17 results match your criteria: "BRAC University James P Grant School of Public Health[Affiliation]"
BMJ Open
December 2024
School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Centre for Public Health, Queen's University Belfast MDBS, Belfast, UK
Introduction: Presbyopia, difficulty in seeing close-ups, affects a billion people globally. Mobile financial services (MFS) have been mandated since January 2021 for Bangladesh government social safety net payments, including old age allowance (OAA) and widow allowance (WA). We report the protocol for the Transforming Households with Refraction and Innovative Financial Technology randomised trial assessing the impact on the use of online banking of providing presbyopic safety net beneficiaries with reading glasses, and brief smartphone and mobile banking app training.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEquitable health research requires actively engaging communities in producing new knowledge to advocate for their health needs. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) relies on the coproduction of contextual and grounded knowledge between researchers, programme implementers and community partners with the aim of catalysing action for change. Improving coproduction competencies can support research quality and validity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
November 2023
Centre for Non-communicable Diseases and Nutrition, BRAC University James P Grant School of Public Health, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Objective: The critical shortage of healthcare workers, particularly in rural areas, is a major barrier to quality care for non-communicable diseases (NCD) in low-income and middle-income countries. In this proof-of-concept study, we aimed to test a decentralised model for integrated diabetes and hypertension management in rural Bangladesh to improve accessibility and quality of care.
Design And Setting: The study is a single-cohort proof-of-concept study.
Introduction: The delay in seeking emergency obstetric care leads to significant maternal morbidity and mortality and can worsen during pandemics, especially in humanitarian conflict settings with low uptake of obstetric services. To mitigate the challenges related to the second delay caused by lack of transport in the COVID-19 pandemic, the organisation United Nations Population Fund implements a community-based referral project called Referral Hub in the Rohingya refugee population in Bangladesh. The objective of the paper is to describe the implementation process of the Referral hub and present clients' utilisation and perception of the service.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Nutr
November 2022
Institute for Global Nutrition and Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
Background: Meta-analyses show that small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNSs) reduce child wasting and stunting. There is little information regarding effects on severe wasting or stunting.
Objectives: We aimed to identify the effect of SQ-LNSs on prevalence of severe wasting (weight-for-length z score < -3) and severe stunting (length-for-age z score < -3).
BMJ Open
June 2022
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Introduction: Several studies have shown that residents of urban informal settlements/slums are usually excluded and marginalised from formal social systems and structures of power leading to disproportionally worse health outcomes compared to other urban dwellers. To promote health equity for slum dwellers, requires an understanding of how their lived realities shape inequities especially for young children 0-4 years old (ie, under-fives) who tend to have a higher mortality compared with non-slum children. In these proposed studies, we aim to examine how key Social Determinants of Health (SDoH) factors at child and household levels combine to affect under-five health conditions, who live in slums in Bangladesh and Kenya through an intersectionality lens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
May 2022
International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK.
COVID-19 brings uncertainties and new precarities for communities and researchers, altering and amplifying relational vulnerabilities (vulnerabilities which emerge from relationships of unequal power and place those less powerful at risk of abuse and violence). Research approaches have changed too, with increasing use of remote data collection methods. These multiple changes necessitate new or adapted safeguarding responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
January 2022
Global Health and Population, Harvard University T H Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med
September 2021
Centre for Non-Communicable Diseases and Nutrition, BRAC University James P Grant School of Public Health, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Objectives: Insufficient physical activity (IPA) is a crucial risk factor for non-communicable diseases (NCDs). The elderly population has a higher likelihood of suffering from NCDs. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of and factors associated with IPA among the elderly people in Bangladesh.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
July 2021
Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York, UK.
Introduction: People living in slums face several challenges to access healthcare. Scarce and low-quality public health facilities are common problems in these communities. Costs and prevalence of catastrophic health expenditures (CHE) have also been reported as high in studies conducted in slums in developing countries and those suffering from chronic conditions and the poorest households seem to be more vulnerable to financial hardship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
April 2021
George Washington University Milken Institute of Public Health, Washington, DC, USA.
BMJ Glob Health
January 2021
Indian Institute of Public Health Gandhinagar, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India.
BMJ Open
January 2021
Centre for Non-communicable Diseases and Nutrition, BRAC University James P Grant School of Public Health, Dhaka, Dhaka District, Bangladesh
Objective: We implemented this study to report the prevalence and associated risk factors of hypertension among adult men and women aged >30 years residing in selected urban and rural areas of Dhaka division, Bangladesh.
Design: Cross-sectional study.
Setting: Two urban (Dhaka city north and Dhaka city south) and two rural (Narsinghdi and Gazipur district) areas of the Dhaka division.
BMJ Glob Health
May 2020
College of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences, University of Sierra Leone, Freetown, Western Area, Sierra Leone.
Safeguarding is rapidly rising up the international development agenda, yet literature on safeguarding in related research is limited. This paper shares processes and practice relating to safeguarding within an international research consortium (the ARISE hub, known as ARISE). ARISE aims to enhance accountability and improve the health and well-being of marginalised people living and working in informal urban spaces in low-income and middle-income countries (Bangladesh, India, Kenya and Sierra Leone).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
October 2019
Nutrition and Clinical Services Division, icddr,b, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Introduction: The Government of Bangladesh is implementing growth monitoring and promotion (GMP) through community clinics (CC) to improve the nutritional status of children. However, little primary evidence is available on the effectiveness of GMP when delivered through CCs. We aim to examine the effectiveness of GMP activities strengthened in CCs to improve the nutritional status of children under 2 years of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
June 2019
Leeds Institute of Health Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
The world is now predominantly urban; rapid and uncontrolled urbanisation continues across low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Health systems are struggling to respond to the challenges that urbanisation brings. While better-off urbanites can reap the benefits from the 'urban advantage', the poorest, particularly slum dwellers and the homeless, frequently experience worse health outcomes than their rural counterparts.
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