DEPRESSION AMONG OLDER IMMIGRANTS
Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts
Table of Contents
Abstract 3
Section 1: Foundation of the Study and Literature Review 4
Purpose of the Study 8
Definition of Key Terms 10
Significance of the Study 12
Review of Professional and Academic Literature 13
Mental Health of Immigrants 15
Depression Among Older African Immigrant Women 16
Stressors faced by Older African Immigrant Women 18
Summary 20
Section 2: Research Design and Data Collection 22
Research Design 22
Methodology 23
Ethical Procedures 27
Limitations, Challenges, and/or Barriers 29
Summary 30
References 31
Abstract
This study titled Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts set out to understand the causes and prevalence of depression among older women coming from Africa to live in the United States of America. The study situated older women to be women above the age of 55 and focused on exploring the views of social workers in relation to issues of depression among these women. The present study is guided by the following questions: a) from the social work perspective, what factors influence older immigrant African womens adaptive capacity in Metro West Massachusetts? (b) from a social work perspective, what mental health service do social works offer to older women from Africa living in the USA? (c) How do social workers assess the need for mental health services for their clients and (d) what service modifications can social workers introduce to enhance mental health service delivery for older women coming from Africa? These questions led to the investigations in this study that was guided by the structural-functional theory. Data was collected using the quota sampling. Interviews and questionnaires were most appropriately used to collect date and the SPSS software was used to analyze data. The study respected ethical issues strictly.
Section 1: Foundation of the Study and Literature Review
In West Massachusetts United States, the most common health disorders are anxiety and depression, which are prevalent in elderly immigrant women aged between 50 and 79 years (Agbemenu, 2016). Despite a variety of efficacious interventions for depression and anxiety, it is clear elderly immigrant women experience mental health care disparities in their access to mental health services and the quality of treatment they receive. Research indicated African American heterogeneity prevents access to depression and anxiety treatment. In addition, African Americans are becoming an increasingly visible minority within the United States especially in West Massachusetts and are often depicted as Blacks. The current study sought to understand the causes and prevalence of depression among older immigrant African American women in Metro West Massachusetts as well as how the older immigrants cope with depression. A total of 12 self-identified social workers were interviewed about their patients mental health problem symptoms and treatment experience, what they thought was the cause of their patients anxiety, stressors facing their patients life in West Massachusetts, their patient access to mental health services, and how patients coped with depression. Results indicated considerable variability across the two groups, with African American elderly immigrant women endorsing higher rates of depression and anxiety, as well as higher rates of treatment seeking, than the Whites. Individual's gender, age, marital status, and origin played a major role in the endorsement of anxiety and depression for the immigrants. Finally, although the two groups differed in the extent to which they experienced stigma about mental health issues, stigma did not predict symptom endorsement or treatment-seeking behavior for any of the two groups. These findings underscored the importance of attending to both between-groups and within-group differences in the mental health and mental health treatment experiences of different ethnic groups.
Overview of…
Running head: DEPRESSION AMONG OLDER IMMIGRANTS
DEPRESSION AMONG OLDER IMMIGRANTS
Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts
Table of Contents
Abstract 3
Section 1: Foundation of he Study and Literature Review 4
Problem Statement 7
Purpose of the Study 8
Research Questions 9
Definition of Key Terms 10
Significance of the Study 12
Theoretical Framework 12
Review of Professional and Academic Literature 13
Cultural Competence 14
Mental Health of Immigrants 15
Depression Among Older African Immigrant Women 16
Stressors faced by Older African Immigrant Women 18
Summary 20
Section 2: Research Design and Data Collection 22
Research Design 22
Methodology 23
Data Analysis 25
Ethical Procedures 27
Limitations, Challenges, and/or Barriers 29
Summary 30
References 31
Abstract
This study titled Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts set out to understand the causes and prevalence of depression among older women coming from Africa to live in the United States of America. The study situated older women to be women above the age of 55 and focused on exploring the views of social workers in relation to issues of depression among these women. The present study is guided by the following questions: a) from the social work perspective, what factors influence older immigrant African womens adaptive capacity in Metro West Massachusetts? (b) from a social work perspective, what mental health service do social works offer to older women from Africa living in the USA? (c) How do social workers assess the need for mental health services for their clients and (d) what service modifications can social workers introduce to enhance mental health service delivery for older women coming from Africa? These questions led to the investigations in this study that was guided by the structural-functional theory. Data was collected using the quota sampling. Interviews and questionnaires were most appropriately used to collect date and the SPSS software was used to analyze data. The study respected ethical issues strictly.
