19 results on '"Winch, Peter J."'
Search Results
2. 'I worked until my body was broken': an ethnomedical model of chronic pain among North Korean refugee women.
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Park, Soim, Surkan, Pamela J., Winch, Peter J., Kim, Jin-Won, and Gittelsohn, Joel
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CHRONIC pain & psychology ,FAMINES ,FRUSTRATION ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,VIOLENCE ,DIET ,TRANSCULTURAL medical care ,QUALITATIVE research ,REFUGEES ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,LONELINESS ,QUALITY of life ,THEMATIC analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis software ,RUMINATION (Cognition) ,HEALTH equity ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PAIN management - Abstract
While increasing numbers of North Korean refugees (NKRs) are migrating to South Korea, different understandings of physical pain between NKR patients and the South Korean healthcare providers may create miscommunication and less satisfaction with their care management. To identify strategies to improve care, this study elicits and presents an ethnomedical model of chronic pain among NKR women. Twenty semi-structured individual interviews were conducted with NKR women with chronic pain living in South Korea. Inductive and deductive thematic analysis was performed on three types of data: interview transcripts, field notes created after each interview, and memos written during the analysis. Participants reported that pain started after a certain period of resettlement and expressed frustration when there was no definite diagnosis for pain. They identified physical factors (e.g. excessive labor, exposure to violence, and poor diet) as the primary causes, while psychological factors (e.g. loneliness, rumination, and financial burden of sending remittances to North Korea) were viewed as collateral or contributing causes. Several participants indicated emotional discomfort when they were referred to psychiatrists for unceasing pain. Physical treatment (injections, medications, or acupuncture) and providers' sincere attitudes were expectations of care considered capable of addressing both physical and emotional distress. Findings highlight the need to understand NKR women's ethnomedical model of chronic pain, which is distinct from illness model of healthcare providers. These preliminary findings could be used to improve care strategies based on NKRs' care needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Vulnerable families and costly formula: a qualitative exploration of infant formula purchasing among peri-urban Peruvian households.
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Rothstein, Jessica D., Winch, Peter J., Pachas, Jessica, Cabrera, Lilia Z., Ochoa, Mayra, Gilman, Robert H., and Caulfield, Laura E.
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BREASTFEEDING promotion , *DECISION making , *INFANT formulas , *INTERVIEWING , *CASE studies , *MEDICAL care costs , *QUALITY of life , *SELF-efficacy , *QUALITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis , *AT-risk people , *ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding - Abstract
Background: Substantial evidence exists surrounding the health risks of breast milk substitutes (BMS) in place of exclusive breastfeeding among infants < 6 months of age in resource-poor settings. Yet, mothers' experiences of selecting and purchasing BMS brands have not been well studied to date. This qualitative study explored the factors influencing BMS purchasing practices, along with the consequences of those decisions, in peri-urban Lima, Peru. Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews (IDIs) with 29 mothers who had begun mixed-feeding their infants during the first 6 months of life. Interviews explored participants' reasons for initiating infant formula use and their experiences of selecting, purchasing, and providing BMS to their children. Audio recordings were transcribed, coded, and key themes and illustrative vignettes were identified. Results: The primary reported reasons for initiating infant formula use included having received a recommendation for infant formula from a healthcare provider, concerns about an infant's weight gain, and the perception of insufficient breast milk. Mothers tended to initially purchase the BMS brand that had been recommended by a doctor, which was often more expensive than the alternatives. The costs of BMS, which escalated as infants grew, often disrupted the household economy and generated significant stress. While some mothers identified alternatives allowing them to continue purchasing the same brand, others chose to switch to less expensive products. Several mothers began to feed their infants follow-on formula or commercial milk, despite their awareness that such practices were not recommended for infants under 6 months of age. The approval of family members and the absence of an infant's immediate adverse reaction influenced mothers' decisions to continue purchasing these products. Conclusions: The high costs of BMS may deepen existing socio-economic vulnerabilities and generate new risks for infant health. The continued dedication of resources towards breastfeeding education and support is critical, and strategies would benefit from underscoring the long-term financial and health consequences of infant formula use, and from strengthening women's self-efficacy to refuse to initiate infant formula when recommended. In addition, health providers should be trained in counseling to help women to relactate or return to exclusive breastfeeding after cessation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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4. Interpretation of vulnerability and cumulative disadvantage among unaccompanied adolescent migrants in Greece: A qualitative study.
