Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Glenn C. Wong is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Glenn C. Wong.


Social Science & Medicine | 1995

Seeking women's voices: Setting the context for women's health interventions in two rural counties in Yunnan, China

Glenn C. Wong; Virginia C. Li; Mary Ann Burris; Yueping Xiang

If interventions to improve health are truly to benefit women, they must be developed from the start with a critical understanding of womens own perceptions of their health problems and needs, and how these concerns are linked to other facets of womens lives. To obtain such understanding, it is crucial for health planners to seek out women in the communities where they live, to encourage them to speak in their own voices about their health and lives, and to be genuinely committed to listening to what the women have to say. This paper presents results of focus group discussions with village women in two rural counties in Yunnan, China. The data are derived from 28 focus group discussions conducted by the Womens Reproductive Health and Development Program in Yunnan as part of a comprehensive assessment of reproductive health needs in poorer, more remote areas of the two counties. The discussions were held to ascertain what village women themselves feel to be their most pressing health problems, and how these relate to work, family, social status and their use of health services. Results show how womens health and their use of health services are rightly intertwined with their labor roles, harsh environmental conditions and oppressive poverty. Widespread breakdowns in the village-level primary health care network lead village women to express a profound lack of confidence in local health services. The findings have several implications for planning and implementation. Demands on womens scarce time need to be explicitly considered when designing health education activities and health service delivery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Social Science & Medicine | 2001

Capacity building to improve women's health in rural China

Virginia C. Li; Wang Shaoxian; Wu Kunyi; Zhang Wentao; Opal Buchthal; Glenn C. Wong; Mary Ann Burris

The Womens Reproductive Health and Development Program (WRDHP) is an ambitious attempt to operationalize two important tenets of health development thinking within a rural reproductive health context. First, it is important for communities to participate in decisions about the services and programs that affect them. Secondly, the complex nature of healthcare is best addressed by intervention processes which call for a multi-functional approach to planning and coordination. In both planning and intervention approach, the WRHDP recognizes the social, cultural and economic realities that affect womens efforts to secure the health and well-being of themselves and their families. The focus of the WRHDP is on capacity-building within a rural reproductive health environment, in this case Yunnan Province in rural China. Rather than using international donor funding to provide a specific intervention, the WRDHP used Ford Foundation funding as a lever to encourage community investment in environmental resources that affect health, to improve the technical skills of individuals within the existing health bureaucracies, and to promote structural changes within existing health and development bureaucracies to support interagency collaboration and community empowerment within the regions health and development agencies. This article describes how the WRHDP created new methods for provincial and local agencies to overcome obstacles and work with one another to improve womens health. It also describes the processes used in the rural areas of Chengjiang and Luliang counties to assess local conditions and needs, and the supported and expanded local efforts in improving womans reproductive and family health that resulted from the processes.


Social Science & Medicine | 1990

Characteristics of women having abortion in China

Virginia C. Li; Glenn C. Wong; Shu-hua Qui; Fu-ming Cao; Pu-quan Li; Jing-hua Sun

A pre-coded, closed response questionnaire was administered to women at abortion clinic sites in August 1985. The convenience sample was comprised of 1200 women, 200 samples in both Chengdu and the Lianshan Yi Autonomous Region in Sichuan Province, 400 in Nanjing and Jiangsu Province, and 400 in the municipality of Shanghai. The women were interviewed by physicians as part of the womens intake medical history. The sample yielded 574 respondents who were urban and 624 who were rural. The number of previous abortions reported ranged from 0 to 5. Nearly half of the abortion recipients had had at least one prior abortion and 18% had had two or more prior abortions. Education, age, marriage duration and residence have apparent effect on abortion order. The urban respondents reported an average of 1.08 children vs 1.60 children for the rural respondents. Approximately 72% of the respondents claimed to have been using a contraceptive method at the time they became pregnant. The most commonly used method was the IUD (41.6%), followed by the pill (21.3%) and the condom only (16.5%). Residence appeared to be the greatest factor determining the type of contraceptive methods. The data presented here are limited and cannot be generalized to the larger population. However, they do shed some light on the contraception characteristics of a group of women who undergo abortion procedures in China. Their response to questions to contracepting behavior prior to abortion suggests that the problem, in part, is behavioral. For example after the expulsion of the IUD, no other method was substituted to avert pregnancy. In order to alleviate the problem of contraceptive failure, and subsequent abortion, there are policy as well as training and education implications for the state.


Archives of Environmental Health | 2002

Children's exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in the home: Comparison of urine cotinine and parental reports

Glenn C. Wong; Barbara A. Berman; Tuyen Hoang; Coen A. Bernaards; Craig A. Jones; J. Thomas Bernert

Abstract The authors examined the relationship between parent-reported estimates of childrens exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in the home and childrens urinary cotinine levels. Data were collected from a largely ethnic minority, low-income, urban sample of households in which a child had asthma and at least 1 household member smoked. Information about level of household smoking restriction, parental smoking status, and number of cigarettes smoked per day accounted for approximately 45% of the variance in cotinine concentration. Detailed information about the duration of household smoking or childrens ETS exposure added no additional significant information. Questionnaires eliciting detailed information about smoking habits and childrens ETS exposure may be no better at predicting childrens urinary cotinine levels than simpler surveys that inquire about smoking restrictions in the home, parental smoking status, and number of cigarettes smoked at home per day.


