Quality Education
Proximate determinants and their influences on fertility reduction in viet nam
Abstracts
Strengthening civil registration and vital statistics in the Asia-Pacific region: learning from country experiences
Social impact of international migration and remittances in Central Asia
Guidelines for contributors
HIV and AIDs stigma and discrimination in China: Results from a national survey
Worldwide, stigma and discrimination have been identified as tremendous barriers to addressing the HIV/AIDS epidemic, beginning with Jonathan Mann in the 1980s (Mann, 1987), and by others (UNAIDS, 2001, 2008; Reidpath, Brijnath and Chan, 2005; APN+, 2004). Stigma was defined by Goffman (1963) nearly half a century ago as a discrediting attribute about an individual or group that serves to devalue that person or group in the eyes of the society. More recent theoretical frameworks suggest that stigmatization and discrimination are manifest in a number of contexts, including within families, communities, schools, employment, travel/ migration opportunities, health-care settings and HIV/AIDS programmes (Parker and Aggleton, 2002), and in religion and the media (Malcolm and others, 1998). A study in four countries in Asia found pervasive discrimination, with 80 per cent of respondents having experienced AIDS-related discrimination, including nearly one in five facing discrimination within their families and in their workplaces (APN+, 2004). In a review of interventions to reduce HIV/AIDS stigma, Brown, MacIntyre and Trujillo (2003) noted that stigma affects prevention behaviours, test-seeking, care-seeking, quality of care provided to positive clients, and perceptions and treatment of people living with HIV and AIDS by communities and families. Parker and others (2002) contend that HIV/AIDS-related stigma is often layered upon other stigma, for example, the one associated with engaging in illegal behaviour, such as sex work and drug use. Furthermore, families with HIV-positive members often face stigma from the community. In order to combat stigma and the associated discrimination, it is important to understand the knowledge, beliefs and attitudes and how they vary across groups within a country. Such knowledge is critical for designing interventions to reduce stigma and discrimination.
Young, low-parity women: Critical target group for family planning in Bangladesh
After years of persistent low levels, contraceptive prevalence in Bangladesh is beginning to rise, albeit slowly (figure 1). This occurs none too soon. Bangladesh, densely populated and poor, endures a population growth rate that is still quite high, even by third world standards.
Obituary: Wasim Alimuz Zaman, Ph.D. 1948-2014
Gender accounting of consumption and the life-cycle deficit for india
Women and population aging
One of the dramatic demographic changes that is taking place, in both developing and industrialized countries, is the increasing proportion of elderly (people 60 years of age and above) in the total population.
Combined statement by civil society organizations at the sixth Asian and Pacific Population Conference, Bangkok, 16-20 September 2013
Human resource requirements for meeting the needs of ageing societies
While health care is accorded priority by Asian and Pacific countries in addressing the rapid ageing of their populations, only some include long-term care as part of a continuum of care available in institutional and non-institutional settings with formal and informal caregivers. Measures for avoidable (preventive and amenable) mortality contribute towards preventive long-term care. The delivery of health care by health professionals, allied health professionals and auxiliary care workers is discussed in this review, with examples of the training of nurses and social workers to show the range and variety of training available in the region. Caregiving is increasingly undertaken by migrant domestic and care workers and by volunteer health workers, often as part of community organizations. Institutional care is often perceived as abandonment and de-institutionalization is thus pursued as an “asset-light” policy option. But it should be supported as ageing-in-place, community-based services and platforms, with the integration of health and social care, innovative approaches for engagement and participation, and technology, all of which require trained human resources with the necessary skills and competencies. Other measures to strengthen care provision and support to older persons include expanding filial piety to social piety, changing mindsets and combating ageism for social solidarity and collective responsibility. It also includes measurement and monitoring mechanisms for accountability and course correction.
Towards a research agenda for civil registration and vital statistics in the Asia-Pacific region
Population conference
The International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP) held its Twenty-first International Population Conference at New Delhi from 20 to 27 September 1989. The Conference, which was organized at the invitation of the Indian Association for the Study of Population (IASP), was opened by India’s Prime Minister Rajiv Ghandi.
Fertility transition
The importance of fertility transition in Asia begins with the magnitude of its influence on the world population growth. Asia constituted 58.2 per cent of the world’s population in 1985. Because it is likely to remain in excess of 55 per cent well into the first quarter of the next century, Asia will continue to dominate the global population phenomena and its growth. In particular, China and India have a dominant role in influencing the Asian demographic situation, because together they comprise the majority of the region’s total population.
The 1988 demographic survey of Viet Nam
The 1988 Viet Nam Demographic Survey was the first country-wide demographic survey of Viet Nam. The sample was drawn according to the sample design recommended by the World Fertility Survey (WFS). It was a three-stage random probability sample of 4,800 households in 12 provinces and 151 communes.
Integration of population and development
Because of the complexity of development planning, demographic factors inevitably enter into the planning process. The integration of those factors is widely recognized as an effective strategy in both development planning and population planning.
Has Thailand’s fertility decline stalled?
Probably the most important demographic development to occur during the last quarter century has been the onset of fertility decline in a number of third world countries. While most Sub-Saharan African countries as well as a number in the Middle East and West Asia have yet to participate in this phenomenon, fertility in countries elsewhere in Asia and in much of Latin America has started down a path towards levels far lower than have ever prevailed in their modern histories. Given that mortality declines preceded the fall in fertility, and that most of these populations have been experiencing unprecedented rapid population growth rates at levels that would lead to extraordinary numbers of people in just decades, most observers concerned with population matters view the onset of fertility decline as a logical and welcome development.
