eTheses
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This community contains an online collection of PhD theses and selected undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations written by QMU students and researchers.
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Item Agency and wellbeing in the context of early marriage: A qualitative inquiry into the northern Nigerian context(Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2018) Zasha, DoosuurAccording to the literature, early marriage remains a problem due to the limitations it places on the educational and economic opportunities of the young girls involved, as well as the variety of health complications they suffer as a result of this. Although early marriage is prevalent in Nigeria, regional differences indicate the northern part of the country as having a higher percentage of girls who marry before the age of 18 compared to the south. Most research and advocacy efforts, as well as related programmes and policies, rightfully focus on the prevention of early marriage but neglect the adolescent girls who are already married. This study focuses on the lives of young married girls, highlighting the process through which they get married as told from their own perspective, and explores their accounts of life after marriage particularly illuminating their health needs and overall wellbeing. Using semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions participatory techniques, and participant observations, 24 young married girls between the ages of 15-25 from Nasarawa state in Nigeria, were recruited for this study, adopting a mixture of principles borrowed from ethnography and grounded theory. The analysis highlights the personal agency exercised by some of the girls in their decisions to get married but also demonstrates how said agency is constrained by the context in which it is exercised. Analysis further reveals the underlying influences behind the constructions of health and illness held by young girls and explores ways in which they primarily seek to address their health and wellbeing. The accounts of these girls also point to strong associations between their wellbeing, economic factors, relationships and experiencing self-worth. This dissertation will contribute to knowledge around early marriage in Nigeria and Sub-Saharan Africa and highlight nuances around the decision-making process at the time of marriage. It also offers insights as to how young girls construct wellbeing in the context of marriage hereby contributing to knowledge around wellbeing in poorer populations in Nigeria and arguably, similar African contexts.Item A qualitative study exploring the experiences of access and pathways to health care among BME community groups residing in Ayrshire(Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2017) McKenzie, ElizabethA review of the literature showed that Black and minority ethnic (BME) communities carry a disproportionately higher burden of illness than the general population and experience greater inequalities in health and health care provision. A growing body of research confirms that BME groups are under-represented in research. The main objective of the present study was to gain insights into the perspectives of BME community groups' experiences of accessing general and sexual health care services in Ayrshire. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 participants, n = 5 men (age range: 32-65; mean age = 52.4 years), and n = 6 women (age range: 27-60; mean age = 47.67 years). Data were analysed employing Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). The analysis is illustrated through the use of four super-ordinate themes: ‘It’s a Trust Thing’, ‘Minding the Gap(s)’, ‘Sexual Health: a Culture of Silence’, and ‘Personal Perception of Risk’. The findings both support and add to the existing trust literature by presenting a heuristic model of trust, and by showing that participants trust is dynamic in character, has a role, and serves various roles and functions that impact decisions about accessing health services. Significant gaps in knowledge about available health services and unique communication challenges that prevent full access to health care and health promotion information were found, resulting in unmet needs. Analysis charted culturally driven factors that prohibit discussions about sexual health concerns and found complex cognitions involved in the personal perception of risk that was meaningfully understood by participants that direct towards understanding risk in terms of a heuristic model. The implications for clinical practice, health promotion, health service development, and the direction of future research will be discussed.Item Do you hear the people sing? The impact of a community choir in a forensic setting.(Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2015) Robertson, JamesThis study considers the health benefits that may be experienced by patients and staff in a medium secure forensic setting when singing in a choir. It also investigates how shared participation in choral experiences might influence the relationships between patients and staff. In addition, framed within the context of Community Music Therapy1 (Pavlicevic and Ansdell 2004; Stige et al. 2010; Stige and Aarø 2012), this study explores how – and to what extent – the researcher’s identity as a music therapist may be altered as a result of including a community-based approach to his work in addition to a clinically-oriented model. The investigation was undertaken throughout a six-month period in which weekly rehearsals comprising up to eight patients and six members of staff were held; a short performance was arranged at the culmination of the project. Whilst studies exploring the use of choral singing in music therapy for people with chronic mental illness have been undertaken (Eyre 2011), there would appear to be a dearth of literature specifically investigating the potential benefits of this intervention with patients in a medium secure forensic setting. A qualitative methodological stance