American Annals of the Deaf | 2000

Developing a Tobacco Survey for Deaf Youth

Barbara A. Berman; Elizabeth A. Eckhardt; Heidi B. Kleiger; Glenn C. Wong; Douglas S. Lipton; Roshan Bastani; Shari Barkin

Formidable barriers hinder use of standard data collection methods among deaf youth. Culturally and linguistically sensitive data collection strategies are needed to identify the unmet health and programming needs of this population. Unfortunately, researchers often fail to describe the issues involved in developing such targeted methods. The authors describe development of a culturally appropriate data collection instrument for a study of tobacco-related knowledge, attitudes, and practices among deaf youth. The instrument uses interactive multimedia technology to administer a questionnaire translated into the primary languages used by the Deaf. The procedures taken to accommodate this technology to these languages and to Deaf culture are described. This process yielded useful insights with respect to data collection not only among the Deaf, but among other frequently overlooked and underserved populations as well.


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2014

Can a Minimal Intervention Reduce Secondhand Smoke Exposure Among Children with Asthma from Low Income Minority Families? Results of a Randomized Trial

Leanne Streja; Catherine M. Crespi; Roshan Bastani; Glenn C. Wong; Craig Jones; John T. Bernert; Donald P. Tashkin; S. Katharine Hammond; Barbara A. Berman

We report on the results of a low-intensity behavioral intervention to reduce second hand smoke (SHS) exposure of children with asthma from low income minority households in Los Angeles, California. In this study, 242 child/adult dyads were randomized to a behavioral intervention (video, workbook, minimal counseling) or control condition (brochure). Main outcome measures included child’s urine cotinine and parental reports of child’s hours of SHS exposure and number of household cigarettes smoked. Implementation of household bans was also considered. No differences in outcomes were detected between intervention and control groups at follow-up. Limitations included high attrition and low rates of collection of objective measures (few children with urine cotinine samples). There continues to be a need for effective culturally and linguistically appropriate strategies that support reduction of household SHS exposure among children with asthma in low income, minority households.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2004

Do children with asthma and their parents agree on household ETS exposure? Implications for asthma management

Glenn C. Wong; Coen A. Bernaards; Barbara A. Berman; Craig A. Jones; J. Thomas Bernert

The adverse consequences of passive smoking have spurred efforts to reduce environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure among children, particularly in the home. For children with asthma, teaching them to avoid tobacco smoke at home is an important element of patient self-management. This strategy assumes that children can accurately assess household smoking behaviors and the level of their own exposure in the home. This study compared child and parental assessments of household smoking behaviors in an urban, low-income and largely ethnic minority sample of asthmatic children and their parents. While there was general parent-child agreement on the smoking status of household members, there was less agreement on duration of household smoking and the childs exposure to ETS. Objective validation measures (cotinine, nicotine) suggest that parents were better able than their children to assess hours of indoor smoking. Childrens assessment of the extent of exposure to ETS may be problematic, with important implications for asthma patient self-management efforts.


American Annals of the Deaf | 2007

Do Deaf and Hard of Hearing Youth Need Antitobacco Education

Barbara A. Berman; Leanne Streja; Coen A. Bernaards; Elizabeth A. Eckhardt; Heidi B. Kleiger; Lauren Maucere; Glenn C. Wong; Shari Barkin; Roshan Bastani

Little research has focused on tobacco use among deaf and hard of hearing youth. Findings are reported from a first-ever tobacco-related survey, completed by 226 California middle and high school students using either a written questionnaire or the Interactive Video Questionnaire, an interactive multimedia computer video technology. Rates for current smoking (3.1%), ever smoking (45.1%), and multiple types of tobacco use (10.6%) were found to be lower than among high school students generally; mainstreamed students were likelier to have ever tried smoking than their deaf school peers (57.8% vs. 31.8%). No statistically significant associations were found between ever smoking and race/ethnicity, gender, school performance, or prelingual vs. postlingual deafening; a quarter of the sample experienced occasional peer pressure to use tobacco products. Tobacco use covariates, exposure to cigarette marketing and antismoking programming, and tobacco education needs of deaf and hard of hearing youth are discussed.


Addictive Behaviors | 2003

Household smoking behavior and ETS exposure among children with asthma in low-income, minority households

Barbara A. Berman; Glenn C. Wong; Roshan Bastani; Tuyen Hoang; Craig Jones; Darlene R. Goldstein; J. Thomas Bernert; Katherine S Hammond; Donald P. Tashkin; Mary Ann Lewis


American Annals of the Deaf | 2006

IS TOBACCO USE A PROBLEM AMONG DEAF COLLEGE STUDENTS

Barbara A. Berman; Coen A. Bernaards; Elizabeth A. Eckhardt; Heidi B. Kleiger; Lauren Maucere; Leanne Streja; Glenn C. Wong; Shari Barkin; Roshan Bastani

Collaboration


Dive into the Glenn C. Wong's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roshan Bastani

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Virginia C. Li

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Thomas Bernert

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leanne Streja

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Craig A. Jones

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Craig Jones

LAC+USC Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge