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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

The Effects of a Brief, Mass-Media Intervention on Attitude and Intention to Seek Professional Psychological Treatment

Demyan, Amy L. 24 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
22

Maternal health care seeking behaviour and preferences for places to give birth in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Yibeltal Tebekaw Bayou 11 1900 (has links)
PURPOSE: The main aim of this study was to systematically assess women’s maternal health care seeking behaviour and its determinants in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. DESIGN: A quantitative and cross-sectional community based study was the selected methodology for this study. METHOD: Data was collected using structured questionnaire administered to 903 women aged 15-49 years through a stratified two-stage cluster sampling technique. Binary and multinomial logistic regression models were employed to identify predictors of adequacy of antenatal care and delivery care. RESULTS: Most of the women (97.9%) visited health care facilities at least once for antenatal care follow up. About 86.5% of them had at least four visits during their last pregnancy; and only 51.1% started their first antenatal visit early. Further, only about one out of five of the antenatal care attendees received sufficient content of antenatal care services. Consequently, only about one out of ten women received overall adequate antenatal care mainly due to inadequate use of the basic components of antenatal services. Most of the women delivered in public health care institutions (76.3%) despite the general doubts about the quality of services in these facilities. Women of better socioeconomic status preferred to give birth at private health care facilities. Caesarean section delivery rate in Addis Ababa (19.1%) is higher than the maximum WHO recommended rate (15.0%); particularly among the non-slum residents (27.2%); clients of private health care facilities (41.1%); currently married women (20.6%); women with secondary (22.2%) and tertiary (33.6%) level of education; and women who belong to the highest wealth quintile (28.2%). The majority (65.8%) of the caesarean section clients were not informed about the consequences of caesarean section delivery and about 9.0% of the caesarean section births had no medical indication. CONCLUSION: Disparities in maternal health care utilisation between the socio-economic groups was evident, requiring urgent attention from policy makers and other stakeholders to enable Ethiopia to meet its millennium development goal 5. Improving the quality of antenatal care in public health facilities which are the main provider of health care services to the majority of the Ethiopian population is urgent. The increase in the rate of caesarean section beyond the World Health Organization recommended upper limit has to be taken seriously. / Health Studies / D. Litt.. et Phil. (Health Studies)
23

Maternal health care seeking behaviour and preferences for places to give birth in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Yibeltal Tebekaw Bayou 11 1900 (has links)
PURPOSE: The main aim of this study was to systematically assess women’s maternal health care seeking behaviour and its determinants in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. DESIGN: A quantitative and cross-sectional community based study was the selected methodology for this study. METHOD: Data was collected using structured questionnaire administered to 903 women aged 15-49 years through a stratified two-stage cluster sampling technique. Binary and multinomial logistic regression models were employed to identify predictors of adequacy of antenatal care and delivery care. RESULTS: Most of the women (97.9%) visited health care facilities at least once for antenatal care follow up. About 86.5% of them had at least four visits during their last pregnancy; and only 51.1% started their first antenatal visit early. Further, only about one out of five of the antenatal care attendees received sufficient content of antenatal care services. Consequently, only about one out of ten women received overall adequate antenatal care mainly due to inadequate use of the basic components of antenatal services. Most of the women delivered in public health care institutions (76.3%) despite the general doubts about the quality of services in these facilities. Women of better socioeconomic status preferred to give birth at private health care facilities. Caesarean section delivery rate in Addis Ababa (19.1%) is higher than the maximum WHO recommended rate (15.0%); particularly among the non-slum residents (27.2%); clients of private health care facilities (41.1%); currently married women (20.6%); women with secondary (22.2%) and tertiary (33.6%) level of education; and women who belong to the highest wealth quintile (28.2%). The majority (65.8%) of the caesarean section clients were not informed about the consequences of caesarean section delivery and about 9.0% of the caesarean section births had no medical indication. CONCLUSION: Disparities in maternal health care utilisation between the socio-economic groups was evident, requiring urgent attention from policy makers and other stakeholders to enable Ethiopia to meet its millennium development goal 5. Improving the quality of antenatal care in public health facilities which are the main provider of health care services to the majority of the Ethiopian population is urgent. The increase in the rate of caesarean section beyond the World Health Organization recommended upper limit has to be taken seriously. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
24

Accès et recours aux soins de santé modernes en milieu urbain : le cas de la ville d'Abidjan - Côte d'Ivoire / Access and appeal in the care of modern health in urban zones : the case of the city of Abidjan - Ivory coast