was adopted. Data were collected and analysed using Participatory Action Research (Stige 2005a; Elefant 2010) and key principles of grounded theory (Glaser and Strauss 1967). Findings suggest that people may experience overall feelings of wellbeing such as enjoyment, warm-heartedness, excitement and fun as well as an increased awareness of posture and breathing. A sense of belonging, hope and contributing to a group may similarly be felt. In addition, opportunities for learning are provided and a sense of empathy towards others may be fostered. The results also suggest that shared participation in choral experiences can positively influence the relationships between patients and staff through feelings of benevolence for each other, a removal of boundaries and a deeper realisation of being a person in one’s own right. Finally, results indicate that the researcher’s identity as a music therapist is altered through the inclusion of a more didactic approach, a conscious working towards musical outcomes and a heightened sensitivity regarding the needs and abilities of service-providers as well as service-users.Item Understanding the power relations in health policy implementation in Pakistan(Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2016) Bajwa, FatimaPolicy implementation is a complex, technical and political process. It is shaped by the capacity of the government, political patronage, influence of diverse actors, power relationships, role of the state, nature of the political systems and their mechanisms for participation in the policy subsystem. Tackling the implementation gap is a health policy concern in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs). In these countries, governments frequently fail to achieve effective policy implementation. The government of Pakistan has over six decades introduced many health initiatives and plans to improve the health status of its population. Still, the implementation process remains arduous. To identify the implementation gaps and their drivers, forty-two semi-structured interviews were conducted with the key policy actors from general political sphere and health policy subsystem in Pakistan, to explore their knowledge, perspectives and experience. The key informants were mainly politicians, bureaucrats, health ministry officials, and technocrats from Islamabad, Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sind provinces in Pakistan. The data was analysed using thematic analysis. This qualitative exploratory study using an inductive approach draws on the concepts of power, policy networks and path dependency. Findings suggest that the factors influencing the policy-action relationship in the health sector in Pakistan operate at two levels: actors and institutional or structural. Political history as a part of the structure plays an important role as well. The power relations within the health sector are a complex interplay of ideas, interests and incentives resulting in policy networks or iron triangles at different levels. The underlying power relations remain the same and policy implementation process is path dependent. Due to this, most health policies remain in long periods of stasis or equilibrium. The stalemate over these policies was seen because of the elitist system of interest groups' hold over policy choices. Frequently, policies are caught in a web of interests.Item The Role of Jordanian Hospital Nurses in Promoting Patients' Health(Queen Margaret University, 2009) Shoqirat, NoordeenBackground/Rationale: In recent years growing attention has been given to health and the development of health promotion within the hospital setting. This is in order to tackle the soaring medical costs and foster health improvement in the population. Given their unique relationship with patients, hospital nurses are urged to promote the patient's health, yet internationally, little is known about their role in health promotion and, specifically, no Jordanian study was found that examines such a role. Purpose of the Study/ Setting: To understand the nature of nurses' roles in heath promotion in a large teaching hospital in Jordan. Study Design/Methods: An in-depth constructivist case study design using a multiple method triangulation strategy was used. The study involved four phases. The first phase examined nurses' role in health promotion using focus group discussions (n=8), non-participant observations and semi-structured questionnaires. The second phase focused on patients' understanding of health and health promotion using focus group discussions (n=8). The third phase examined health promotion from the perspective of hospital stakeholders and a nursing educator. The fourth phase included documentary review of nurses' job descriptions and nursing philosophy of care. Data Analysis: Whilst quantitative data were analysed using SPSS, qualitative data were thematically analysed using N-Vivo (2) and filing and colour index method. Findings: Generally, hospital nurses' views towards their role in health promotion were positive. However, their perceived role and actual practice of health promotion were largely restricted to individualised information giving and behavioural change approaches. The thesis identified diverse contributing factors to this situation. This includes lack of time, shortage of nursing staff, lack of knowledge in heath promotion, power imbalance between doctors and nurses, low public image of nursing and gender issues related to nursing. Conclusion: The way hospital nurses' role in health promotion is currently perceived and operationalised in practice is inconsistent with the recent health promotion ideas operating at the level of empowerment and political actions. Addressing the identified barriers therefore, together with a radical reform from curative services towards health promoting health agenda, is crucial. Unless this happens, hospital nurses' ability to promote health might continue to be questioned. The thesis develops a conceptual model illuminating Jordanian hospital nurses' role in health promotion together with contributing factors.