Doreen Othero | |
---|---|
Born | ca. 1960 |
Other names | Doreen A. M. Othero, Doreen M. Othero, Doreen Alice Maloba Othero |
Occupation(s) | Registered nurse, research and policy analyst |
Years active | 2002–present |
Doreen Alice Maloba Othero (born ca. 1960) is a registered nurse, academic, and research and policy analyst in Kenya. She specialises in interdisciplinary solutions to development to ensure that the interrelated needs of the population and their health are incorporated into environmental conservation projects and policies. She is a senior lecturer at Maseno University and has been involved with the Lake Victoria Basin Commission conducting research and advising on policy since 2008. Her work has focused on HIV/AIDS control and management and sustainable economic and environmental development. Since 2014, she has been the regional coordinator for integration of population, health, and the environment for the East African Community.
Doreen Alice Maloba Othero was born around 1960 in Kenya. She attended Murende Primary School, near Nambale in Busia County from 1967 until 1974. She completed her O-level exams at Nangina Girls High School in Funyula town, before completing her A-level qualification at Butere Girls High School in 1980. She obtained her registered nursing certification from Kenya Medical Training College in 1986 and went on to complete her certification as a midwife at Mater Misericordiae Hospital in Nairobi in 1992. After completing her Bachelor of Science degree in nursing at the University of Eastern Africa, Baraton in 1999, she earned a master's degree from Great Lakes University of Goma in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in health management in 2001, and completed her PhD in public health at Kenyatta University in 2006. [1]
Othero began researching HIV/AIDS and prevention programmes for the African Medical and Research Foundation in refugee camps in Ethiopia and Eritrea in 2002. [2] The following year, she was hired as an assistant lecturer in public health at Maseno University, and worked her way up to hold the post of senior lecturer and programme coordinator for the university's School of Public Health and Community Development by 2018. From 2004, [3] she was coordinating Maseno University's response to the HIV/AIDs crisis in Africa, which included preparing a baseline study, distribution of medication and condoms, and training for educators, care providers, and policy makers, on transmission and availability of support systems. [4] Othero became a project manager for the East African Community's Lake Victoria Basin Commission (LVBC) in 2008 and was responsible for overseeing research conducted at eighteen universities in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda to evaluate students' HIV/AIDS status. The purpose of the survey was to establish a baseline for evaluating the severity of HIV infections on the campuses to formulate an effective health management policy. [5] [6] She became the technical specialist on HIV/AIDS for the LVBC in 2009. [7] She led a baseline study of the various mobile populations including commercial traders, fishers, migrant farm workers, security personnel, sex workers, and truck drivers who used the lake basin to evaluate patterns of the spread of HIV/AIDS and the status of the migratory population. [8] Findings of the research confirmed that the rate of infection for people living along the lake was particularly high and was driven by interaction of transient workers with commercial sex workers and cultural norms, such as widow inheritance. [7]
In 2014, Othero became the regional coordinator for integration of population, health, and the environment (PHE) in the East African Community. [9] Her work was aimed towards developing a interdisciplinary approach to solving the four major issues in the lake basin, namely environmental damage and stress, population density, varied use needs, and overlapping of development projects. [10] By drawing upon the expertise of government agencies, civil society, media outlets, non-governmental organisations, and academia, the goal was to create strategic plan for sustainable development with monitoring and evaluation controls to form best practices for using resources and protecting the well-being of the population in East Africa. She travelled to the member states of the East African Community to establish PHE networks. [9] She also spoke at international events. During a presentation at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in 2014, Othero and Deepa Pullanikkatil, a sustainability and environmental manager who has researched lake basins in Malawi, argued in favor of development efforts which coordinate health and economic initiatives with environmental conservation projects. They stressed that goals to protect resources often failed because of a lack of attention to the impact programmes had on the livelihoods and well-being of the communities concerned. [11] Her presentation at the 2017 African Great Lakes Conference organised by The Nature Conservancy and held in Entebbe, Uganda was called "riveting" by colleagues attending the gathering. [12] [13] Suzanne York, director of Transition Earth, stated that as a leading PHE expert, Othero was able to link child and maternal health, family planning, and disease prevention to conservation efforts by pointing out that population dynamics were often critical to successful conservation efforts. [13]
Othero worked with lawmakers of the East African Legislative Assembly such as Christophe Bazivamo and Valerie Nyirahabineza (Rwanda) and Daniel Kidega (Uganda) to develop a bill in 2017 which would regulate importation, manufacture, and sale of polythene bags throughout the region. [14] Concerned with illegal logging, deforestation, and farming instability, [15] Othero urged that the region adopt farming innovations. For example, in western Kenya near Mount Elgon, the population has depended on maize as a staple for the diet. To cultivate the plant, vast fields were cleared, leading to deforestation. To combat the environmental issue, but provide both a continuity of livelihood and well-being for the population, Othero and other members of the commission introduced other cash crops, like sugarcane and potatoes, to local farmers. They have helped farmers transition to raising kitchen gardens for household use and replanting trees. In addition, dairy cattle, have been introduced. These cows are fed by zero grazing methods, [16] which reduce the impact of overgrazing by stall feeding them fodder. [17] Beekeeping was also introduced in the area around Mount Elgon [16] and Mount Kenya as a less environmentally harmful and more lucrative source of income. According to Othero, raising bees is "one of the best ways the community can use to improve their livelihoods and conserve the forest". Beekeeping is also less labour intensive than growing maize, allows farmers to use traditional wood and dung hives which are inexpensive to make, and typically offers a more stable income source. [18]
Kisumu is the third-largest city in Kenya located in the Lake Victoria area in the former Nyanza Province. It is the second-largest city after Kampala in the Lake Victoria Basin. The city has a population of slightly over 600,000. The metro region, including Maseno and Ahero, has a population of 1,155,574 people according to the 2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census which was conducted by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.
