List of works
Editorial
Published 11/18/2024
Frontiers in Global Women's Health, 5
Excerpt - Since the mid-1990s, attention has increasingly shifted toward investigating and promoting men's involvement in maternal and child health (1). Numerous studies have highlighted the positive impact of male partner's involvement on maternal health care services. Specifically, male partner involvement in maternal care reduces risk of HIV transmission to infants of HIV-positive mothers (2), improves adherence to recommended infant feeding practices (3), and increases uptake of maternal health services such as antenatal care (4). This involvement is also linked to reduce risks of preterm births, low birth weight, fetal growth restrictions, and infant mortality (5–7). Conversely, extensive research has shown that IPV negatively influences maternal health outcomes, with affected women facing higher rates of physical trauma, suicidal ideation, and increased visits to emergency rooms (8–13).
Editorial
Decolonizing a Wretched Healthcare System: The African Public Health Practitioner Case
Published Winter 2024
Ethnicity & disease, 34, 1, 49 - 52
Introduction: Over the past two years, public health practitioners in African countries have worked actively to combat the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic with relatively low fatality rates. This pandemic has forced healthcare professionals to re-think and redesign the healthcare system within their own country.
Methods: Using the Afrocentric PEN-3 framework and a letter style, the purpose of this commentary was to describe the positive, existential, and negative socio-cultural values associated with African healthcare systems. The commentary also highlights socio-cultural factors affecting public trust in African healthcare systems and their health agencies and how systematically decolonizing them may decrease foreign reliance and empower efficient locally based solutions.
Results: We, as African public health practitioners, make three key points in this commentary. First, African public health practitioners have developed resilience within under-resourced healthcare systems. Secondly, oral tradition in African societies and its byproduct (social media) is the means through which people connect and share what they know about any topics (COVID-19). Thirdly, African leaders have particularly contributed to the high level of distrust in their countries' healthcare systems in favor of the healthcare systems of industrialized countries.
Conclusion: This commentary concludes with implications for encouraging African public health practitioners to cultivate the resilience that has led to contributing to the wellness of millions of Africans during this COVID-19 pandemic.