Africa's 60+ population is projected to triple by 2050, yet most nutritional interventions still focus on maternal and child health, leaving vulnerable older adults underserved. Our review in @NutrReviews looks into current evidence on nutrition outcomes and interventions
The UK Visa Application Centre (VFS Global) in Westlands, Nairobi, is a masterclass in modern day exploitation.
Kenyans pay hundreds of dollars, wait in the sun, get misinformed, and walk away feeling less human. The new venue at Principal Place (yes, they left 9West) has no proper waiting area and no parking. This is by design to have you pay 17K for their VIP/Premium “services “
If you’re not paying for premium services, you’re left outside in the heat, on the pavement. Elderly people, parents with kids, students, all treated like a security threat
Their Communication is Trash. You get vague emails like “your passport is ready for collection ” only to be turned away and told “collection is from 2pm to 5pm, (you can easily indicate that on the same damn email) That means if you show up at 10am, you’ll have to wait till 2pm or you can easily pay the 17K to be attended to quickly.. ?? EXPLOITATION
No clear timeline. No courtesy. You’re meant to guess your way through it.
These centers aren’t run by embassies, they’re outsourced to private companies who monetize your desperation. It’s a business, not a service.
And guess what? No refund if your visa is denied(familiar?)
The worst part? This is normalized.
We’ve accepted that applying for a visa means surrendering your dignity just to maybe be allowed into a country that benefits from our labor, money, and talent.
If Global North countries want to charge Africans these high fees and accord them zero dignity , the bare minimum should be basic human respect. Decent waiting areas. Transparent timelines and Fair communication.
This isn’t about security. It’s about power and exploitation…
This system needs to be called out and changed.
And it’s time African governments started protecting their citizens from this daylight exploitation.
Toolkits can be accessed using the following links, https://t.co/ibRr4EOboe for the Visa and Passport Equity toolkit and https://t.co/NJGorKhl10 for the Budget Equity toolkit
A recording of the event here, https://t.co/dhJ8qfoEqD
Last week, two toolkits were launched as part of the Towards Equitable Partnerships with the Global South (TEPSO) project. The toolkits aim to promote visa and passport equity, as well as budget equity, for research collaborations between North and South institutions/partners.
Our last output for this year is this editorial in @JPhysiother led by Christina Faria on Surrogate endpoints in trials of physiotherapy interventions
📎https://t.co/85kYrKV3bj
📝 Janaine Polese @AnthonyManyara_ Rod Taylor @OrianaCiani@AlineScianni
📢🆕 editorial on the SPIRIT and CONSORT surrogate extensions in @JDentRes@SageJournals by @FSchwendicke and @NickJakubovics which includes examples of surrogate endpoints in dentistry clinical trials
🔗🔗https://t.co/rMNWAmhaH4
Prof Rod Taylor and Dr @AnthonyManyara_ next to our poster on the new SPIRIT-and CONSORT-Surrogate extensions. If at #ictmc2024 come chat with Rod from 12:30pm on reporting surrogate endpoints, its poster number 213.#surrogateendpoints
This work was supported by @wellcometrust and @NIHRglobal. We acknowledge all participants who took part in the study, and the field workers, clinical and support staff who facilitated data collection #HIV#Ageing#Frailty#Zimbabwe
📢🆕publication in @HIV_Medicine reporting on the prevalence, factors, and quality of life associated with frailty and pre-frailty in middle-aged and older adults living with HIV in Zimbabwe
🔗🔗https://t.co/L9lATJdp0p