Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Katie Bristow is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Katie Bristow.


Public Health Nutrition | 2011

Young children's food in Liverpool day-care settings: a qualitative study of pre-school nutrition policy and practice

Ffion Lloyd-Williams; Katie Bristow; Simon Capewell; Modi Mwatsama

OBJECTIVE To explore nutrition and food provision in pre-school nurseries in order to develop interventions to promote healthy eating in early years settings, especially across deprived communities. DESIGN An ethnographic approach was used combining participant observation with semi-structured interviews. Research participants were selected purposively using convenience sampling. SETTING Community pre-school nurseries. SUBJECTS Nursery managers (n 9), cooks (n 6), staff (n 12), parents (n 12) and children at six nurseries (four private and two attached to childrens centres) in Liverpool, UK. RESULTS Private nurseries had minimal access to information and guidelines. Most nurseries did not have a specific healthy eating policy but used menu planning to maintain a focus on healthy eating. No staff had training in healthy eating for children under the age of 5 years. However, enthusiasm and interest were widespread. The level and depth of communication between the nursery and parents was important. Meal times can be an important means of developing social skills and achieving Early Years Foundation Stage competencies. CONCLUSIONS Nurseries are genuinely interested in providing appropriate healthy food for under-5s but require support. This includes: improved mechanisms for effective communication between all government levels as well as with nurseries; and funded training for cooks and managers in menu planning, cost-effective food sourcing and food preparation. Interventions to support healthy eating habits in young children developed at the area level need to be counterbalanced by continued appropriate national-level public health initiatives to address socio-economic differences.


International Journal of Family Medicine | 2011

Help Seeking and Access to Primary Care for People from "Hard-to-Reach" Groups with Common Mental Health Problems.

Katie Bristow; Suzanne Edwards; E Funnel; L Fisher; Linda Gask; Christopher Dowrick; C Chew Graham

Background. In the UK, most people with mental health problems are managed in primary care. However, many individuals in need of help are not able to access care, either because it is not available, or because the individuals interaction with care-givers deters or diverts help-seeking. Aims. To understand the experience of seeking care for distress from the perspective of potential patients from “hard-to-reach” groups. Methods. A qualitative study using semi-structured interviews, analysed using a thematic framework. Results. Access to primary care is problematic in four main areas: how distress is conceptualised by individuals, the decision to seek help, barriers to help-seeking, and navigating and negotiating services. Conclusion. There are complex reasons why people from “hard-to-reach” groups may not conceptualise their distress as a biomedical problem. In addition, there are particular barriers to accessing primary care when distress is recognised by the person and help-seeking is attempted. We suggest how primary care could be more accessible to people from “hard-to-reach” groups including the need to offer a flexible, non-biomedical response to distress.


Archives of Womens Mental Health | 2015

Perinatal distress and depression in Malawi: an exploratory qualitative study of stressors, supports and symptoms

Robert C. Stewart; Eric Umar; Selena Gleadow-Ware; Francis Creed; Katie Bristow

Quantitative studies have demonstrated that depression and anxiety in the perinatal period are common amongst women in low- and middle-income countries and are associated with a range of psychosocial and health-related stressors. In this exploratory qualitative study conducted in southern Malawi, we investigated the thoughts and emotions experienced by women in pregnancy and the postnatal period, their expectations of support from husband and others, problems and difficulties faced and the impact of these on psychological wellbeing. We conducted 11 focus group discussions with a total of 98 parous women. A thematic analysis approach was used. Three major themes were identified: pregnancy as a time of uncertainty, the husband (and others) as support and stressor, and the impact of stressors on mental health. Pregnancy was seen as bringing uncertainty about the survival and wellbeing of both mother and unborn child. Poverty, lack of support, HIV, witchcraft and child illness were identified as causes of worry in the perinatal period. Husbands were expected to provide emotional, financial and practical support, with wider family and friends having a lesser role. Infidelity, abuse and abandonment were seen as key stressors in the perinatal period. Exposure to stressors was understood to lead to altered mental states, the symptoms of which are consistent with the concept of common perinatal mental disorder. This study confirms and expands on evidence from quantitative studies and provides formative data for the development of a psychosocial intervention for common perinatal mental disorder in Malawi.


