrovascular cause, 128 (4.8%); other determined etiology, 274 patients (10.3%). At 3 months, 880 patients (33.2%) were functionally independent and 664 had died (25.1%). ICH due to hypertension had a higher odds of functional independence (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.33; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.00 to 1.77; P=0.05) and lower mortality (aOR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.47 to 0.86; P=0.003). ICH due to antithrombotic therapy had higher mortality (aOR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.01 to 2.61; P=0.045). Within 3 months, 4.2% of patients had cerebrovascular events. The rate of ischemic stroke was higher than that of recurrent ICH in all etiologies but CAA and unknown etiology. CAA had high odds of recurrent ICH (aOR, 3.38; 95% CI, 1.48 to 7.69; P=0.004) while the odds was lower in ICH due to hypertension (aOR, 0.42; 95% CI, 0.19 to 0.93; P=0.031).
Conclusions
Although hypertension is the leading etiology of ICH, other etiologies are frequent. One-third of ICH patients are functionally independent at 3 months. Except for patients with presumed CAA, the risk of ischemic stroke within 3 months of ICH was higher than the risk of recurrent hemorrhage.