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Jul 28, 2016

POta kely ho'a ny gasy kely eee...

Notsongoina avy tatsy amin'ny Forum Fivavahana/Finoana ao @ Serasera

rhaj0 - 28/07/2016 14:15
Mba tsy gisitra, fa alohan'ny gisitra, @ halavana hono ny gasy eee...

http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/26/health/human-height-changes-century/index.html
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/160726022225-adult-height-1996-birth-cohort-exlarge-169.jpg

The Non-Communicable Diseases Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC), which is a network of health scientists that works closely with the World Health Organization, conducted the height research.
Authors used nearly 1,500 worldwide population-based data, such as publicly available measurement surveys, to estimate height for people from all over the world born between 1896 to 1996. 

rhaj0 - 28/07/2016 20:24
Dia pOta izany ny gasy, dia... rahefa fivavahana/finoana no resaka, dia hoe,
"izay ny lahatr'Andrmntra" eee...

Dia nefa anie ny sakafo na izay regime-ntsakafo ao no antony.

Ireto izao zaza gasy mitovy taona

http://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/2747/production/_86155001_dsc_0679-copy.jpg
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-34528978
Rova and Jiana are the same age but Rova is much shorter

rhaj0 - 04/08/2016 13:06
Ny fahitako azy aloha, fijerena ny zava-misy tsy miangatra io, dia, eny pOta ny gasy. Io ilay ataonay aty fihomehezana fotsiny sisa hoe, rahefa mifanao fotoana any ankalamanjana misy fety ireny ohatra, dia hoe, rahefa misy tropitropy na olona fohifohy kely, dia bebe ny probabilitE fa fianakams gasy izay eee.. Dia ny viavy gasy koa moa, dia hoe... raha mijery avy aty aoriana, ka fohifohy sady mibika poire, dia sipa gasy izay eee...

Fa mandehana anie atsy @ bilaogiko eee...
http://gasy-mkm.blogspot.ca
Dia hanaovy karoka hoe "malnutrition". Dia ho hitanao fa dia, indrisy tokoany, "malnourri" ny gasy. Ary tena giravy ny vokatr'io, fa tsy hoe, io (lasa) fohy kely io foana, fa tena saozanina ary tena atahorana akoriny azany ny fahasalamany ara-tsaina; tsy hoe "marary saina" fa misy "retard" na tsy ni-developper @ potentiel-ny feno.

Ka ilay "pOta ny gasy" dia tena fanairana antsika. Aza raisina hoe, jugement negatif io, na hoe fanakianana, na fanabatiana, fa tena .. "olana" mila atrehina ary eritreretina tsara. Inona @ regime-ntsakafontsika no tsy mety. Ohatra hoe, mangahazo+siramamy fotsiny ve dia mahavoky? na hoe katsaka fotsiny? mofogasy (lafarinina sy siramamy) sy kafe maraina ve ampy?

rhaj0 -
Source The Huffington Post - 06/29/2016




rhaj0 -

© UNICEF Madagascar/2009
Source UNICEF

In Madagascar 76.5 percent of the population lives in poverty, which means that most people are unable to afford adequate nutrition or access to health care. With 50 percent of under-five year-olds suffering from stunted growth, Madagascar is one of the 10 countries in the world with the highest burden of chronic malnutrition, and one of the 20 countries where 90 percent of the world's stunted children live. Anaemia affects 35 percent of women of child-bearing age - threatening their health and that of their unborn children. Some 38,000 children die every year before their fifth birthday - or 104 children a day.
Now more than ever, preventing a deterioration in the health and nutrition status of the Malagasy people is vital to ensure that gains made in previous years are not lost, and that the most excluded women and children are reached with life-saving interventions. 
Punctuated by repeated peaks of acute malnutrition, the situation in Madagascar is critical. Global acute malnutrition among children under five varies from 10 percent to 20 percent during the 'lean season,' when food supplies are limited, in the country's most vulnerable regions. This is mainly in the semi- arid south where unreliable rainfall frequently damages harvests.
While Madagascar has shown a decline in its under-five mortality rate in recent years, acute poverty threatens to turn back this progress. 
© UNICEF Madagascar/2010
Malaria, diarrhoea, neonatal complications and acute respiratory infections are the biggest causes of death in children. A lack of access to basic health care, especially in remote rural regions, means that many children do not receive routine immunisations including polio, tetanus, measles and the BCG vaccine to prevent childhood tuberculosis.
Access to safe drinking water and sanitation is poor, with significant idsparities between households in rural and urban invironments. In rural areas only 29 percent of families use improved drinking water sources, and only 11 percent of the population across Madagascar has acces to adequate sanitation. Access to water and sanitation in schools and basic health centres is limited. Less than a third of primary schools have latrines, and less then 15 percent of basic health centres are equipped with drinking water points.

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