Esther Madudu

Esther Madudu (Born in 1980) is a Ugandan midwife. Madudu has had nearly 15 years of experience first at a maternity home in Kumi District, and now working at Tiriri Health Center IV in Uganda.[1]

Esther Madudu
Born1980
NationalityUgandan
OccupationMidwife

Early life and education

Esther Madudu was the second of ten children. In her earlier years, she attended Lwala Girls School in Kaberamaido District. She then went to Jinja School of Nursing and Midwifery. Esther Madudu’s career was inspired by her grandmother who attended to pregnant women in their home and also advised Madudu to get an education.[2]

Career

Madudu began working at a maternity home in Kumi district, but now works at Tiriri Health Center IV. The duties for midwives include prenatal services for the mothers, providing HIV counseling, education about nutrition; maternity services, including delivery; as well as postnatal care. Madudu herself has delivered over two thousand babies in the past decade.[3]

Awards and recognition

  1. The Outstanding Achievement Award 2013/2014 - among the most prestigious awards for health workers in Uganda awarded by the Ugandan Minister for Health, Dr Elioda Tumwesigye.
  2. She received the Global REAL Award in 2013, based on nomination by AMREF U.S. The REAL Awards are fronted by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Frontline Health Workers Coalition and Save the Children USA. These awards recognize frontline health workers in the US and around the world who are protecting health and saving lives daily.
  3. On Monday, 25 November 2013, - to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women - Esther Madudu was awarded the National Order of Merit (France)[4]

Nobel Peace Prize Petition

The petition to nominate Esther Madudu for the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize was sparked by her long track record as a midwife, and activist, particularly her activist work with AMREF's Stand Up for African Mothers campaign. For Madudu, it would have been a symbolic nomination of all African midwives.[5] Amref Health Africa as well as various other organizations and individuals lobbied to raise the 100,000 signatures required for nomination.[6]

Media and publications

gollark: <@151391317740486657> Do you know what "unsupported" means? PotatOS is not designed to be used this way.
gollark: Specifically, 22 bytes for the private key and 21 for the public key on ccecc.py and 25 and 32 on the actual ingame one.
gollark: <@!206233133228490752> Sorry to bother you, but keypairs generated by `ccecc.py` and the ECC library in use in potatOS appear to have different-length private and public keys, which is a problem.EDIT: okay, apparently it's because I've been accidentally using a *different* ECC thing from SMT or something, and it has these parameters instead:```---- Elliptic Curve Arithmetic---- About the Curve Itself-- Field Size: 192 bits-- Field Modulus (p): 65533 * 2^176 + 3-- Equation: x^2 + y^2 = 1 + 108 * x^2 * y^2-- Parameters: Edwards Curve with c = 1, and d = 108-- Curve Order (n): 4 * 1569203598118192102418711808268118358122924911136798015831-- Cofactor (h): 4-- Generator Order (q): 1569203598118192102418711808268118358122924911136798015831---- About the Curve's Security-- Current best attack security: 94.822 bits (Pollard's Rho)-- Rho Security: log2(0.884 * sqrt(q)) = 94.822-- Transfer Security? Yes: p ~= q; k > 20-- Field Discriminant Security? Yes: t = 67602300638727286331433024168; s = 2^2; |D| = 5134296629560551493299993292204775496868940529592107064435 > 2^100-- Rigidity? A little, the parameters are somewhat small.-- XZ/YZ Ladder Security? No: Single coordinate ladders are insecure, so they can't be used.-- Small Subgroup Security? Yes: Secret keys are calculated modulo 4q.-- Invalid Curve Security? Yes: Any point to be multiplied is checked beforehand.-- Invalid Curve Twist Security? No: The curve is not protected against single coordinate ladder attacks, so don't use them.-- Completeness? Yes: The curve is an Edwards Curve with non-square d and square a, so the curve is complete.-- Indistinguishability? No: The curve does not support indistinguishability maps.```so I might just have to ship *two* versions to keep compatibility with old signatures.
gollark: > 2. precompilation to lua bytecode and compressionThis was considered, but the furthest I went was having some programs compressed on disk.
gollark: > 1. multiple layers of sandboxing (a "system" layer that implements a few things, a "features" layer that implements most of potatOS's inter-sandboxing API and some features, a "process manager" layer which has inter-process separation and ways for processes to communicate, and a "BIOS" layer that implements features like PotatoBIOS)Seems impractical, although it probably *could* fix a lot of problems

References

  1. "Portrait of a midwife". Stand up for African Mothers. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  2. "Midwives: Esther Madudu and Eija Pessinen, The Conversation - BBC World Service". BBC. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  3. "Esther Madudu: 11 years in the labour ward". Saturday Monitor. 2013-08-23. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  4. "Ugandan midwife to receive France's Order of Merit". RFI. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  5. "A Midwife's Road to the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize Nomination Is Paved One Signature at a Time". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  6. "Nomination and Selection of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
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