FreshRSS

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☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Why do community members believe mothers and babies are dying? Behavioral versus situational attribution in rural northern Ghana

Por: Victoria Aboungo · Elizabeth Kaselitz · Raymond Aborigo · John Williams · Kat James · Cheryl Moyer — Enero 27th 2020 at 01:00
Rates of maternal and neonatal death remain high in the Global South, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. In addition, indicators vary significantly by geography. This study aimed to understand what communities in northern Ghana with frequent maternal and newborn deaths or near deaths (near-misses) perceive to be the causes. As part of a larger study, four communities in Ghana's Northern Region were identified as areas with high concentrations of deaths and near-misses of mothers and babies.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Project 20: Midwives’ insight into continuity of care models for women with social risk factors: What works, for whom, in what circumstances, and how

Por: Hannah Rayment-Jones · Sergio A. Silverio · James Harris · Angela Harden · Jane Sandall — Enero 29th 2020 at 01:00
Women with social risk factors such as those living in poverty and social isolation, seeking asylum or refugee status, experiencing domestic abuse, mental illness, learning difficulties, and substance abuse problems, have significantly higher rates of poor birth outcomes compared to their more advantaged counterparts (Draper, 2019, Biro, 2017, Lindquist, 2015, Blumenshine, 2010, Smith 2009). In both the UK and the US women from black and minority ethnic backgrounds [BME] also experience unacceptably high rates of morbidity and mortality compared to their white counterparts, regardless of their socio-economic status (Knight et al, 2018).
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Recently graduated midwives in Uganda: Self-perceived achievement, wellbeing and work prospects

Por: James Copestake · Marc Theuss · Sharon Brownie · Gabby Davies · Eva Burke · Moses Mukuru · Hellen Kyakuwaire · Grace Edwards — Diciembre 12th 2019 at 01:00
to investigate how recent graduates from a combined work/study midwifery degree programme in Uganda viewed its effects on their wellbeing and work prospects.
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