Academic literature on the topic 'Medical care – Cambodia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Medical care – Cambodia"

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Liverani, Marco, Por Ir, Bart Jacobs, et al. "Cross-border medical travels from Cambodia: pathways to care, associated costs and equity implications." Health Policy and Planning 35, no. 8 (2020): 1011–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czaa061.

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Abstract In low- and middle-income countries, patients may travel abroad to seek better health services or treatments that are not available at home, especially in regions where great disparities exist between the standard of care in neighbouring countries. While awareness of South–South medical travels has increased, only a few studies investigated this phenomenon in depth from the perspective of sending countries. This article aims to contribute to these studies by reporting findings from a qualitative study of medical travels from Cambodia and associated costs. Data collection primarily involved interviews with Cambodian patients returning from Thailand and Vietnam, conducted in 2017 in the capital Phnom Penh and two provinces, and interviews with key informants in the local health sector. The research findings show that medical travels from Cambodia are driven and shaped by an interplay of socio-economic, cultural and health system factors at different levels, from the effects of regional trade liberalization to perceptions about the quality of care and the pressure of relatives and other advisers in local communities. Furthermore, there is a diversity of medical travels from Cambodia, ranging from first class travels to international hospitals in Bangkok and cross-border ‘medical tourism’ to perilous overland journeys of poor patients, who regularly resort to borrowing or liquidating assets to cover costs. The implications of the research findings for health sector development and equitable access to care for Cambodians deserve particular attention. To some extent, the increase in medical travels can stimulate improvements in the quality of local health services. However, concerns remain that these developments will mainly affect high-cost private services, widening disparities in access to care between population groups.
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Webber, G., N. Edwards, I. D. Graham, et al. "A survey of Cambodian health-care providers' HIV knowledge, attitudes and intentions to take a sexual history." International Journal of STD & AIDS 20, no. 5 (2009): 346–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/ijsa.2008.008390.

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Cambodia has one of the highest prevalence rates of HIV in Asia and is scaling up HIV testing. We conducted a cross-sectional survey with 358 health care providers in Phnom Penh, Cambodia to assess readiness for voluntary testing and counselling for HIV. We measured HIV knowledge and attitudes, and predictors of intentions to take a sexual history using the Theory of Planned Behaviour. Over 90% of health care providers correctly answered knowledge questions about HIV transmission, but their attitudes were often not positive towards people living with HIV. The Theory of Planned Behaviour constructs explained 56% of the variance in intention to take a sexual history: the control providers perceive they have over taking a sexual history was the strongest contributor (51%), while social pressure explained a further 3%. Attitudes about taking a sexual history did not contribute to intention. Interventions with Cambodian health care providers should focus on improving skills in sexual history-taking.
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Albert, Tyler J., Thomas Fassier, Meng Chhuoy, et al. "Bolstering Medical Education to Enhance Critical Care Capacity in Cambodia." Annals of the American Thoracic Society 12, no. 4 (2015): 491–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1513/annalsats.201412-557ar.

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Oreglia, Elisa, Sokhey Ly, Camille Tijamo, Amra Ou, Caroline Free, and Chris Smith. "Development of an Intervention to Support the Reproductive Health of Cambodian Women Who Seek Medical Abortion: Research Protocol." JMIR Research Protocols 9, no. 7 (2020): e17779. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/17779.

