Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Paul F.A. Van Look
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and overview
- 2 Defining reproductive tract infections and other gynaecological morbidities
- 3 The social context of gynaecological morbidity: correlates, consequences and health seeking behaviour
- 4 Reproductive health: men's roles and men's rights
- 5 Study design for the measurement of gynaecological morbidity
- 6 Alternatives to community-based study designs for research on women's gynaecological morbidity
- 7 Community interaction in studies of gynaecological morbidity: experiences in Egypt, India and Uganda
- 8 Definitions of clinically diagnosed gynaecological morbidity resulting from reproductive tract infection
- 9 Laboratory tests for the detection of reproductive tract infections
- 10 Laboratory methods for the diagnosis of reproductive tract infections and selected conditions in population-based studies
- 11 The value of the imperfect: the contribution of interview surveys to the study of gynaecological ill health
- 12 Qualitative methods in gynaecological morbidity research
- 13 Integrating qualitative and quantitative methods in research on reproductive health
- 14 Interpreting results from different sources of data
- 15 Turning research into action
- Appendix A Notes on contributors
- Index
1 - Introduction and overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Paul F.A. Van Look
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and overview
- 2 Defining reproductive tract infections and other gynaecological morbidities
- 3 The social context of gynaecological morbidity: correlates, consequences and health seeking behaviour
- 4 Reproductive health: men's roles and men's rights
- 5 Study design for the measurement of gynaecological morbidity
- 6 Alternatives to community-based study designs for research on women's gynaecological morbidity
- 7 Community interaction in studies of gynaecological morbidity: experiences in Egypt, India and Uganda
- 8 Definitions of clinically diagnosed gynaecological morbidity resulting from reproductive tract infection
- 9 Laboratory tests for the detection of reproductive tract infections
- 10 Laboratory methods for the diagnosis of reproductive tract infections and selected conditions in population-based studies
- 11 The value of the imperfect: the contribution of interview surveys to the study of gynaecological ill health
- 12 Qualitative methods in gynaecological morbidity research
- 13 Integrating qualitative and quantitative methods in research on reproductive health
- 14 Interpreting results from different sources of data
- 15 Turning research into action
- Appendix A Notes on contributors
- Index
Summary
Objectives
Since the late 1980s, several studies have highlighted the widespread prevalence of reproductive tract infections and gynaecological morbidities within community settings. Studies have been carried out in Egypt (Younis et al., 1993; Zurayk et al., 1995), India (Bang et al., 1989; Bhatia et al., 1997; Latha et al., 1997; Oomman, 1996), Nigeria (Brabin et al., 1995), Bangladesh (Wasserheit et al., 1989; Hawkes, 2002) and Turkey (Bulut et al., 1997), among others. These findings have spurred a great deal of interest among the research and NGO (non-governmental organizations) communities on the prevalence, correlates and consequences of reproductive tract infections, and gynaecological morbidity more generally, using both self-reported as well as clinically diagnosed and laboratory detected measures of morbidity.
The experience of studies so far has also raised a variety of methodological concerns and complexities, and offers a rich source of methodological lessons for future work (Koenig et al., 1998). These lessons become especially important to document in the light of the rapidly expanding number of ongoing or planned research studies on the prevalence and correlates of reproductive tract infections or gynaecological morbidities. Substantial sums of money are likely to be invested in the coming years in knowledge, attitudes and practice (KAP) surveys of reproductive tract infections, both by large investigations such as the Demographic and Health Surveys, and by smaller in-country investigations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Investigating Reproductive Tract Infections and Other Gynaecological DisordersA Multidisciplinary Research Approach, pp. 1 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003