Section 1: Foundation of…
Running head: DEPRESSION AMONG OLDER IMMIGRANTS
DEPRESSION AMONG OLDER IMMIGRANTS
Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts
Table of Contents
Abstract 3
Section 1: Foundation of the Study and Literature Review 4
Problem Statement 7
Purpose of the Study 8
Research Questions 9
Definition of Key Terms 10
Significance of the Study 12
Theoretical Framework 12
Review of Professional and Academic Literature 13
Cultural Competence 14
Mental Health of Immigrants 15
Depression Among Older African Immigrant Women 16
Stressors faced by Older African Immigrant Women 18
Summary 20
Section 2: Research Design and Data Collection 22
Research Design 22
Methodology 23
Data Analysis 25
Ethical Procedures 27
Limitations, Challenges, and/or Barriers 29
Summary 30
References 31
Abstract
This study titled Depression among Older Immigrant African Women in Metro West Massachusetts set out to understand the causes and prevalence of depression among older women coming from Africa to live in the United States of America. The study situated older women to be women above the age of 55 and focused on exploring the views of social workers in relation to issues of depression among these women. The present study is guided by the following questions: a) from the social work perspective, what factors influence older immigrant African womens adaptive capacity in Metro West Massachusetts? (b) from a social work perspective, what mental health service do social works offer to older women from Africa living in the USA? (c) How do social workers assess the need for mental health services for their clients and (d) what service modifications can social workers introduce to enhance mental health service delivery for older women coming from Africa? These questions led to the investigations in this study that was guided by the structural-functional theory. Data was collected using the quota sampling. Interviews and questionnaires were most appropriately used to collect date and the SPSS software was used to analyze data. The study respected ethical issues strictly.
Section 1: Foundation of the Study and Literature Review
In West Massachusetts United States, the most common health disorders are anxiety and depression, which are prevalent in elderly immigrant women aged between 50 and 79 years (Agbemenu, 2016). Despite a variety of efficacious interventions for depression and anxiety, it is clear elderly immigrant women experience mental health care disparities in their access to mental health services and the quality of treatment they receive. Research indicated African American heterogeneity prevents access to depression and anxiety treatment. In addition, African Americans are becoming an increasingly visible minority within the United States especially in West Massachusetts and are often depicted as Blacks. The current study sought to understand the causes and prevalence of depression among older immigrant African American women in Metro West Massachusetts as well as how the older immigrants cope with depression. A total of 12 self-identified social workers were interviewed about their patients mental health problem symptoms and treatment experience, what they thought was the cause of their patients anxiety, stressors facing their patients life in West Massachusetts, their patient access to mental health services, and how patients coped with depression. Results indicated considerable variability across the two groups, with African American elderly immigrant women endorsing higher rates of depression and anxiety, as well as higher rates of treatment seeking, than the Whites. Individual's gender, age, marital status, and origin played a major role in the endorsement of anxiety and depression for the immigrants. Finally, although the two groups differed in the ext.......rsement or treatment-seeking behavior for any of the two groups. These findings underscored the importance of attending to both between-groups and within-group differences in the mental health and mental health treatment experiences of different ethnic groups.
Overview of the Problem, Its History and Significance Related To The Study
In recent years, there has been a growing need of social work for the immigrants, particularly the old immigrants aging from 65 years and above (Social Work Today, n.a.). They are the ones who experience the relocation in an entirely new geographical region where people are strangers to them. The societys acceptability is low towards them that create negative impacts on their physical and cognitive health. The impacts could be observed in the form of social isolation, loss of independence, cognitive declines and health problem in old age.
Old age is the critical time of life when the elderly people need special care and attention. Their socialization patterns are changed, especially when they have to migrate. The negative effects may emerge in terms of economic, social, psychological, political and cultural terms (Lotfi, 2020). Immigration has adverse effects on ageing people as they are mentally weakened to take the pressures enforced on them by a variety of changes. Their family and social relations are affected, resulting in more complex problems like physical, psychological and sociologial difficulties.
Social work interventions are innovative strategies to uplift the emotional and physical wellbeing of elderly migrating people. Social workers help the elderly individuals towards the adaptation process so that social exclusion should be mitigated and social justice could be served (Haidar, n.a.). Since they work with mixed status families, they have to take care of their individual rights, especially targeting towards their ethnic backgrounds.
An increase in African American older migrants is expected to increase by the year 2050 with racial ethnic needs arising along with those who have low educational levels (Gilmore, 2013). Their social and emotional needs have to be addressed by culturally competent social workers so that medical and therapeutic healthcare services should be appropriately provided to the needy ones. However, it has been observed that there are healthcare access barriers to the racial and ethnically diverse older immigrants (Koehn, 2009). There is a vast disparity of the healthcare provision to the native populations and those aging migrants who are transferred to other regions, adversely affecting the morbidity and mortality rates of these populations (Kristiansen et al., 2016).
Problem Statement
The intent in this study is to explore the views of social workers in relation to depression among older immigrant African women currently living in west Massachusetts. Older immigrant African women refers to women who are over 55 years of age and they relocated from any African country after acquiring permanent residency in the United States. Depression among elderly immigrant women stands out as an important phenomenon for study in the context of social work taking into consideration the extent to which the condition affects vulnerable populations. Derr (2017), pointed out immigrants typically face stressors relating to migration experience which may cause or intensify mental health problems. Moreover, Derr (2017) also discussed that immigrants tend to access mental health services at a lower rate as compared to non-immigrants. Subsequently, this situation leaves immigrants at risk of untreated health conditions leading to increased disease burden (Lynch, Berg, Manna, & Schade, 2016). As such, this negative health predisposition created greater need for mental health services among immigrants who seem more susceptible to develop depression. This situation makes it imperative to establish the views of social workers addressing the mental health needs, especially depression, among older immigrant African women in Metro West Massachusetts. It is due to an inference that Metro West Massachusetts has a cluster of cities and towns where one of the fastest growing communities in African Americans, having a rate of 95% growth since 2000 (Impact Metro West, n.a.). However, disparities in educational and social gains are still seen for the people of color, as are evident in other parts of the United States (Rosenberg, 2020). In turn, insights gained should play a critical role in the development of comprehensive mental health programs aimed at improving the immigrants health outcomes.
As noted, migration can be challenging, and many immigrant women experience challenges that affect their mental health (Foo et al., 2018). For example, the changes in practices, values, social factors and cultural identification are considered as factors contributing to the potential risk of developing mental health issues (Alegra, lvarez, & DiMarzio, 2017). Similarly, Foo et al. (2018) asserted migration into a new country leads to drastic changes in essential aspects of normal day life. Here, the process of assimilating to new environments and cultures causes considerable levels of acculturative stress, which researchers have linked to the occurrence of psychiatric disorders (Foo et al., 2018). Therefore, examining stressors surrounding the migrant experiences from the social work perspective should offer insights into the issues faced by this vulnerable population, especially for women aged 50 years and above.
Based on the highlighted problem, it is imperative to determine the views of social workers from West Massachusetts who work with older immigrant African women in Metro West Massachusetts affected by depression (ODonnell et al., 2016). Such an undertaking may reveal service modifications such as giving patients with language barriers more time needed to enhance access to quality mental health services (ODonnell et al., 2016). As suggested by researchers, immigration can create worry, which may increase the risks of experiencing depression, and this can be exacerbated by cultural factors, such as language barriers which may cause difficulty in diagnosing and treating this disorder among immigrant populations (Landa, Skritskaya, Nicasio, Humensky, & Lewis-Fernndez, 2015). Failure to determine appropriately the views of social workers on depression within a certain community translates to neglecting social health and welfare (Baldwin-Clark, Ofahengaue Vakalahi, & Anderson, 2016). In response, the intent of this study is to obtain the perspective of social workers regarding depression within the selected migrant population as well as insights into the ways in which professionals in the healthcare sector can help meet emerging needs.