BMC Health Services Research | 2016

Evaluating a complex model designed to increase access to high quality primary mental health care for under-served groups: a multi-method study

Christopher Dowrick; Peter Bower; Carolyn Chew-Graham; Karina Lovell; Suzanne Edwards; Jonathan Lamb; Katie Bristow; Mark Gabbay; Heather Burroughs; Susan Beatty; Waquas Waheed; Mark Hann; Linda Gask

BackgroundMany people with mental distress are disadvantaged because care is not available or does not address their needs. In order to increase access to high quality primary mental health care for under-served groups, we created a model of care with three discrete elements: community engagement, primary care training and tailored wellbeing interventions. We have previously demonstrated the individual impact of each element of the model. Here we assess the effectiveness of the combined model in increasing access to and improving the quality of primary mental health care. We test the assumptions that access to the wellbeing interventions is increased by the presence of community engagement and primary care training; and that quality of primary mental health care is increased by the presence of community engagement and the wellbeing interventions.MethodsWe implemented the model in four under-served localities in North-West England, focusing on older people and minority ethnic populations. Using a quasi-experimental design with no-intervention comparators, we gathered a combination of quantitative and qualitative information. Quantitative information, including referral and recruitment rates for the wellbeing interventions, and practice referrals to mental health services, was analysed descriptively. Qualitative information derived from interview and focus group responses to topic guides from more than 110 participants. Framework analysis was used to generate findings from the qualitative data.ResultsAccess to the wellbeing interventions was associated with the presence of the community engagement and the primary care training elements. Referrals to the wellbeing interventions were associated with community engagement, while recruitment was associated with primary care training. Qualitative data suggested that the mechanisms underlying these associations were increased awareness and sense of agency. The quality of primary mental health care was enhanced by information gained from our community mapping activities, and by the offer of access to the wellbeing interventions. There were variable benefits from health practitioner participation in community consultative groups. We also found that participation in the wellbeing interventions led to increased community engagement.ConclusionsWe explored the interactions between elements of a multilevel intervention and identified important associations and underlying mechanisms. Further research is needed to test the generalisability of the model.Trial registrationCurrent Controlled Trials, reference ISRCTN68572159. Registered 25 February 2013.


Maternal and Child Nutrition | 2013

Exploring health inequalities through the lens of an ethnographic study of healthy eating provision in the early years sector

Katie Bristow; Sue Povall; Simon Capewell; Modi Motswama; Ffion Lloyd-Williams

The social determinants of health are increasingly receiving international attention since the publication of the World Health Organizations Commission on the Social Determinants of Health in 2008. How different determinants affect health is much debated. Contrasting suggestions include, for example, a major link with socio-economic inequalities, lack of social status and psychosocial stress or the extent of the welfare state. Others emphasise the need to understand the socio-cultural contexts of specific situations. Diet-related health is a good example of the relationship between poor health outcomes and deprivation. The aim of this paper is to explore the specific conditions and contexts that might reduce or exacerbate the provision of a healthy diet to children under 5 years in a range of nurseries supported by the Sure Start Local Programmes initiative in Liverpool. An ethnographic approach was taken to gather data from six nurseries, combining observation at the nurseries with interviews with owners and or managers (10), cooks (6), staff (12) and parents (2). The findings reveal the complex way different issues work together to support or hinder a nursery to develop a healthy eating culture and how relative inequalities, in general, are outworked. While recognising the importance of social status leading to poor health due to psychosocial stress, the findings tend to emphasise the importance of a strong welfare state and taking an early years of life-course approach in reducing health inequalities.