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Background In Cambodia, abortion has been legally permitted on request during the first trimester of pregnancy since 1997. However, although there has been an increase in the percentage of women having induced abortion and medical abortion, there has also been a decrease in the percentage of women who say they received help from a health worker with their abortion. These data point toward the demedicalization of abortion, and although medical abortion has been shown to be safe, there are concerns about safety, given the variety of available products and counseling provided. These concerns are particularly relevant for female factory workers, who typically come from rural areas where access to good health care and information about reproductive health care is limited. Objective This study aims to understand the reproductive health needs of female Cambodian garment factory workers after medical abortion from a multidisciplinary and mixed-methods perspective, focusing on how they seek and share medical abortion- and health-related information; how they use their mobile phones for this and other purposes; what cultural challenges exist around reproductive health; and how they might be magnified or mitigated by mobile phones, linguistic challenges around health care, and mobile phone use. The main purpose of this study is to combine multidisciplinary methods, theories, and expertise to gain new, culturally grounded insights into family planning and medical abortion in Cambodia, but the findings could help inform the development of a relevant intervention to support comprehensive postabortion care. Methods The methods proposed are interviews and participant observation among factory workers, health providers, and mobile phone providers; a linguistic analysis of relevant data (interview transcripts, web-based sources, and other fieldwork materials); and digital methods to understand what kind of information about medical abortion exists on the web in Cambodia and how it is accessed by the targeted population. Results The data collection part of the project will end on December 31, 2020. The team conducted 67 semistructured interviews with female factory workers, women who sought a medical abortion, health providers, and mobile phone providers; participant observation with factory workers and health providers; and an analysis of YouTube and Facebook to understand what kind of information is available, who creates it, and how it is used. The team is currently performing data analysis, and the findings are clustered around (1) the use of mobile phones and digital resources for health-related and medical abortion-related information, (2) the experience of medical abortion care, and (3) the development of an intervention through edutainment videos. Conclusions The project highlights both the widely untapped potential of using digital platforms (especially YouTube and Facebook) to distribute accurate information on medical abortion and the challenges in providing individual information via mobile phones while respecting individuals’ privacy. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/17779
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Waldron, Nick R., Devan Kennifer, Erin Bourgois, Keo Vanna, Saqib Noor, and James Gollogly. "Acid violence in Cambodia: The human, medical and surgical implications." Burns 40, no. 8 (2014): 1799–804. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.burns.2014.04.012.

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Lee, Hye-Yoon, Sung Hun Choi, Jae Suk Rim, et al. "Illnesses Encountered during Medical Volunteering in Takeo Province, Cambodia." Medicina 56, no. 1 (2020): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina56010030.

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Background and Objectives: Medical volunteering seeks to meet the clinical needs of underserved areas, but has been criticized for difficulties in addressing local health issues and resultant lack of sustainability. Our team has visited rural Cambodia annually since 2012. This study reports the illnesses encountered during the recent mission and share our experiences to improve the efficiency of medical volunteering. Materials and Methods: Infrastructure, such as public electricity or water, was unavailable, hence most medical care and records were hand-performed. We categorized (1) primary diagnoses (chief complaints) by duration of symptoms, and (2) primary and secondary diagnoses (illnesses that were not related to the chief complaint) by severity of illness since patients commonly reported multiple symptoms. Blood pressure and anthropometric values were also checked and analyzed. Results: We encountered 317 adult and 141 pediatric patients. Among adults, 61.3% had persistent chronic (>6 month) symptoms of their chief complaints. The commonest diagnoses of chronic symptoms were musculoarthritis (31.5%) and gastroesophageal reflux disease and/or gastritis (21.7%). Hypertension and/or cardiac problems were relatively common among males (13.6%). The most common diagnosis among the severest cases (specialized or intensive care recommended) was cardiac problems (14.8%), often with abnormalities in sonography or electrocardiogram. For children, the overwhelming majority of diagnoses were related to acute symptoms and low severity, and approximately half were cases of the common cold. Commonly prescribed drugs were antacids or mucosal protectors (31.3%), Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or other painkillers (27.6%), and antiparasites (17.7%) in adults, and NSAIDs (44.7%) and antiparasites (23.2%) in children. Among adults, 32.7% were diagnosed with hypertension, and body mass index (p = 0.003) and age (p < 0.001) were both correlated with hypertension and its grade. Conclusions: Our study offers practical help to volunteer health workers planning to visit Southeast Asia.
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Rizvi, Farwa, Joanne Williams, Steven Bowe, and Elizabeth Hoban. "Factors influencing unmet need for contraception amongst adolescent girls and women in Cambodia." PeerJ 8 (October 7, 2020): e10065. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10065.