Purpose of the Study
In this study, the views of social workers regarding depression in older immigrant African women in Metro West Massachusetts will be obtained. Through analyzing hese perspectives, insights can be provided into ways the social workers sector can assist to meet the emerging needs of the population. Expected in the results of this study will be any service modification needed to meet the needs of the immigrant African women located in Metro West Massachusetts (Takeuchi, 2016). These findings can enhance access to quality mental health services and ensure the women understand the implications of not seeking mental health services. Having examined the stressors faced by the migrant women, insights will be gained into the issues the women face within the population and solutions directly targeted to the population can be developed (Agbemenu, 2016). Social workers will also benefit as they will use the findings of this study to determine methods they can use to reach out to the population under study.
Research Questions
This study would focus on answering the following research questions:
1. From the perspective and
References
Agbemenu, K. (2016). Acculturation and Health Behaviors of African Immigrants Living in the United States: An Integrative Review. ABNF Journal, 27(3).
Alegría, M., Álvarez, K., & DiMarzio, K. (2017). Immigration and mental health. Current epidemiology reports, 4(2), 145-155.
Austin, Z. & Sutton, J. (2014). Qualitative research: Getting started. The Canadian Journal of Hospital Pharmacy, 67(6), 436-440. https://doi.org/10.4212/cjhp.v67i6.1406
Baldwin-Clark, T., Ofahengaue Vakalahi, H. F., & Anderson, B. (2016). What about African American older women and depressive symptoms? Educational Gerontology, 42(5), 310-320.
Barrett, L. A. (2019). Tuskegee syphilis study of 1932–1973 and the rise of bioethics as shown through government documents and actions. DttP: Documents to the People, 47(4), 11-16.
Bengtsson, M. (2016). How to plan and perform a qualitative study using content analysis. Nursing Plus Open, 2, 8-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.npls.2016.01.001
Cassel, J. (1995). The contribution of the social environment to host resistance: the fourth wade Hampton frost lecture. American journal of epidemiology, 141(9), 798-814.
Cobb, S. (1976). Social support as a moderator of life stress. Psychosomatic medicine.
Davidson. Edu. (n.a.). IRB response to Covid 19. https://www.davidson.edu/offices-and-services/human-subjects-irb/irb-response-covid-19Delara, M. (2016). Social determinants of immigrant women’s mental health. Advances in Public Health, 2016.
Derr, A. S. (2017). Mental health service use among immigrants in the United States: A systematic review. Psychiatric Services, 67(3), 265-274.
Dictionary. (n.a.). Coping mechanism. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/coping-mechanism
Dictionary. (n.a.). Migration. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/migration
Ekwemalor, C. C., & Ezeobele, I. E. (2020). Psychosocial Impacts of Immigration on Nigerian Immigrants in the United States: A Phenomenological Study. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 31(3), 276-283.
Emadpoor, L., Lavasani, M. G., & Shahcheraghi, S. M. (2016). Relationship between perceived social support and psychological well-being among students based on mediating role of academic motivation. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 14(3), 284-290.
Family Health International. (n.a.). Qualitataive reaserach methods: A data collector's field guide. https://course.ccs.neu.edu/is4800sp12/resources/qualmethods.pdf
Foo, S., Tam, W., Ho, C., Tran, B., Nguyen, L., McIntyre, R., & Ho, R. (2018). Prevalence of depression among migrants: a systematic review and meta-analysis. International journal of environmental research and public health, 15(9), 1986.
Gilmore, R.L. (2013). Motivations, skills and rewards: Social workers' perspectives on practice with older adults. St. Catherine University. https://sophia.stkate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1181&context=msw_papersGlen, S. (n.a). Purposive sampling (deliberate sampling). Statistics How To. https://www.statisticshowto.com/purposive-sampling/
Haidar, A. (n.a.). Social workers and the protection of immigrant and refugee rights. Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy and Practice. https://crownschool.uchicago.edu/social-workers-and-protection-immigrant-and-refugee-rights
Health Policy Institute. (n.a.). Cultural competence in healthacare: Is it important for people with chronic conditions? https://hpi.georgetown.edu/cultural/
Iliyasu, R. & Etikan, I. (2021). Comparison of quota sampling and stratified random sampling. Bioemtrics and Biostatistics International Journal, 10(1), 24-27. https://doi.org/10.15406/bbij.2021.10.00326
Impact Metro West. (n.a.). Demographics and diversity. https://www.impactmw.org/demographics-and-diversity
Kinser, P. A., & Lyon, D. E. (2014). A conceptual framework of stress vulnerability, depression, and health outcomes in women: potential uses in research on complementary therapies for depression. Brain and Behavior, 4(5), 665-674.