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Mishra, Divya, Spiegel, Paul B., Digidiki, Vasileia Lucero, and Winch, Peter J.
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MINORS ,HOMELESS persons ,ADOLESCENCE ,YOUNG adults ,QUALITATIVE research ,TEENAGE boys ,CHILD welfare - Abstract
Background: In settings of mass displacement, unaccompanied minors (UAMs) are recognized as a vulnerable group and consequently prioritized by relief efforts. This study examines how the interpretation of vulnerability by the national shelter system for male UAMs in Greece shapes their trajectories into adulthood.Methods and Findings: Between August 2018 and April 2019, key informant interviews were carried out with child protection staff from Greek non-governmental organizations that refer UAMs to specialized children's shelters in Athens to understand how child protection workers interpret vulnerability. In-depth interviews and life history calendars were collected from 44 male migrant youths from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Iran who arrived in Greece as UAMs but had since transitioned into adulthood. Analysis of in-depth interviews and life history calendars examined how cumulative disadvantage and engagement with the shelter system altered youths' trajectories into adulthood. Younger adolescents were perceived as more vulnerable and prioritized for shelters over those who were "almost 18" years old. However, a subset of youths who requested shelter at the age of 17 years had experienced prolonged journeys where they spent months or years living on their own in socially isolated environments that excluded them from experiences conducive to adolescent development. The shelter system for UAMs in Greece enabled youths to develop new skills and networks that facilitated integration into society, and transferred them into adult housing when they turned 18 years old so that they could continue developing new skills. Those who were not in shelters by age 18 years could not access adult housing and lost this opportunity. Limitations included possible underrepresentation of homeless youth as well as the inability to capture all nationalities of UAMs in Greece, though the 2 most common nationalities, Afghan and Pakistani, were included.Conclusions: Due to the way vulnerability was interpreted by the shelter system for UAMs, youths who had the greatest need to learn new skills to facilitate their integration often had the least opportunity to do so. To avoid creating long-lasting disparities between UAMs who are placed in shelters and those who are not, pathways should be developed to allow young adult males to enter accommodation facilities and build skills and networks that facilitate integration. Furthermore, cumulative disadvantages should be taken into account while assessing UAMs' vulnerability. Following UAMs' trajectories into early adulthood was critical for capturing this long-term consequence of the shelter system's interpretation of vulnerability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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5. Violence en route: Eritrean women asylum-seekers experiences of sexual violence while migrating to Israel.
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Gebreyesus, Tsega, Sultan, Zebib, Ghebrezghiabher, Habtom M., Singh, Namrita, Tol, Wietse A., Winch, Peter J., Davidovitch, Nadav, and Surkan, Pamela J.
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EMIGRATION & immigration & psychology ,SEX crimes -- Risk factors ,COMMUNITIES ,DEPENDENCY (Psychology) ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH facilities ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,HUMAN trafficking ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
Migrating irregularly, without access to support, may increase female asylum-seekers' vulnerability to sexual violence. In this study, the authors applied a public health lens to explore the risk for sexual violence experienced by female asylum-seekers en route from Eritrea to Israel. The study team conducted 13 in-depth interviews and 8 focus groups with Eritreans in Israel between April and September of 2013. Participants in the study described their experiences occurring in three segments. The combination of irregular movement through dangerous, difficult and often isolated terrain, dependence on human smugglers, and vulnerability to traffickers led to the systematization and normalization of sexual violence en route. Such factors heighten vulnerability to sexual violence among these Eritrean women asylum-seekers, as well as others who find themselves in similar circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Parenting self‐efficacy in the context of poverty and HIV in Eastern Uganda: A qualitative study.
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Augustinavicius, Jura L., Familiar‐Lopez, Itziar, Winch, Peter J., Murray, Sarah M., Ojuka, Caesar, Boivin, Michael J., and Bass, Judith K.
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COLLECTIVE representation ,SOCIAL perception ,SELF-efficacy ,STRICT parenting ,PARENTING ,QUALITATIVE research ,HIV - Abstract
Copyright of Infant Mental Health Journal is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2019
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7. Dusukasi-The Heart That Cries: An Idiom of Mental Distress Among Perinatal Women in Rural Mali.
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Lasater, Molly E., Beebe, Madeleine, Warren, Nicole E., Souko, Fatoumata, Keita, Mariam, Murray, Sarah M., Bass, Judith K., Surkan, Pamela J., and Winch, Peter J.
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MENTAL health services ,MATERNAL health services ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,RURAL women ,ANXIETY ,MENTAL depression ,MEDICAL personnel ,PREGNANCY complications ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL population ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,TERMS & phrases ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Perinatal mental health problems such as depression and anxiety are prevalent in low and middle-income countries. In Mali, the lack of mental health care is compounded by few studies on mental health needs, including in the perinatal period. This paper examines the ways in which perinatal women experience and express mental distress in rural Mali. We describe a process, relying on several different qualitative research methods, to identify understandings of mental distress specific to the Malian context. Participants included perinatal women, maternal health providers, and community health workers in rural southwest Mali. Participants articulated several idioms of distress, including gèlèya (difficulties), tôôrô (pain, suffering), hamin (worries, concerns), and dusukasi (crying heart), that occur within a context of poverty, interpersonal conflict, and gender inequality. These idioms of distress were described as sharing many key features and operating on a continuum of severity that could progress over time, both within and across idioms. Our findings highlight the context dependent nature of experiences and expressions of distress among perinatal women in Mali. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Advantages and limitations for users of double pit pour-flush latrines: a qualitative study in rural Bangladesh.
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Hussain, Faruqe, Clasen, Thomas, Akter, Shahinoor, Bawel, Victoria, Luby, Stephen P., Leontsini, Elli, Unicomb, Leanne, Barua, Milan Kanti, Thomas, Brittany, and Winch, Peter J.
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TOILETS ,SANITATION ,WATER table ,BIODEGRADATION ,PUBLIC health ,POVERTY ,RESTROOMS ,RURAL population ,QUALITATIVE research ,PILOT projects - Abstract
Background: In rural Bangladesh, India and elsewhere, pour-flush pit latrines are the most common sanitation system. When a single pit latrine becomes full, users must empty it themselves and risk exposure to fresh feces, pay an emptying service to remove pit contents or build a new latrine. Double pit pour-flush latrines may serve as a long-term sanitation option including high water table areas because the pits do not need to be emptied immediately and the excreta decomposes into reusable soil.Methods: Double pit pour-flush latrines were implemented in rural Bangladesh for 'hardcore poor' households by a national NGO, BRAC. We conducted interviews, focus groups, and spot checks in two low-income, rural areas of Bangladesh to explore the advantages and limitations of using double pit latrines compared to single pit latrines.Results: The rural households accepted the double pit pour-flush latrine model and considered it feasible to use and maintain. This latrine design increased accessibility of a sanitation facility for these low-income residents and provided privacy, convenience and comfort, compared to open defecation. Although a double pit latrine is more costly and requires more space than a single pit latrine the households perceived this sanitation system to save resources, because households did not need to hire service workers to empty pits or remove decomposed contents themselves. In addition, the excreta decomposition process produced a reusable soil product that some households used in homestead gardening. The durability of the latrine superstructures was a problem, as most of the bamboo-pole superstructure broke after 6-18 months of use.Conclusions: Double pit pour-flush latrines are a long-term improved sanitation option that offers users several important advantages over single pit pour-flush latrines like in rural Bangladesh which can also be used in areas with high water table. Further research can provide an understanding of the comparative health impacts and effectiveness of the model in preventing human excreta from entering the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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9. Sink or Swim: Promoting Youth Development Through Aquatics Programs in Baltimore, Maryland.
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Storm, Margaret K., Williams, Kendra N., Shetter, Elinor M., Kaminsky, Julie, Lowery, Caitlin M., Caldas, Stephanie V., and Winch, Peter J.
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YOUTH development ,AQUATIC sports ,RECREATIONAL sports ,SOCIAL interaction ,LIFE skills - Abstract
Youth participation in structured recreational activities promotes positive youth development. Engagement with others as part of a team or through group activities allows youth to develop skills in social interaction, goal setting, discipline, emotional maturity, physical activity competence, and many other abilities. As a recreational activity, group-oriented sport, and life skill, swimming has the potential to positively affect youth development in many different domains. Despite the promise of swimming for youth development, large disparities exist in access to and use of pools and swim programming. Swimming opportunities are much less available and less utilized by minority populations, especially in inner-city urban areas. In Baltimore City, Maryland, programs have attempted to improve youth swimming abilities and promote pool use for physical fitness, but participation has been low. The objective of this study is to understand the factors influencing use of swim programming offered in Baltimore, in order to identify suggestions for improving swim programs to more effectively engage inner city minority youth. Researchers conducted 13 in-depth-interviews, three focus group discussions, and six pool observations. Informants included Baltimore City parents, teachers, young adults (18-24 years old), aquatics staff, and city officials from both swimming and non-swimming backgrounds. Findings suggest that important barriers to youth participation in swimming include inconsistent availability of swim programs, limited knowledge of swimming opportunities, variant local definitions of swimming ability, and a lack of role models. Motivators to swimming participation include supportive role models and perceptions of swimming as a gateway to employment opportunities. To improve programs promoting youth development through swimming, the identified barriers and motivators should be addressed by developing messaging focused on: skills of competent swimmers, pool and class schedules, financial costs and support, pool safety, transportation options, benefits of indoor pools, the growing diversity of swimmers, family-oriented aquatic activities, the social and physical appeal of swimming, and employment opportunities swimming can provide. Community outreach and engagement with schools and parent organizations could help change social norms and increase youth participation in swimming. This would provide youth, both in Baltimore and other urban populations, with more opportunities for positive development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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10. A qualitative exploration of health workers' and clients' perceptions of barriers to completing four antenatal care visits in Morogoro Region, Tanzania.
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Callaghan-Koru, Jennifer A., McMahon, Shannon A., Chebet, Joy J., Kilewo, Charles, Frumence, Gasto, Gupta, Shivam, Stevenson, Raz, Lipingu, Chrisostom, Baqui, Abdullah H., and Winch, Peter J.
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PRENATAL care ,MATERNAL health ,MATERNAL health services ,REPRODUCTIVE health services ,MATERNAL & infant welfare ,DEVELOPING countries ,INCOME ,MEDICAL personnel ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,QUALITATIVE research ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,ECONOMICS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Health Policy & Planning is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
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11. Postnatal care utilization and local understandings of contagion among HIV-infected and uninfected women in rural, southern Zambia.
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Sacks, Emma, Moss, William J., Winch, Peter J., Thuma, Philip, van Dijk, Janneke H., and Mullany, Luke C.
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HIV infection epidemiology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HIV infections ,INFANT care ,INFANT mortality ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,POSTNATAL care ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL conditions ,SOCIAL stigma ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,THEMATIC analysis ,VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases) ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Postnatal care is essential for ensuring the optimal health of newborns and necessary for the prevention of maternal-to-child human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission as well as the early diagnosis and treatment of HIV-infected infants. However, coverage of postnatal care is low in many rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa. We examined women’s experiences of accessing formal postnatal care for their HIV-exposed newborns, comparing reports of HIV-infected and uninfected women in an HIV-endemic area of rural southern Zambia. We conducted 24 qualitative in-depth interviews with recently delivered women in a rural region of southern Zambia, including 8 with women who were willing to disclose their HIV infection status and answer additional questions. Data were transcribed, coded and analyzed using thematic analysis techniques. HIV-infected women identified more disincentives and reported more negative experiences accessing postnatal care than HIV-uninfected women. A local notion of contagion holds that healthy infants may become sick withchibele, a fatal, febrile illness, if exposed to another infant who is taking “strong medicine”, such as antiretroviral drugs. Thus, HIV-uninfected women expressed objections to sharing clinics with women and infants who were presumed to be under treatment. Additionally, women reported receiving better treatment from staff at HIV clinics compared to general pediatric clinics. Due to these tensions, HIV-infected women were less likely to visit a clinic for newborn care if the clinic or waiting area was a common space used by HIV-uninfected women and their children. When integrating programs for HIV with maternal and child health care, these nuanced tensions between groups of patients must be recognized and resolved. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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12. Supply-side dimensions and dynamics of integrating HIV testing and counselling into routine antenatal care: a facility assessment from Morogoro Region, Tanzania.
