Does African Need a Pandemic?

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Peatness

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posted elsewhere by @Grapelander


 
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The Economic Warfare School (EGE) said that the memorandum resulted with the United States using population control policies as a weapon of economic warfare against Nigeria by utilizing social blackmail to force sterilizations and utilizing food power as a means of mitigating population growth.[3] The EGE writes that Nigeria went from approaching potential nuclear capability to a less-developed country, with the United States being able to establish control of Nigeria's resources and maintain the interests of Americans businesses there.[3]
 
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Sweden pushing abortion in Africa as 'self-care': UN insider​


View: https://rumble.com/v1c9tlz-rich-white-sweden-targets-black-africa.html


Sweden has unveiled its latest plan to push for more abortion in Africa, increasing its funding and selling the vile practice to both the UN and the third world populace under the guise of 'self-care.' LifeSiteNews correspondent Jim Hale sits down with Rebecca Oas, UN insider and director of research at the Center for Family and Human Rights (C-Fam), to discuss Sweden's targeting of the continent.
 
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View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1558878619954339840
 
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WTF? this is a plot to murder Africans. Note - no Africans present.

GPCE Seminar: Increasing COVID Vaccine Uptake in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Approach​


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ev4VJrhmBgY


Johnson & Johnson Global Public Health (J&J GPH) has a mission of accelerating equitable health care delivery among the world’s most vulnerable and underserved populations. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Africa has experienced a disproportionate burden of the disease and suboptimal vaccine uptake. This seminar showcases J&J GPH efforts to understand and combat vaccine hesitancy across the African continent by leveraging data and behavior science alongside private sector capabilities. Specially, Lauren Marks from Johnson & Johnson Global Public Health will discuss J&J’s approach to understanding a target audience and designing interventions to reach them, with an emphasis on how and why to use tools like Behavioral & Attitudinal Segmentation, Message Testing, and Geospatial Analysis to find the right people with the right message. Sunny Sharma and Rebecca West from Ipsos will then delve into the research findings from some of these studies. In 2021, J&J GPH and Ipsos conducted two phases of unbranded market research with unvaccinated adults in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zambia. First, a segmentation typing tool was designed and tested to define sub-groups of people according to attitudinal barriers and motivators to vaccinate – the confident enthusiasts, enthusiastic pragmatists, vaccine skeptics, and COVID-19 cynics. Next, a discrete choice experiment was conducted to test optimal messages across sub-groups to support vaccine uptake. In this seminar, Rebecca and Sunny from Ipsos will present details of the segmentation study and recommended message strategies. Lastly, Kenneth Davis and Quinn Lewis from Fraym will explore the Geospatial Analysis. In partnership with J&J GPH, produced machine learning (ML) enhanced spatial population data to 1) map levels of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, 2) model the underlying drivers of hesitancy based on Confidence, Convenience, and Complacency, and 3) replicate the five Ipsos population segments. These data and models were all produced down to the community and neighborhood level (1km2) across ten countries – Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Uganda, and Zambia. This insight is being delivered through a custom web-based application to inform risk communication and community engagement (RCCE) and social behavior change (SBC) efforts among a wide variety of implementing partners working to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake. 23 June 2022
 

ThinPicking

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WTF? this is a plot to murder Africans. Note - no Africans present.

GPCE Seminar: Increasing COVID Vaccine Uptake in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Approach​


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ev4VJrhmBgY


Johnson & Johnson Global Public Health (J&J GPH) has a mission of accelerating equitable health care delivery among the world’s most vulnerable and underserved populations. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Africa has experienced a disproportionate burden of the disease and suboptimal vaccine uptake. This seminar showcases J&J GPH efforts to understand and combat vaccine hesitancy across the African continent by leveraging data and behavior science alongside private sector capabilities. Specially, Lauren Marks from Johnson & Johnson Global Public Health will discuss J&J’s approach to understanding a target audience and designing interventions to reach them, with an emphasis on how and why to use tools like Behavioral & Attitudinal Segmentation, Message Testing, and Geospatial Analysis to find the right people with the right message. Sunny Sharma and Rebecca West from Ipsos will then delve into the research findings from some of these studies. In 2021, J&J GPH and Ipsos conducted two phases of unbranded market research with unvaccinated adults in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zambia. First, a segmentation typing tool was designed and tested to define sub-groups of people according to attitudinal barriers and motivators to vaccinate – the confident enthusiasts, enthusiastic pragmatists, vaccine skeptics, and COVID-19 cynics. Next, a discrete choice experiment was conducted to test optimal messages across sub-groups to support vaccine uptake. In this seminar, Rebecca and Sunny from Ipsos will present details of the segmentation study and recommended message strategies. Lastly, Kenneth Davis and Quinn Lewis from Fraym will explore the Geospatial Analysis. In partnership with J&J GPH, produced machine learning (ML) enhanced spatial population data to 1) map levels of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, 2) model the underlying drivers of hesitancy based on Confidence, Convenience, and Complacency, and 3) replicate the five Ipsos population segments. These data and models were all produced down to the community and neighborhood level (1km2) across ten countries – Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Uganda, and Zambia. This insight is being delivered through a custom web-based application to inform risk communication and community engagement (RCCE) and social behavior change (SBC) efforts among a wide variety of implementing partners working to increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake. 23 June 2022

"drive demand for health-seeking behaviour" 🤮

These delusional goblins are clutching at straws with their fluffy presentations. Even rural communities are wise to it. Needle bearing footsoldiers have insurmountable problems no matter the mind games these people intend on playing.
 
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"drive demand for health-seeking behaviour" 🤮

These delusional goblins are clutching at straws with their fluffy presentations. Even rural communities are wise to it. Needle bearing footsoldiers have insurmountable problems no matter the mind games these people intend on playing.
I wish I could believe this - don't forget they are sending NGOs, charities, and anthropologists ahead to butter them up.

 
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Heidi Larson is funded by

 

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