Ymba, Maïmouna 29 May 2013 (has links)
La ville d’Abidjan est localisée au Sud de la Côte d’Ivoire. Elle est la capitale économique depuis 1983 et la première ville du pays. Elle concentre le potentiel humain et une offre de soins dense et diversifiée répartie sur de faibles distances physiques, donnant l’impression que tout est accessible. En effet, l’État Ivoirien a consenti d’importants investissements pour construire et équiper des services de santé depuis l’émergence de la ville au début du siècle dernier pour améliorer l’accès aux soins des abidjanais. Pourtant, malgré une augmentation considérable du nombre d’infrastructures sanitaires et de leur disponibilité, les taux d’utilisations et de fréquentations des services de santé modernes dans les communes de la ville d’Abidjan restent faibles et les indicateurs de santé demeurent très préoccupants et les besoins de soins sont importants. En plus, la croissance spatiale et démographique accélérée que connaît la ville entraînent des changements rapides dans son organisation territoriale empêchant les autorités publiques chargées de la planification de suivre le rythme de sa croissance urbaine. Ils ne sont pas toujours parvenus à équiper en services urbains les nouveaux espaces au fur et à mesure de leur création et à intégrer les nouveaux citadins aux origines diverses. Cette thèse permet d’étudier, comment, dans un contexte considéré comme privilégié, se pose la problématique de l’accès et du recours aux services de santé modernes. Pour réaliser ce projet, cette étude, à partir des combinaisons d’analyses spatiales, statistiques, et d’un travail de terrain, analyse les inégalités socio-spatiales d’accès aux services de santé pour mettre en exergue le problème de l’accessibilité aux soins, tant physique, culturelle, matérielle que sociale. Elle mesure également l’adéquation de cette offre de soins moderne aux besoins de soins des populations pour identifier les zones et les populations défavorisées pour l’accès aux soins. Et enfin, cette étude analyse les pratiques citadines du recours aux soins, ainsi que les déterminants qui limitent ou facilitent l’accès aux soins dans la ville d’Abidjan. Les résultats des études montrent que les services de santé existent, ils sont denses et diversifiés, mais ils ne sont pas repartis là où il y a le plus de besoins de soins. Dans notre étude, on souligne aussi une prédominance de la prise en charge à domicile des épisodes morbides notamment à travers l’automédication et une diminution de l’utilisation des services de soins modernes. Le recours aux structures de soins se fait rare dans les quartiers où les besoins en soins de santé sont les plus importants. L’automédication ou la médecine de rue sont généralement les plus privilégiées. Les structures de soins sont sollicitées que lorsque la maladie devient très grave. Nos résultats montrent également qu’il est difficile d’attribuer à un facteur le rôle déterminant des recours thérapeutiques, car les comportements sont à la fois déterminés par les caractéristiques socio-démographiques de l’individu, de sa famille et par des paramètres contextuels, mais aussi par les caractéristiques de l’épisode morbide, par la connaissance du système de soins environnant et les attitudes vis-à-vis du système de soins. Néanmoins, nous pouvons dire qu’à Abidjan, les pratiques citadines du recours aux soins sont tributaires de la capacité économique des ménages avec le risque accru de marginaliser les personnes les plus vulnérables. / The city of Abidjan is located in the South of the Ivory Coast. It is the economic capital since 1983 and the first city of the country. It concentrates human potential and health of dense care supply modern and diversified divided on weak physical distance, giving the impression that everything is approachable. In effect, the State Of the Ivory Coast approved important investments to construct and equip services of health care since the emergence of the city at the beginning of last century to ameliorate the access to health care of abidjanais. However, in spite of a considerable increase among health facilities and among their availability, the rates of uses and company of the services of modern health care in the spaces of the city of Abidjan remain weak and the indicators of health remain very worrying and the needs in care of health are important. On top of that, the space and demographic speeded up growth which knows the city draw away quick changes in her territorial organization preventing the public authorities made responsible with planning for following the rhythm of its urban growth. They did not always manage to equip new urban spaces with timely urban services and to integrate new citizens at the various origins. This thesis allows to be studying, how, in a considered context as privileged, settle the problems of access and health care seeking in the services of modern health. To accomplish this plan, this study, from the combination of spatial analysis, statistics, and field work, analyses the socio- spatial inequality of access to the services of health to head with the problem of accessibility in care, so physical, cultural, material that social. It also measures the adequacy of health care supply at the Needs in care of health of populations to identify zones and populations discriminated for the access to health care. And finally, this study analyses the city practices in the use of health care, as well as the determinants that hinder or facilitate access to health care in the city of Abidjan. Study results show that the services of health exist, they are dense and manifold, but they did not leave again where there are most needs in care of health. In our study, they also underline a predominance of the taking care at home of morbid episodes notably across self-medication and a reduction of the use of the services of modern care. The seeking in structures of health care becomes rare in the space where the needs in care of health are the most important. Self-medication or street medicine are the most favouring in general. Structures of health care are solicited that when illness becomes very serious. Our results also show that it is difficult to allocate to a factor the role determining therapeutic seeking, because behaviours are determined at the same time by the socio-demographic characteristics of the individual, his family and by contextual parameters, but also by the characteristics of morbid episode, by the knowledge of the ambient the health care system and attitudes in relation to the health care system. However, we can say that in Abidjan, the city practices of health care seeking are dependent on the economic capacity of household with risk augmented to marginalize the most vulnerable persons.

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