‘Do not forget us’: the shared experiences and needs of people living with incontinence in humanitarian contexts
Author:
Affiliation:
1. a School of Civil Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
2. b Research and Grant Institute of Ghana, Accra, Ghana
3. c Oxfam, London, UK
4. d School of Population and Global Health, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia
Abstract
Funder
Elrha
Publisher
IWA Publishing
Link
https://iwaponline.com/washdev/article-pdf/14/3/220/1388334/washdev0140220.pdf
Reference28 articles.
1. Obstetric fistula-induced incontinence and WASH programming in humanitarian settings: agenda for research, innovation, and practice
2. Alam M.-U., Das Gupta S., Rosato-Scott C., Shoaib D. M., Ritu A. H., Nowshin R., Rahat M. A., Akram N., Rose J., Evans B. E. & Barrington D. J. (in press) Experiences of children's self-wetting (including urinary incontinence) in Cox's Bazar Rohingya Refugee Camps, Bangladesh. PLOS Global Public Health.
3. Managing incontinence in low-and middle income-countries: A qualitative case study from Pakistan
4. Barrington D. 2023 Understanding Children and Their Caregivers’ Experiences with Incontinence in Humanitarian Contexts. Available from: https://osf.io/e3khv/ (accessed 6 June 2023).
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1. Living with faecal incontinence: a qualitative investigation of patient experiences and preferred outcomes through semi-structured interviews;Quality of Life Research;2024-08-14
2. Left alone and behind: Experiences of living with incontinence in a Sudanese refugee camp and how WASH practitioners can support;Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development;2024-06-11
3. Addressing water, sanitation and hygiene inequalities: A review of evidence, gaps, and recommendations for disability-inclusive WASH by 2030;PLOS Water;2024-06-11
4. Experiences of children’s self-wetting (including urinary incontinence) in Cox’s Bazar’s Rohingya refugee camps, Bangladesh;PLOS Global Public Health;2024-03-07
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