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Background Unmet need is the gap between women’s need and their practice of using contraception. Unmet need for contraception in female adolescents and women in Cambodia is a public health concern which may lead to unintended pregnancies or abortions that can contribute to maternal morbidity and mortality. Methods Bronfenbrenner’s Social Ecological Model was used as a theoretical framework to analyze data from the 2014 Cambodian Demographic and Health Survey to ascertain demographic and social factors potentially associated with unmet need for contraception. Bivariate and weighted multiple logistic regression analyses with adjusted odds ratios (AOR) were conducted for 4,823 Cambodian, sexually active females aged 15–29 years. Results The percentage of unmet need for contraception was 11.7%. At the individual level of the Social Ecological Model, there was an increased likelihood of unmet need in adolescent girls 15–19 years and women 20–24 years. Unmet need was decreased in currently employed women. At the microenvironment level, there was an increased likelihood of unmet need with the husband’s desire for more children and when the decision for a woman’s access to healthcare was made by someone else in the household. At the macroenvironment level, unmet need was decreased in women who could access a health facility near their residence to obtain medical care. There were no urban rural differences found in the Cambodian sample population. Conclusion Unmet need for contraception in Cambodian females adolescents and women is associated with younger age, unemployment and low personal autonomy for accessing healthcare but not with education or wealth status. There is a need to implement culturally appropriate reproductive and sexual health literacy programs to increase access to modern contraception and to raise women’s autonomy.
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Oum, Vantheara, Yurie Kobashi, Masaharu Tsubokura, Arinobu Hori, Yoshifumi Hayashi, and Sotheara Chhim. "Factors Affecting the Help-Seeking Behaviours of Patients with Schizophrenia in Rural Cambodia." Case Reports in Psychiatry 2020 (June 5, 2020): 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8065058.

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In low- and middle-income countries in Asia, the use of supernatural, religious, and magical approaches to mental illness is widespread. We aimed to document the help-seeking behaviours and barriers to effective mental healthcare in the case of a psychiatric patient in rural Cambodia. The present case report describes the pathway that a patient with schizophrenia utilised to receive effective treatment in a rural area. First, the patient was taken by his parents to a pagoda. Subsequently, they took him to the home of a Kru Khmer (a Cambodian traditional healer). Nevertheless, his condition did not improve, and after seeing this, a neighbour suggested to his mother that they visit the provincial hospital. The patient received a diagnosis after an assessment by the hospital psychiatrist. Following several months of treatment with medication, the patient no longer exhibited paranoid behaviour. In this case, the patient’s and his family’s beliefs are strongly related to help-seeking behaviour toward medical care among psychiatric patients. To promote timely visits to the hospital, it is crucial to clarify and understand the type of beliefs held by psychiatric patients and their families. Besides, an educational approach to the beliefs is essential for shortening the duration of untreated illness.
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Grant, Jenna. "Repair in Translation." East Asian Science, Technology and Society 14, no. 1 (2020): 15–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/18752160-8233535.

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Abstract In this article, the author juxtaposes writing and conversation about care for, with, and in spite of technology in Cambodia. The scene is medical care, and the actors are radiologists, engineers, cadres, and X-ray machines. A radiologist is forced to repair an X-ray machine for doctors of the revolution; the pressure and constraints are almost unreal, yet his skill in repair affirms his humanity and the specialized knowledge and creativity required for problem solving. An engineer teaches repair as he fixes an old X-ray machine. He finds words and necessary tools are missing in Phnom Penh, a familiar story of lack, yet repair is material practice that enables improvisation in spite of linguistic and epistemic challenges. A radiologist, the same one from before, in the twilight of his life, questions the dominance of technologies within medical care and the deskilling of doctors. Juxtaposing these stories bolsters attention for the mundane and creative work of keeping things going in a “broken world,” in line with the ways that care and repair are mobilized in STS. It also shows how the radical potential of “broken world thinking” is circumscribed when a broken world is the one from which people are struggling to distance themselves. What we are left with are multiple, overlapping, fraught stories of modernity in which need, choice, and pleasure of repair all have a place.
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Pérez-León Acevedo, Juan Pablo. "Realising the Right to Health for Victims of International Crimes. The Case of Medical Rehabilitation Reparations Ordered by International Courts: Challenges, Possibilities and Ways of Improvement." Groningen Journal of International Law 3, no. 2 (2015): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.21827/5a86a8d59644e.

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In the last few decades, international crimes, ie, serious human rights violations, have inflicted severe harm on both the physical and mental health of large numbers of victims around the world. In attempting to redress these damages, international courts, within their respective mandates, have issued reparations orders in favour of victims and their communities. Precisely, an important modality of reparations has consisted of rehabilitation which includes measures of a medical nature for victims. This means physical and psychological rehabilitation including treatment, care and support. At three international level courts, namely, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR), International Criminal Court (ICC), and Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), important developments in the field of medical rehabilitative reparations have taken place. This article critically analyses the practices on medical rehabilitation reparations at those courts, suggests which steps should be taken to improve those practices and proposes which actions States and other international community actors should adopt to better implement and/or contribute towards the implementation of orders on medical rehabilitation reparations. Attention is also given to international human rights law, particularly the obligation to cooperate and the right to health standards and principles.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Medical care – Cambodia"

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Göransson, Ann-Margreth, and Eivor Johansson. "Seven health workers' experience of promoting child health in Cambodia : A qualitative study." Thesis, Högskolan i Borås, Institutionen för Vårdvetenskap, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-17258.

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Cambodia is one of the poorest countries in Southeast Asia, many people suffer from impaired health after all the years of war. The purpose of this study is to describe health workers&apos; experience of promoting child health in Cambodia. The study was performed according to a qualitative approach and consists of interviews conducted with health workers who work in government, NGOs and the private clinic. Interviews and text material was analyzed by qualitative content analysis. The results show that at the state level are given opportunities to work health promotion in order to influence children&apos;s health and at the practical level turns out, however, limitations in the form of various health obstacles. The result can be used to discuss what can promote and restrict children&apos;s health. Health workers believe that it is important to invest in that all children should have the opportunity to go to school and that education leads to one of the fundamental rights, the best possible health.<br>Program: Graduate Diploma in Specialist Nursing, Primary Health Care
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Göransson, Ann-Margreth, and Eivor Johansson. "Sju hälsoarbetares erfarenheter av att främja barns hälsa i Kambodja : En kvalitativ studie." Thesis, Högskolan i Borås, Institutionen för Vårdvetenskap, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-17257.

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Kambodja är ett av de fattigaste länderna i Sydostasien, många människor lider av nedsatt hälsotillstånd efter alla år av krig. Syftet med studien är att beskriva hälsoarbetarnas erfarenheter av att främja barns hälsa i Kambodja. Studien utfördes enligt en kvalitativ metod och består av intervjuer som utfördes med hälsoarbetare som arbetar inom statliga, icke statliga organisationer och på privat klinik. Intervjuer och textmaterial analyserades utifrån en kvalitativ innehållsanalys. Resultatet visar att på statlig nivå ges möjligheter att arbeta hälsofrämjande för att kunna påverka barns hälsa och på den praktiska nivån visar sig dock begränsningar i form av olika hälsohinder. Resultatet kan användas för att diskutera vad som kan främja och begränsa barns hälsa. Hälsoarbetarna anser att det är viktigt att satsa på att alla barn skall få möjlighet att gå i skolan och att utbildning leder till en av de grundläggande rättigheterna, bästa möjliga hälsa.<br>Program: Specialistsjuksköterskeutbildning med inriktning mot distriktssköterska
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CHASSIGNOL, LAURENT. "Une action humanitaire au cambodge : evolution de l'hygiene hospitaliere a l'hopital des bonzes a phnom penh dans le cadre de sa rehabilitation par action nord sud." Lyon 1, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993LYO1M055.

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Bith, Pollie D. ""Mango illness" health decisions and the use of biomedical and traditional therapies in Cambodia /." Thesis, 2004. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?index=0&did=813771831&SrchMode=1&sid=4&Fmt=2&VInst=PROD&VType=PQD&RQT=309&VName=PQD&TS=1233960180&clientId=23440.

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Books on the topic "Medical care – Cambodia"

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Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and Vidyāsthān Paṇṭuḥ Paṇṭāl niṅ Srāvjrāv ṭoempī Qabhivaḍḍhn ̊Kambujā, eds. Improving health sector performance: Institutions, motivations and incentives : the Cambodia dialogue. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and CDRI ... [et al.], 2011.

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Heinzl, Richard. Cambodia calling: A memoir from the frontlines of humanitarian aid. John Wiley & Sons Canada, 2008.

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Heinzl, Richard. Cambodia calling: A memoir from the frontlines of humanitarian aid. John Wiley & Sons Canada, 2008.

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Heinzl, Richard. Cambodia calling: A memoir from the frontlines of humanitarian aid. John Wiley & Sons Canada, 2008.

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Caring for Cambodian Americans: A multidisciplinary resource for the helping professions. Garland Pub., 1997.

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Ouch, Cheth. The Cambodian community in the United States. Cross Cultural Health Care Program], 1999.

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Tang, Shirley Suet-ling. Community development as public health, public health as community development: A report of the needs assessment on HIV/AIDS among Cambodian Americans in Lowell, Massachusetts. Massachusetts Asian AIDS Prevention Project, 2001.

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Cambodians And Their Doctors A Medical Anthropology Of Colonial And Postcolonial Cambodia. University of Hawaii Press, 2010.

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Trankell, Ing-Britt, Jan Ovesen, and Nordic Institute of Asian Studies Staff. Cambodians and Their Doctors: A Medical Anthropology of Colonial and Post-Colonial Cambodia. Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2010.

