idk what this is but I made it it animation class and worked way too long on it for my own good. I think its a Gonzo/Kermit fusion???
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idk what this is but I made it it animation class and worked way too long on it for my own good. I think its a Gonzo/Kermit fusion???
[Top] Cassava roots dry on the roof of a house on the outskirts of Kahemba. Image by Neil Brandvold. DRC, 2016.
[Middle] Again Kakene, 18, has had Konzo since 2002 and relies on wooden blocks to drag himself to the market and visit friends. He is the only one in his family with Konzo. Image by Neil Brandvold. DRC, 2016.
For more of Amy’s reporting, visit her project page at “What’s Driving HIV in South Africa?”
For more of Neil’s reporting, visit his project page at “Konzo in the Democratic Republic of the Congo”
Konzo in the DRC
Amy Maxmen
Science writer, Amy Maxmen, and I have been reporting on a series of neglected diseases across Africa. We are currently traveling to the very rural town of Kahemba, which translates to “the town of suffering” to report on a little known incurable disease known as Konzo.
In the Congolese dialect Yaka, the word Konzo means "tied legs”— referring to the walk of people suffering from the paralytic disease. The ailment is caused by the consumption of insufficiently processed cassava, which naturally contains cyanide. More than 600 million people worldwide rely on cassava [yucca] as their main source of food. However, insufficiently processed cassava results in outbreaks of Konzo in thousands of children and women of childbearing age, whose diagnosis is often and dangerously mistaken for polio.
Amy and I are traveling with Congolese born, U.S. researcher Dr. Desire Tshala-Katumbay who has worked extensively in the region researching the disease.
Konzo, while incurable, is caused by eating improperly prepared cassava (yucca). The first questions I asked myself when we came across the disease were, why are people still eating cassava if its known to cause the disease - and why don't people move from the region if they can’t grown another crop.
As we traveled to Kahemba the answers became more apparent. The town is extremely rural. After two full days driving primarily down dried up river beds and over small trails we finally came to remote village. The majority of the small houses dotting the roadside along the trek had piles of cassava drying on the rooftops. Due to the nature of the soil the people in this region depend almost solely on cassava for their diets. Given how remote the town is, and the lack of options or access to health care the people have little to no options.
Given the short amount of time we were given in the actual town of Kahemba we were initially concerned about finding sufficient cases of Konzo to report on - however we immediately started coming across people suffering from various degrees of severity of the disease. Walking through the streets of the town I encountered Again Kakene, 18, who had been suffering from Konzo since 2002. He relied on wooden blocks to drag himself to the market or to visit friends and relatives. His case was not unique, it seems that roughly 1 in 10 people in the town holds themselves up by makeshift crutches or sits on the ground with crooked legs.
For more of Amy’s reporting, visit her project page at “What’s Driving HIV in South Africa?”
For more of Neil’s reporting, visit his project page at “Konzo in the Democratic Republic of the Congo”
Nande : désormais des nilotiques ?
Voici une information qui donnera des insomnies à certains… Pourquoi dis-je cela ? Je la tire du groupe WhatsApp du Projet 2014. Et tout tend alors à dire que bientôt, il ne sera pas surprenant de voir plusieurs passer leur test d’ADN pour se rassurer. En attendant, je vous laisse lire ; moi qui me croyais métis ! Je tiens à préciser que le muyira n’est pas venu de Kitara. Avant le partage de…
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Konzo could step on me and I would thank him.
Kwango : 12 zones de santé touchées par la maladie Konzo
Kwango : 12 zones de santé touchées par la maladie Konzo
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Le chef de Division provincial de la santé de Kwango Pierre Mwela indique que 12 zones de santé sur les 14 que compte cette province sont touchées par la maladie Konzo.
Il l’a dit samedi 20 juillet à radio Okapi.
Les malades présentent des signes de malnutrition et des faiblesses aux membres supérieurs et inférieurs. Cette maladie touche les nerfs de l’individu et provoque…
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Pinoy Parazzi Vol 8 Issue 79 June 26 - 28, 2015
• Piolo at Sarah, passionate daw ang kissing scene sa pelikula • Marian, alam na ang gender ng baby pero ayaw pang i-share • PBB teens Bailey at Kenzo, pinagpipiyestahan sa social media ang ‘Bromance’ moments • Angel, problemado sa shooting ng pelikula • Ronnie Ricketts, kinasuhan ng katiwalian • Binay kay Koko: magpakalalaki ka • ‘Bomba’, binulabog ang Ombudsman
Continue Reading... http://www.pinoyparazzi.com/pinoy-parazzi-vol-8-issue-79-june-26-28-2015/
In the affected communities, the social consequences of the disease were dramatic. In the visited villages, the affected women could not farm and thus could not feed their families. Many of their husbands had already left them and only a few women received any assistance from relatives. Others were living on the edge of the village, abandoned by the community and suffering from severe malnutrition. The majority of these women, if not all, knew that they were sentenced to death.
From "Konzo Outbreak, in the South‐west of the Democratic Republic of Congo, 1996" by I. Bonmarin, M. Nunga, and W. A. Perea in Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, one of over 50 free articles from Oxford University Press on Ebola following the declaration of an international public health emergency in August.