Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Master’s thesis in Public Health |
Title | Live long and prosper: assessment of the effect of participation in self-help groups for landmine accident survivors in rural Cambodia through analysing pre-and post-intervention changes in health determinants |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://munin.uit.no/bitstream/handle/10037/5454/thesis.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |
Abstract | Growing up in a multi-cultural environment and having the possibility to travel to countries quite different from Norway, international health has always been a topic that caught my attention. Throughout my bachelor in Nursing I used every possibility to do my internships abroad, something that gave me the opportunity to work in an intensive care unit in Poland and in home based care for the elderly in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon. This interest in international health brought me into contact with Tromsø Mine Victim Resource Centre (TMC) and their work with war victims and mine accident survivors in poor and oppressed countries in the South. Their work interested me because it is sustainable and involves the local communities’ knowledge and uses this in how their projects are constructed. When considering topic for my master thesis in Public Health I was clear quite early that I wanted to write about international health. I contacted Hans Husum working in TMC to figure out if they were working on any interesting projects that I might be able to do some research on for my thesis. He introduced me to Trauma Care Foundation Cambodia and their work with mine accident survivors and war victims. With the support of TMC I travelled to Cambodia and met with the people working with self-help groups for mine accident survivors. Their work interested me and I decided that this was the perfect project for me to write about. |
» | Cambodia - Demographic and Health Survey 2010 |
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