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23 May 2024

BU graduate’s paper read 600 times

international, open access, Publishing, student research, writing Edwin van Teijlingen

Today ResearchGate informed us that the academic paper `Whose Shoes?` Can an educational board game engage Ugandan men in pregnancy and childbirth? published in 2018 by former Ph.D. student Dr. Alice Ladur has been read 600 times.  The paper appeared in the Open Access journal BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth.   Alice was based in the Centre for Midwifery and Women Health (CMWH) and supervised by professors Vanora Hundley and Edwin van Teijlingen.

Men can play a significant role in reducing maternal morbidity and mortality in low-income countries such as Uganda. Maternal health programmes are increasingly looking for innovative interventions to engage men to help improve health outcomes for pregnant women. Educational board games offer a unique approach to present health information where learning is reinforced through group discussions supporting peer-to-peer interactions.  Alice conducted interviews with men from Uganda currently living in the UK on their views of an educational board game. Men were asked their perceptions on whether a board game was relevant as a health promotional tool in maternal health prior to implementation in Uganda.

The results of the pilot study were promising; participants reported the use of visual aids and messages were easy to understand and enhanced change in perspective. Men in this study were receptive on the use of board games as a health promotional tool and recommended its use in rural Uganda.  The paper concluded that key messages from the focus group appeared to be that the board game is more than acceptable to fathers and that it needs to be adapted to the local context to make it suitable for men in rural Uganda

Prof. Edwin van Teijlingen

 

Reference:

  1. Ladur, A.N., van Teijlingen, E. & Hundley, V. `Whose Shoes?` Can an educational board game engage Ugandan men in pregnancy and childbirth?. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 18, 81 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-018-1704-6

Tags: BU research CMWH Edwin-blog-post Featured academics Global engagement Health health and wellbeing Maternal Health Men midwifery Prof. Edwin van Teijlingen Prof. Vanora Hundley publication publishing research Research news social sciences Uganda Uncategorized Whose Shoes?

Related Posts

  • CMMPH PhD student published in BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth27 March 2018
  • Midwifery paper read 2,500 times26 July 2023
  • Congratulations to PhD student Alice Ladur9 July 2019
  • Collaborative midwifery paper cited 40 times18 February 2024

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