Reflective Practice | 2008

Challenging the official approach to health care through reflective practice: a case study of a community health NGO in Bolivia

Katie Bristow

The community health non‐governmental organisation (NGO), CODÍGO Bolivia aims to foster two forms of critical reflective practice in its staff and trainees – critical practical reflectivity (perspective transformation) and critical political reflectivity (conscientisation). Reflective practice is seen as an integral aspect of the organisation’s aim to counter a narrow biomedical view of health with what is termed ‘integrated health’. This paper will analyse CODÍGO’s ability to achieve its aims through using Yip’s four levels of reflective practice (0 = absence of reflectivity, 1 = basic practical reflectivity, 2 = reflectivity in action, and 3 = critical practical reflectivity – perception transformation) and four categories of interlocking factors: philosophical/ideological, politico‐economic, sociocultural and practical/pragmatic. A tool based on the four categories of factors is also discussed as a means of making explicit and mitigating against some of the potential difficulties surrounding CODÍGO’s approach.


International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2017

Evaluating feasibility and acceptability of a local psycho-educational intervention for pregnant women with common mental problems affected by armed conflict in Swat, Pakistan: A parallel randomized controlled feasibility trial

Muhammad Naseem Khan; Mukesh Dherani; Anna Chiumento; Najia Atif; Katie Bristow; Siham Sikander; Atif Rahman

Background: The current research was conducted in the Swat valley, where widespread conflict and militancy had been experienced prior to the field activities. The aim of this trial was to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of a locally developed psycho-educational intervention. Methods: This mixed-methods study incorporated a quantitative and qualitative component. For the quantitative component, trial participants were identified from a cross-sectional study conducted in the earlier phase of the research, with Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ) score of ≥9. Participants with suicidal ideation, severe mental or medical illness, recently given birth or living with another woman with an SRQ score of 9 or above were excluded. Participants fulfilling eligibility were randomized on a 1:1 allocation ratio using simple randomization to the psycho-educational intervention or routine care arm. The intervention arm received two psycho-educational sessions at their homes delivered by local community health worker from the study area. The primary outcome was help-seeking for psychological distress, measured by a semi-structured interview by a researcher blind to the allocation status at 2 months post-intervention. Secondary outcomes include psychological distress and social support measured by SRQ and Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS), respectively, at 2 months post-intervention. Intervention acceptability was explored through in-depth interviews. Results: Local community health workers with no mental health experience successfully delivered the psycho-educational sessions in the community. The uptake of intervention was good and the intervention was taken well by the families and the community health workers. The outcome evaluation was not powered; however, more women sought assistance for their distress from their community health workers in the intervention arm, compared to women in the control arm. Conclusion: This trial showed good acceptance and feasible delivery of a locally developed psycho-educational intervention through community health workers following conflict, giving way for further adaptation and evaluation.


Social Science & Medicine | 2012

Intersectionality and gender mainstreaming in international health: Using a feminist participatory action research process to analyse voices and debates from the global south and north

Rachel Tolhurst; Beryl Leach; Janet Price; Jude Robinson; Elizabeth Ettore; Alex Scott-Samuel; Nduku Kilonzo; Louis P. Sabuni; Steve Robertson; Anuj Kapilashrami; Katie Bristow; R Lang; Francelina Romao; Sally Theobald


Health Education Research | 2013

Caught in a dilemma: why do non-smoking women in China support the smoking behaviors of men in their families?

Aimei Mao; Katie Bristow; Jude Robinson


Health & Place | 2012

The space of access to primary mental health care: A qualitative case study

Marija Kovandžić; Emma Funnell; Jonathan Hammond; Abdi Ahmed; Suzanne Edwards; Pam Clarke; Derek Hibbert; Katie Bristow; Christopher Dowrick

Collaboration


Dive into the Katie Bristow's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Atif Rahman

University of Liverpool

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katharine Abba

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Linda Gask

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge