Browsing by Author "Everett-Murphy Katherine"
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- ItemOpen AccessThe development and evaluation of a smoking cessation programme for disadvantaged pregnant women in South Africa(2011) Everett-Murphy Katherine; Mathews, Catherine; Steyn, KriselaStudies of smoking during pregnancy in South Africa have found exceptionally high smoking rates among disadvantaged women of mixed ethnic descent (46%) (Steyn et al., 1997; Petersen et al., 2009a). As a consequence, these women are at high risk of smoking-related pregnancy complications and poor birth outcomes. It has long been recommended that a smoking cessation intervention be developed specifically for this high risk group. There is strong evidence that best practice smoking cessation interventions for pregnant women can be effective in increasing quit rates, as well as in reducing the incidence of premature birth and low birth weight (Lumley et al., 2009). However, these interventions have only been studied in developed countries and it was unknown whether such programmes could be successfully applied to a South African setting. From 2002, the Medical Research Council of SA undertook a programme of research for the purposes of developing and evaluating a smoking cessation intervention, specifically for disadvantaged pregnant women attending public-sector, antenatal clinics in Cape Town. This thesis reports on several aspects of this research.
- ItemOpen AccessA qualitative study on diabetic and hypertensive patients in Cape Town, South Africa: their experiences of primary health care and their struggles with self-management(2014) Chuma, Thandi; Mathews, Catherine; Everett-Murphy KatherineThe overall aim of this study was to understand how diabetic and hypertensive patients experience PHC in Cape Town, as well as their capacity for self- management of their condition. The specific objectives were: to explore how patients react to existing health care materials/interventions at the health care facility; to identify the needs these patients have for information and behavioural change counselling; to investigate the perceived barriers to lifestyle modification in relation to the patients and to the broader social and economic environment and to investigate the sources of personal motivation to control their illness through lifestyle modification.