Koehn, S. (2009). Negotiating candidacy: Ethnic minority seniors' access to care. Ageing and Society, 29(4), 585-608. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X08007952
Kristiansen, M., Razum, O., Tezcan-Guntekin, H. & Krasnik, A. (2016). Aging and health among migrants in a European perspective. Public Health Reviews, 37. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40985-016-0036-1
Landa, A., Skritskaya, N., Nicasio, A., Humensky, J., & Lewis-Fernández, R. (2015). Unmet need for treatment of depression among immigrants from the former USSR in the US: A primary care study. The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 50(3), 271-289.
Lazar-Neto, F., Louzada, A. C. S., de Moura, R. F., Calixto, F. M., & Castro, M. C. (2018). Depression and its correlates among Brazilian immigrants in Massachusetts, USA. Journal of immigrant and minority health, 20(4), 832-840.
Li, S. S., Liddell, B. J., & Nickerson, A. (2016). The relationship between post-migration stress and psychological disorders in refugees and asylum seekers. Current psychiatry reports, 18(9), 82.
Lotfi, S. (2020). Problems of old migrants and social work interventions. Turkish Journal of Applied Social Work, 3(2), 138-146.
Lynch, J. R., Berg, S. T., Manna, J., & Schade, C. P. (2016). Making a dent in undiagnosed and untreated depression among older West Virginians. West Virginia Med. J, 112(3), 60-66.
Mannan, S. (2020, May). Best practices of semi-structured interview method. Research Gate Publications. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341232398_Best_practices_of_Semi-structured_interview_methodMortensen, D.H. (2020, June 5). How to do a thematic analysis for user interviews. Interaction Design Foundation. https://www.interaction-design.org/literature/article/how-to-do-a-thematic-analysis-of-user-interviews
Noubicier, A.F. & Charpentier, M. (2013). Successful aging: Perception of aged immigrant woemn from Black Africa in Montreal. Sante Mentale au Quebec, 38(2), 277-295. https://doi.org/10.7202/1024000ar.
O’Donnell, C. A., Burns, N., Mair, F. S., Dowrick, C., Clissmann, C., van den Muijsenbergh, M., . . . Saridaki, A. (2016). Reducing the health care burden for marginalised migrants: the potential role for primary care in Europe. Health Policy, 120(5), 495-508.
Okudo, J. C., & Ross, M. W. (2016). Common health concerns in African immigrants in the Us-implications for the family physician. International Journal of Medical and Health Sciences Research, 3(4), 44-49.
Oxford University Press. (n.a.-a). Host Country. Retrieved from https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/host_1
Oxford University Press. (n.a.-b). Immigrant. Retrieved from https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/immigrant?q=immigrant
Pannucci, C.J. & Wilkins, E.G. (2011). Identifying and avoiding bias in reaserach. Plastic and Reconstructive Suregry, 126(2), 619-625. https://doi.org/10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181de24bcNowell, L.S., Norris, J.M., White, D.E. & Moules, N.J. (2017). Thematic analysis: Striving to meet the trsutowrthiness criteria. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406917733847Rashid, R., & Gregory, D. (2014). 'Not giving up on life': a holistic exploration of resilience among a sample of immigrant Canadian women. Canadian ethnic studies, 46(1), 197-214.
Rosenberg, E. (2020, January). Impact Metro West regional overview: Summary of key trends. Impact Metro West. https://www.impactmw.org/tinymce/source/Impact%20MetroWest%20Regional%20Overview.pdf
Sabbioni, D., Feehan, S., Nicholls, C., Soong, W., Rigoli, D., Follett, D., . . . Curtis, K. (2018). Providing culturally informed mental health services to Aboriginal youth: the YouthLink model in Western Australia. Early Intervention in Psychiatry, 12(5), 987-994.
