Browsing by Author "Obiri-Danso, Kwasi"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemBurden of respiratory viral infections among inmates of a Ghanaian prison(Research Gate Publication, 2019-09-08) Sylverken, Augustina Angelina; El-Duah, Philip; Owusu, Michael; Yeboah, Richmond; Kwarteng, Alexander; Ofori, Linda; Gorman, Richmond; Obiri-Danso, Kwasi; Owusu-Dabo, Ellis; 0000-0002-7691-914X; 0000-0003-1671-0755; 0000-0003-1671-0755; 0000-0002-2765-6179; 0000-0002-0893-2908; 0000-0002-6831-3375; 0000-0002-5497-1684; 0000-0003-4232-4292Respiratory viral infections are important causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Information on circulating respiratory viruses among prisoners is lacking, although this is of public health importance and knowledge would assist in putting in place preventive measures to forestall disease outbreaks. The aim of this study therefore was to get the footprint of such diseases that have epidemic potential to be described and quantified for control. Prisoners on remand numbering 203 in a prison in Kumasi, the Ashanti Regional capital, were interviewed using prevalidated questionnaire, nasopharyngeal samples taken and screened by real-time PCR for common respiratory viruses in February, 2018. Of the total number of 203 participants enrolled, majority were males (n = 198, 97.54%). The modal age unsurprisingly was in the active working class of 18 to 35 years (n = 155, 76.36%) with 48 (23.65%) of participants older than 35 years. Inmates reported nasal congestion (n = 83, 40.89%), cough with or without pharyngitis (n =108, 53.20%) and fever (n = 74, 39.48%). Viruses detected in throat samples were Infl uenza A (n = 1, 0.49%) and Rhinovirus (n = 8, 3.94%). There was no statistically significant association between respiratory virus positivity and age (p = 0.118), gender (p > 0.900), duration of incarceration (p = 0.239) and reported symptoms (p = 0.724). The prison population may have a lower prevalence of respiratory viruses circulating in them. This may be dominated by those with high antigenic diversity.
- ItemHydro-Climatic Modelling of an Ungauged Basin in Kumasi, Ghana(Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss., 2018) Osei, Marian Amoakowaah; Amekudzi, Leonard Kofitse; Wemegah, David Dotse; Preko, Kwasi; Gyawu, Emmanuella Serwaa; Obiri-Danso, KwasiThe Owabi catchment which is about 69 km2 provides about 20 % of water needs of the Kumasi metropolis has been in recent times prone to high anthropogenic activities that threaten water resource management. The Soil-Water-AssessmentTool (SWAT) was used to assess the extent of these activities on the hydrology on the catchment from 1986 to 2015. Specifically, the model simulated historic and projected stream-flow and water balance. Initial results revealed the forest and topography 5 played major role in water loss at the catchment as evapotranspiration and surface runoff were the dominant modulating processes. Monthly calibration/validation of the model yielded satisfactory results with NSE (0.66/0.67), R2 (0.67/0.67), PBIAS (8.2%/8.0%) and RSR (0.59/0.58). Nine sensitive parameters of which the catchment slope (CN2) ranked principal were found to control runoff amounts into the river. The model uncertainty was also quite low as the 95PPU enveloped about 50% of the observed streamflow within a width of 0.45 - 0.55. Furthermore, future streamflow predictions were modelled under RCP2.6, 10 RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 climatic scenarios, and two landuse scenarios, landuse category 1 and 2 (LU1 and LU2). An increasing trend of the downscaled rainfall totals between 2021 to 2050 for all RCPs were observed. This will positively impact streamflow generation at the catchment under LU1. There is an expected deficit of streamflow amounts under LU2 relative to LU1, and a marginal reduction as compared to the baseline. In general, the model proved efficient in determining the hydrology parameters in the catchment and therefore has potential to be used for further modelling of water quality and pollution to aid 15 effective water resource decisions at the catchment. 1 Introducti