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Cambodia Calling: A Memoir from the Frontlines of Humanitarian Aid. Wiley, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Medical care – Cambodia"

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Schantz, Clémence. "Body symbolics, obstetric practices, and the improvement of maternal health in Cambodia." In The Anthropological Demography of Health. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198862437.003.0017.

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Cambodia is one of the nine countries worldwide to have reduced its maternal mortality rate by more than 75 per cent between 1990 and 2015. Whilst prior to the 2000s, childbirth in Cambodia used to be a private event, it has now become a biomedical event for women and their families. This chapter describes the findings of mixed-method research challenging the idealized vision of the United Nations regarding maternal health in Cambodia by describing obstetrical practices on the ground, from an empirical study led in several clinical settings in Phnom Penh, through participant observation, semi-structured interviews with health-care professionals and patients, questionnaires with pregnant women, to the examination of medical records from four Phnom Penh maternity wards. The findings demonstrate that the biomedicalization of childbirth in Cambodia has been accompanied by technologized delivery with extremely frequent use of surgical practices. In order to understand the population’s adherence to these practices, the chapter draws out a number of anthropological and demographic arguments. These biomedical practices are part of a symbolism of the body where the body is conceived as a receptacle, where the body humours must be able to circulate appropriately, and where the hot/cold balance must be respected. Childbirth as an opening of the body represents a danger for women because it threatens this equilibrium.
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Vafadari, Kazem. "The Emerging Markets of the Asian Region." In Current Issues and Emerging Trends in Medical Tourism. IGI Global, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8574-1.ch023.

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Medical tourism has become a catchphrase in the early years of the 21st Century for even the most unlikely of destinations. This chapter outlines the issues and practices involved in an assessment of the status of medical tourism in the emerging economies and destinations of the Asian Region. A selection of countries as case studies covers the region from the Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, South Asia (Sri Lanka), through to Cambodia, Taiwan, Myanmar, and Japan. The growth of medical tourism in the Asian region, and its various economic and social impact on abovementioned countries is under focus in this chapter. It provides a comprehensive view of how different countries should capitalize on their advantage to increase their share of regional or international medical tourism market. Both technological advances and traditional medicine have provided comparative advantage for medical tourism destinations in the Asian region.
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Conference papers on the topic "Medical care – Cambodia"

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Nurasih, Maisaroh, and Cesa Septiana Pratiwi. "Demand on Sectio Caesarea's Labor among Pregnant Women in Developing Countries: A Scoping Review." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.03.16.

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ABSTRACT Background: The Sectio Caesarea (SC) has continued to increase in the last decades, both globally and in developing countries. SC is not only performed on medical indications but is also performed at the request of the mother so that it has an impact on increasing CS in general. This study aimed to review the demand on Sectio Caesarea’s labor among pregnant women in developing countries. Subjects and Method: This scoping review method was selected for this study using the Arksey and O’Malley framework. This study consisted of 5 stages, namely: 1) Identifying the scoping review questions with the Population Intervention Comparison Outcome (PICO) Framework; 2) Identifying articles relevant to inclusion and exclusion criteria, conducting literature searches through PubMed, Sciencedirect, Wiley and EBSCO, searching for gray literature through search engines, namely google scholar; 3) Article selection using Covidance Software with PRISMA Flowchart (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyzes) to describe the flow search literature, conduct critical appraisal using The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Critical Appraisal Tools to assess the quality of articles; 4) Mapping data (data charting);and 5) Compile, summarize and report results. Results: Based on 5 articles that fit the inclusion criteria, the study design used included were qualitative, cross sectional, mix methods. Articles obtained were came from developing countries, 2 Iranian, 1 Jordan, 1 Nigerian, and 1 Cambodia. Two themes emerge from this study, namely the factors affecting the demand for SC and the role of antenatal education. Conclusion: The formation of positive and trusting relationships between women, families and health care providers can result in proper communication. Meaningful discussion is important for women in making labor decisions. Keywords: sectio caesarea, demand for pregnant women, developing countries Correspondence: Maisaroh Nurasih. Universitas ‘Aisyiyah Yogyakarta. Jl. Ringroad Barat No. 63, Mlangi Nogotirto, Gamping, Rice Field Area, Nogotirto, Gamping District, Sleman Regency, Yogyakarta. Email: maisarohubay24@gmail.com: Mobile: +6282137175569 DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.03.16
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