Maternal and Non-maternal Caregivers' Practices in Drug Administration to Children during Illness
In: Child Care in Practice, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 295-309
ISSN: 1476-489X
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In: Child Care in Practice, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 295-309
ISSN: 1476-489X
In: Journal of empirical research on human research ethics: JERHRE ; an international journal, Band 17, Heft 1-2, S. 114-128
ISSN: 1556-2654
There were eighteen Research Ethics Committees (RECs) operating in Ghana as of December 2019 but no empirical assessment of their operational characteristics had been conducted. We assessed the characteristics of Ghanaian RECs using an existing Self-Assessment Tool for RECs in Developing Countries. We present results from nine RECs that participated in this nation-wide assessment. Our results indicate that the RECs are generally adherent to the recommendations in the Tool including being composed of members with diverse expertise. They also reviewed and approved research protocols as well as had access to some limited funding for their activities. There is no national policy on research human protections or an ethics authority to regulate the activities of the RECs. We recommend the establishment of this authority in Ghana while encouraging institutions to sustain efforts aimed at making their RECs operate independently.
In: World development perspectives, Band 23, S. 100317
ISSN: 2452-2929
Africa's recent communications 'revolution' has generated optimism that using mobile phones for health (mhealth) can help bridge healthcare gaps, particularly for rural, hard-to-reach populations. However, while scale-up of mhealth pilots remains limited, health-workers across the continent possess mobile phones. This article draws on interviews from Ghana and Malawi to ask whether/how health-workers are using their phones informally and with what consequences. Health-workers were found to use personal mobile phones for a wide range of purposes: obtaining help in emergencies; communicating with patients/colleagues; facilitating community-based care, patient monitoring and medication adherence; obtaining clinical advice/information and managing logistics. However, the costs were being borne by the health-workers themselves, particularly by those at the lower echelons, in rural communities, often on minimal stipends/salaries, who are required to 'care' even at substantial personal cost. Although there is significant potential for 'informal mhealth' to improve (rural) healthcare, there is a risk that the associated moral and political economies of care will reinforce existing socioeconomic and geographic inequalities.
BASE
In: Journal of international development: the journal of the Development Studies Association, Band 30, Heft 4, S. 539-558
ISSN: 1099-1328
World Affairs Online
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 140, S. 105257