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An, Selena J., George, Asha S., LeFevre, Amnesty E., Mpembeni, Rose, Mosha, Idda, Mohan, Diwakar, Yang, Ann, Chebet, Joy, Lipingu, Chrisostom, Baqui, Abdullah H., Killewo, Japhet, Winch, Peter J., and Kilewo, Charles
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HIV prevention ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COUNSELING ,DELIVERY (Obstetrics) ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL screening ,MOTHERS ,PREGNANT women ,PRENATAL care ,RESEARCH ,SERODIAGNOSIS ,QUALITATIVE research ,EVALUATION research ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Background: Integration of HIV into RMNCH (reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health) services is an important process addressing the disproportionate burden of HIV among mothers and children in sub-Saharan Africa. We assess the structural inputs and processes of care that support HIV testing and counselling in routine antenatal care to understand supply-side dynamics critical to scaling up further integration of HIV into RMNCH services prior to recent changes in HIV policy in Tanzania.Methods: This study, as a part of a maternal and newborn health program evaluation in Morogoro Region, Tanzania, drew from an assessment of health centers with 18 facility checklists, 65 quantitative and 57 qualitative provider interviews, and 203 antenatal care observations. Descriptive analyses were performed with quantitative data using Stata 12.0, and qualitative data were analyzed thematically with data managed by Atlas.ti.Results: Limitations in structural inputs, such as infrastructure, supplies, and staffing, constrain the potential for integration of HIV testing and counselling into routine antenatal care services. While assessment of infrastructure, including waiting areas, appeared adequate, long queues and small rooms made private and confidential HIV testing and counselling difficult for individual women. Unreliable stocks of HIV test kits, essential medicines, and infection prevention equipment also had implications for provider-patient relationships, with reported decreases in women's care seeking at health centers. In addition, low staffing levels were reported to increase workloads and lower motivation for health workers. Despite adequate knowledge of counselling messages, antenatal counselling sessions were brief with incomplete messages conveyed to pregnant women. In addition, coping mechanisms, such as scheduling of clinical activities on different days, limited service availability.Conclusion: Antenatal care is a strategic entry point for the delivery of critical tests and counselling messages and the framing of patient-provider relations, which together underpin care seeking for the remaining continuum of care. Supply-side deficiencies in structural inputs and processes of delivering HIV testing and counselling during antenatal care indicate critical shortcomings in the quality of care provided. These must be addressed if integrating HIV testing and counselling into antenatal care is to result in improved maternal and newborn health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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13. An improved tool for household faeces management in rural Bangladeshi communities.
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Sultana, Rebeca, Mondal, Utpal K., Rimi, Nadia Ali, Unicomb, Leanne, Winch, Peter J., Nahar, Nazmun, and Luby, Stephen P.
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DEFECATION ,CHILDREN'S health ,RURAL geography ,WASTE products management ,RURAL sanitation ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Copyright of Tropical Medicine & International Health is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
14. Pathways of care-seeking during fatal infant illnesses in under-resourced South African settings
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Sharkey, Alyssa B., Chopra, Mickey, Jackson, Debra, Winch, Peter J., and Minkovitz, Cynthia S.
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RARE diseases ,INFANT mortality ,RURAL geography ,CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Summary: The purpose of this study was to examine care-seeking during fatal infant illnesses in under-resourced South African settings to inform potential strategies for reducing infant mortality. We interviewed 22 caregivers of deceased infants in a rural community and 28 in an urban township. We also interviewed seven local leaders and 12 health providers to ascertain opinions about factors contributing to infant death. Despite the availability of free public health services in these settings, many caregivers utilized multiple sources of care including allopathic, indigenous and home treatments. Urban caregivers reported up to eight points of care while rural caregivers reported up to four points of care. The specific pathways taken and combinations of care varied, but many caregivers used other types of care shortly after presenting at public services, indicating dissatisfaction with the care they received. Many infants died despite caregivers’ considerable efforts, pointing to critical deficiencies in the system of care serving these families. Initiatives that aim to improve assessment, management and referral practices by both allopathic and traditional providers (for example, through training and improved collaboration), and caregiver recognition of infant danger signs may reduce the high rate of infant death in these settings. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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15. Reported infant feeding practices and contextual influences on breastfeeding: qualitative interviews with women registered to MomConnect in three South African provinces.
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Trafford, Zara, Jewett, Sara, Swartz, Alison, LeFevre, Amnesty E., Winch, Peter J., Colvin, Christopher J., Barron, Peter, and Bamford, Lesley
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ARTIFICIAL feeding ,BREASTFEEDING ,DECISION making ,HEALTH promotion ,INFANT nutrition ,MOTHERHOOD ,PARENTING ,WOMEN'S health ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding - Abstract
Background: Global guidelines recommend exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) for the first 6 months of life. South African EBF rates have steadily increased but still only average 32% for infants below 6 months of age. Malnutrition and developmental delays continue to contribute substantially to the morbidity and mortality of South African children. MomConnect, a national mHealth messaging system used to send infant and maternal health messages during and after pregnancy, has a specific focus on improving rates of breastfeeding and has achieved high rates of population coverage. Methods: For this qualitative study, we interviewed women who were registered to MomConnect to investigate their breastfeeding and other infant feeding practices, decision-making pre- and post-delivery, and the role of the health system, family members and the wider community in supporting or detracting from breastfeeding intentions. Data were collected from February–March 2018 in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal, Free State and Gauteng provinces. Framework analysis was conducted to identify common themes. Results: Most women interviewed had breastfed, including HIV-positive women. Even when women had delivered by caesarean section, they had usually been able to initiate breastfeeding a few hours after birth. Understandings of EBF varied in thoroughness and there was some confusion about the best way to cease breastfeeding. Most women felt well-equipped to make infant feeding decisions and to stick to their intentions, but returning to work or school sometimes prevented 6 months of EBF. Advice from the health system (both via clinics and MomConnect) was considered helpful and supportive in encouraging EBF to 6 months, although family influences could thwart these intentions, especially for younger women. Mothers reported a range of breastfeeding information sources that influenced their choices, including social media. Conclusions: Efforts to improve EBF rates must include consideration of the social and economic environment surrounding women. Interventions that focus only on improving women's knowledge are valuable but insufficient on their own. Attention should also be paid to infant behaviors, and how these affect women's breastfeeding choices. Finally, although there is strong local policy support for EBF, more rigorous implementation of these and other broader changes to create a more enabling structural environment ought to be prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. The endings of journeys: A qualitative study of how Greece's child protection system shapes unaccompanied migrant children's futures.
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Mishra, Divya, Digidiki, Vasileia, and Winch, Peter J.
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CHILD welfare , *EXECUTIVES , *EXPERIENCE , *IMMIGRANTS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *QUALITATIVE research , *CHILDREN - Abstract
• Unaccompanied children are unprepared to navigate Greek bureaucratic systems. • Unaccompanied migrant children are preoccupied with their futures as young adults. • When NGO staff help migrant youth integrate, they choose to stay in Greece. • With migrant youth cannot integrate, they leave Greece and become undocumented. Migrants' journeys can be non-linear and directed towards abstract destinations, with endings better marked by periods of integration rather than arrival in any particular place. This study explores how male unaccompanied migrant children's interactions with child protection staff in Greece shape their future trajectories as migrants. The transcripts of in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 26 youth who were placed in accommodation facilities for unaccompanied minors in Greece were qualitatively analyzed using inductive coding. Attention was paid to how youths' experiences with bureaucratic actors shaped their perceptions of Greece, and how those perceptions informed their future decisions as young adults. When youth arrived in Greece, they were unprepared to interpret their new institutional environments. Their understanding of their environments was shaped largely by their interactions with individual non-governmental organization (NGO) staff members. Youth who believed that NGO staff were supportive and invested in their futures typically had plans to stay Greece. Youth who perceived staff to be unsupportive typically had intentions to leave Greece, even if it meant giving up their rights as asylees to be irregular migrants in another country. Investment by NGO staff in unaccompanied children's futures as young adults has important implications for the decisions youth make and their trajectories as migrants. When youth believe staff are indifferent to their best interests, they often disengage and continue their journey to another country, where they will once again be irregular migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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17. Influences on Healthcare-seeking during Final Illnesses of Infants in Under-resourced South African Settings.
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Sharkey, Alyssa, Chopra, Mickey, Jackson, Debra, Winch, Peter J., and Minkovitz, Cynthia S
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MEDICAL quality control , *INFANT health , *CAREGIVERS , *DECISION making , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *CONTEXTUAL analysis - Abstract
To examine how health caregivers in under-resourced South African settings select from among the healthcare alternatives available to them during the final illness of their infants, qualitative interviews were conducted with 39 caregivers of deceased infants in a rural community and an urban township. Nineteen local health providers and community leaders were also interviewed to ascertain opinions about local healthcare and other factors impacting healthcare-seeking choices. The framework analysis method guided qualitative analysis of data. Limited autonomy of caregivers in decision-making, lack of awareness of infant danger-signs, and identification of an externalizing cause of illness were important influences on healthcare- seeking during illnesses of infants in these settings. Health system factors relating to the performance of health workers and the accessibility and availability of services also influenced healthcare-seeking decisions. Although South African public-health services are free, the findings showed that poor families faced other financial constraints that impacted their access to healthcare. Often there was not one factor but a combination of factors occurring either concurrently or sequentially that determined whether, when, and from where outside healthcare was sought during final illnesses of infants. In addition to reducing health system barriers to healthcare, initiatives to improve timely and appropriate healthcare-seeking for sick infants must take into consideration ways to mitigate contextual problems, such as limited autonomy of caregivers in decision-making, and reconcile local explanatory models of childhood illnesses that may not encourage healthcare-seeking at allopathic services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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18. “These are not good things for other people to know”: How rural Tanzanian women’s experiences of pregnancy loss and early neonatal death may impact survey data quality
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Haws, Rachel A., Mashasi, Irene, Mrisho, Mwifadhi, Schellenberg, Joanna Armstrong, Darmstadt, Gary L., and Winch, Peter J.
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PSYCHOLOGY of miscarriage , *PERINATAL death & psychology , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *INFERTILITY , *INTERVIEWING , *PREGNANCY , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL population , *GENDER role , *SOCIAL control , *SOCIAL stigma , *SURVEYS , *WOMEN , *QUALITATIVE research , *DISCLOSURE , *NARRATIVES , *CONTENT mining - Abstract
Abstract: Little research in low-income countries has compared the social and cultural ramifications of loss in childbearing, yet the social experience of pregnancy loss and early neonatal death may affect demographers’ ability to measure their incidence. Ninety-five qualitative reproductive narratives were collected from 50 women in rural southern Tanzania who had recently suffered infertility, miscarriage, stillbirth or early neonatal death. An additional 31 interviews with new mothers and female elders were used to assess childbearing norms and social consequences of loss in childbearing. We found that like pregnancy, stillbirth and early neonatal death are hidden because they heighten women’s vulnerability to social and physical harm, and women’s discourse and behaviors are under strong social control. To protect themselves from sorcery, spiritual interference, and gossip—as well as stigma should a spontaneous loss be viewed as an induced abortion—women conceal pregnancies and are advised not to mourn or grieve for “immature” (late-term) losses. Twelve of 30 respondents with pregnancy losses had been accused of inducing an abortion; 3 of these had been subsequently divorced. Incommensurability between Western biomedical and local categories of reproductive loss also complicates measurement of losses. Similar gender inequalities and understandings of pregnancy and reproductive loss in other low-resource settings likely result in underreporting of these losses elsewhere. Cultural, terminological, and methodological factors that contribute to inaccurate measurement of stillbirth and early neonatal death must be considered in designing surveys and other research methods to measure pregnancy, stillbirth, and other sensitive reproductive events. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. "The doctor said formula would help me": Health sector influences on use of infant formula in peri-urban Lima, Peru.
- Author
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Rothstein, Jessica D., Caulfield, Laura E., Broaddus-Shea, Elena T., Muschelli, John, Gilman, Robert H., and Winch, Peter J.
- Subjects
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INFANT formulas -- Law & legislation , *MARKETING laws , *HEALTH care industry laws , *COUNSELING , *DECISION making , *INFANT formulas , *INFANT nutrition , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *METROPOLITAN areas , *MOTHERS , *NURSES' attitudes , *PHYSICIANS , *THERAPEUTICS , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding - Abstract
• Describes rates of unnecessary formula use during infants' first 60 days of life. • Demonstrates how formula companies market products directly to health providers. • Reveals how providers' formula "prescriptions" lead to higher mixed feeding rates. • Describes how poor counseling from nurses hinders mothers' ability to breastfeed. • Shows the need to improve monitoring of legislation to control formula marketing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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