Sánchez, M., Cardemil, E., Adams, S. T., Calista, J. L., Connell, J., DePalo, A., . . . Kaminow, P. (2014). Brave new world: Mental health experiences of Puerto Ricans, immigrant Latinos, and Brazilians in Massachusetts. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 20(1), 16.
Scheider, S., Ostermann, F. O., & Adams, B. (2017). Why good data analysts need to be critical synthesists. Determining the role of semantics in data analysis. Future Generation computer systems, 72, 11-22.
Social Work Today. (n.a.) E-news exclusive: Addressing the social work needs of older immigrants and refugees. https://www.socialworktoday.com/news/enews_0911_01.shtml
Taherdoost, H. (2016). Validity and realiability of the reaserach instrument: How to test the validation of a questionnaire/ survey ina research. SSRN Electronic Journal, 5(3), 28-36. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3205040
Takeuchi, D. T. (2016). Vintage wine in new bottles: infusing select ideas into the study of immigration, immigrants, and mental health. Journal of health and social behavior, 57(4), 423-435.
Thoits, P. A. (1985). Social support and psychological well-being: Theoretical possibilities Social support: Theory, research and applications (pp. 51-72): Springer.
Thomson, M. S., Chaze, F., George, U., & Guruge, S. (2015). Improving immigrant populations’ access to mental health services in Canada: a review of barriers and recommendations. Journal of immigrant and minority health, 17(6), 1895-1905.
Tools for Dev. (n.a.). How to choose a sample size (for the statistically challanged). https://www.tools4dev.org/resources/how-to-choose-a-sample-size/
UCI Office of Research. (n.a.). How to consent. https://www.research.uci.edu/compliance/human-research-protections/researchers/how-to-consent.html
Univeristy of California San Francisco. (2021, April 28). Verbal, electronic or implied consent (waiver of signed consent). https://irb.ucsf.edu/verbal-electronic-or-implied-consent-waiver-signed-consent
University of Southern California. (2020, December 7). 10 skills every social worker needs. https://msw.usc.edu/mswusc-blog/10-skills-every-social-worker-needs/Wolf, S. M., Clayton, E. W., & Lawrenz, F. (2018). The past, present, and future of informed consent in research and translational medicine: SAGE Publications Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA.
Ythera. (2017, November 1). Who is the African woman? https://ythera.co/2017/11/who-is-the-african-woman/
Women in nineteenth century Europe were systematically excluded from positions of power in the public spheres including but not limited to political and economic domains. Thus invisible and disenfranchised, women were relegated to being priestesses in the cult of domesticity: the private sphere that was at once necessary for the maintenance of life but also restricting in its roles and functions. The cult of domesticity was open primarily to members
Women Participation in Marine Industry The Relation Ship between the Participation of Woman in Maritime Sectors and Various Policy Organizations Women represent a considerable portion of the world's labor force. However they face the hurdles of wage discrimination, harassment, and occupational segregation which ultimately limit their economic advancement. Historically, marine industry does not tend to be a successful career path for women. However, with the passage of time women have penetrated quite
Women's Rights In Saudi Arabia Despite recent media attention stemming from Saudi Arabia's recent legislative decision to allow women the right to vote and run in the 2015 municipal elections, the truth remains that Saudi Arabian women remain some of the most tightly-controlled and oppressed populations in the world in terms of legislation and cultural practices -- both of which prohibit them from having the same rights as men. In viewing
Women's Higher Education From 1920 To 1945 The female college students from 1920 to 1945 have had a lasting impact on women's education in the United States, which is not surprising since that generation of women was the first generation to attend colleges or universities in large groups. One of the most significant impacts is that they helped shift the face of higher education, so that women at colleges and universities
Women and Health Agenda Over the Last 20 Years This review is about women's health demands and their contribution in creating a healthy society. For many decades, World Health Organization (WHO) has had tremendous measures that concern women's health. Women's health remains a crucial priority by various healthcare agencies. This review explains why various healthcare institutions take a great initiative in ensuring that women's health remains an urgent priority in the
Similar protests launched in the United Kingdom around the same time period. And the results were altogether similar as well. In 1918, the British Parliament passed the Eligibility of Women Act, which allowed women to be elected into the Parliament. In 1928, the Representation of the People Act granted women across the nation voting rights as equal to those as of the men. This was a major milestone achieved by
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now