Benga is a genre of Kenyan popular music. It evolved between the late 1940s and late 1960s, in Kenya's capital city of Nairobi. In the 1940s, the African Broadcasting Service in Nairobi aired a steady stream of soukous, South African kwela, Congolese finger-style guitar and various kinds of Cuban dance music that heavily influenced emergence of benga. There were also popular folk songs of Tanzania and Kenya's Luo peoples that formed the base on benga creation.
Maseno University is a public university based in the Maseno district of the Kisumu County, Kenya, along the Equator. It was fully fledged as a university in 2001, after being a constituent college of Moi University for a decade. It has over 10,000 students pursuing programmes offered in the university campuses and it is currently ranked among the best universities in Kenya.
The International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology is an international scientific research institute, headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya that works towards improving lives and livelihoods of people in Africa.
Kisumu County is one of 47 counties in the Republic of Kenya. Its borders follow those of the original Kisumu District, one of the former administrative districts of the former Nyanza Province in western Kenya. Its headquarters is Kisumu City which is the third largest city in Kenya after the capital Nairobi and the coastal city of Mombasa. It has a population of 1,155,574. The land area of Kisumu County totals 2085.9 km2.
Margaret Atieno Ogola was a Kenyan Catholic novelist who wrote The River and the Source and its sequel, I Swear by Apollo.
Professor Thomas Risley Odhiambo was a Kenyan entomologist and environmental activist who directed research and scientific development in Africa.
Bethwell Allan Ogot is a Kenyan historian and eminent African scholar who specialises in African history, research methods and theory. One of his works starts by saying that "to tell the story of a past so as to portray an inevitable destiny is, for humankind, a need as universal as tool-making. To that extent, we may say that a human being is, by nature, historicus.
Peter Amollo Odhiambo is a Kenyan consultant thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon. He is Kenya's first cardiothoracic surgeon and a professor of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery at the University of Nairobi. He is a founder and former chairman of the Kenya Cardiac Society, and a former president of the Pan African Society of Cardiology (PASCAR). Odhiambo is the chairman of the Kenya Tobacco Control Board. He is also the founder and editor of Medicom, the African Journal of Hospital Medicine.
Prostitution in Kenya is widespread. The legal situation is complex. Although prostitution is not criminalised by National law, municipal by-laws may prohibit it.. It is illegal to profit from the prostitution of others, and to aid, abet, compel or incite prostitution.. UNAIDS estimate there to be 133,675 prostitutes in the country.
Miriam Khamadi Were is a Kenyan public health advocate, academic, and recipient of the first Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize. In 2022, she has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in public health.
Maseno School, located in Kisumu County in Kenya, is one of the oldest formal education schools in the country.
Kenya Institute of Puppet Theatre also known as KIPT is a Kenyan non-governmental and non-profit technical advisory and management community based theatre institute, which was founded in 2007.
Agnes Odhiambo was a Kenyan human rights activist, who worked as a senior researcher and advocate for women's rights at Human Rights Watch, from 2009 to 2023.
Stellah Wairimu Bosire, is a Kenyan physician, corporate executive, human rights activist and author, a former co-executive director of Uhai Eashri and previously served as the chief executive officer of Kenya Medical Association and as the vice-chair of the HIV and AIDS Tribunal of Kenya.
George Albert Omore Magoha was a Kenyan consultant surgeon, academic administrator and technocrat, who served as a Professor of Surgery at Maseno University's School of Medicine, in Kisumu County as from 17 January 2023 till his death.
Elizabeth Ngugi was a Kenyan Professor of Community Health at the University of Nairobi, and a nurse by trade. Her major contributions to her university's program was her research and work with local prostitutes to prevent HIV/AIDS transmission. Ngugi is described as the first Kenyan nurse to become a professor.
Butere Girls High School is a girls only public boarding secondary school in Butere, Kenya.
Teresia Mbari Hinga was a Kenyan Christian feminist theologian and a professor of religious studies at Santa Clara University in California. She was a founding member of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians.
Hazel Ong'ayo Ayanga is a Kenyan theologian whose work focuses on the care and empowerment of orphans, vulnerable children and women affected by HIV/AIDS. She is an associate professor of Religious Studies at Moi University, Kenya and also researches spirituality in clinical settings, religion and change in Africa and the centrality of ritual in human life. She has published over twenty peer-reviewed articles and coauthored several book chapters and edited volumes.