Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marwa Farag is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marwa Farag.


International Journal of Health Care Finance & Economics | 2012

The income elasticity of health care spending in developing and developed countries

Marwa Farag; Nandakumar Ak; Stanley S. Wallack; Dominic Hodgkin; Gary Gaumer; Can Erbil

To date, international analyses on the strength of the relationship between country-level per capita income and per capita health expenditures have predominantly used developed countries’ data. This study expands this work using a panel data set for 173 countries for the 1995–2006 period. We found that health care has an income elasticity that qualifies it as a necessity good, which is consistent with results of the most recent studies. Furthermore, we found that health care spending is least responsive to changes in income in low-income countries and most responsive to in middle-income countries with high-income countries falling in the middle. Finally, we found that ‘Voice and Accountability’ as an indicator of good governance seems to play a role in mobilizing more funds for health.


Substance Abuse Treatment Prevention and Policy | 2014

Cultural interventions to treat addictions in Indigenous populations: findings from a scoping study

Margo Rowan; Nancy Poole; Beverley Shea; Joseph P. Gone; David Mykota; Marwa Farag; Carol Hopkins; Laura Hall; Christopher J. Mushquash; Colleen Anne Dell

BackgroundCultural interventions offer the hope and promise of healing from addictions for Indigenous people.a However, there are few published studies specifically examining the type and impact of these interventions. Positioned within the Honouring Our Strengths: Culture as Intervention project, a scoping study was conducted to describe what is known about the characteristics of culture-based programs and to examine the outcomes collected and effects of these interventions on wellness.MethodsThis review followed established methods for scoping studies, including a final stage of consultation with stakeholders. The data search and extraction were also guided by the “PICO” (Patient/population, Intervention, Comparison, and Outcome) method, for which we defined each element, but did not require direct comparisons between treatment and control groups. Twelve databases from the scientific literature and 13 databases from the grey literature were searched up to October 26, 2012.ResultsThe search strategy yielded 4,518 articles. Nineteen studies were included from the United States (58%) and Canada (42%), that involved residential programs (58%), and all (100%) integrated Western and culture-based treatment services. Seventeen types of cultural interventions were found, with sweat lodge ceremonies the most commonly (68%) enacted. Study samples ranged from 11 to 2,685 clients. Just over half of studies involved quasi-experimental designs (53%). Most articles (90%) measured physical wellness, with fewer (37%) examining spiritual health. Results show benefits in all areas of wellness, particularly by reducing or eliminating substance use problems in 74% of studies.ConclusionsEvidence from this scoping study suggests that the culture-based interventions used in addictions treatment for Indigenous people are beneficial to help improve client functioning in all areas of wellness. There is a need for well-designed studies to address the question of best relational or contextual fit of cultural practices given a particular place, time, and population group. Addiction researchers and treatment providers are encouraged to work together to make further inroads into expanding the study of culture-based interventions from multiple perspectives and locations.


International Journal of Health Care Finance & Economics | 2013

Health expenditures, health outcomes and the role of good governance

Marwa Farag; Nandakumar Ak; Stanley S. Wallack; Dominic Hodgkin; Gary Gaumer; Can Erbil

This paper examines the relationship between country health spending and selected health outcomes (infant mortality and child mortality), using data from 133 low and middle-income countries for the years 1995, 2000, 2005, and 2006. Health spending has a significant effect on reducing infant and under-5 child mortality with an elasticity of 0.13 to 0.33 for infant mortality and 0.15 to 0.38 for under-5 child mortality in models estimated using fixed effects methods (depending on models employed). Government health spending also has a significant effect on reducing infant and child mortality and the size of the coefficient depends on the level of good governance achieved by the country, indicating that good governance increases the effectiveness of health spending. This paper contributes to the new evidence pointing to the importance of investing in health care services and the importance of governance in improving health outcomes.


Substance Abuse Treatment Prevention and Policy | 2015

A scoping study of cultural interventions to treat addictions in Indigenous populations: methods, strategies and insights from a Two-Eyed Seeing approach

Margo Rowan; Nancy Poole; Beverley Shea; David Mykota; Marwa Farag; Carol Hopkins; Laura Hall; Christopher J. Mushquash; Barbara Fornssler; Colleen Anne Dell

BackgroundThis paper describes the methods, strategies and insights gained from a scoping study using a “Two-Eyed Seeing” approach. An evolving technique, Two-Eyed Seeing respects and integrates the strengths of Indigenous knowledge and Western sciences, often “weaving back and forth” between the two worldviews. The scoping study was used to inform a tool for measuring the impact of culturally based addictions treatment services on wellness in Indigenous populations. It formed part of a three-year study, Honouring Our Strengths: Indigenous Culture as Intervention in Addictions Treatment. The scoping study identified and mapped literature on cultural interventions in addictions treatment, and described the nature, extent and gaps in literature.MethodsUsing a Two-Eyed Seeing approach, we adapted, applied and enhanced a common framework of scoping studies. In the end stage of the scoping review process, an Ad Hoc Review Group, led by our project Elder, reviewed and interpreted Indigenous and Western understandings within the mapped information. Elements of the scoping study were joined with results from community focus groups with staff at treatment centres.ResultsTwo-Eyed Seeing contributed differently at each stage of the scoping study. In early stages, it clarified team expertise and potential contributions. At the mid-point, it influenced our shift from a systematic to a scoping review. Near the end, it incorporated Western and Indigenous knowledge to interpret and synthesize evidence from multiple sources.ConclusionsThis paper adds to the collective work on augmenting the methodology of scoping studies. Despite the challenges of a Two-Eyed Seeing approach, it enables researchers using scoping studies to develop knowledge that is better able to translate into meaningful findings for Indigenous communities.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Echinococcosis: An Economic Evaluation of a Veterinary Public Health Intervention in Rural Canada

Janna M. Schurer; Ellen Rafferty; Marwa Farag; Wu Zeng; Emily J. Jenkins

Echinococcosis is a rare but endemic condition in people in Canada, caused by a zoonotic cestode for which the source of human infection is ingestion of parasite eggs shed by canids. The objectives of this study were to identify risk factors associated with infection and to measure the cost-utility of introducing an echinococcosis prevention program in a rural area. We analyzed human case reports submitted to the Canadian Institutes for Health Information between 2002 and 2011. Over this 10 year period, there were 48 cases associated with E. granulosus/E. canadensis, 16 with E. multilocularis, and 251 cases of echinococcosis for which species was not identified (total 315 cases). Nationally, annual incidence of echinococcosis was 0.14 cases per 100 000 people, which is likely an underestimate due to under-diagnosis and under-reporting. Risk factors for echinococcosis included female gender, age (>65 years), and residing in one of the northern territories (Nunavut, Yukon, or Northwest Territories). The average cost of treating a case of cystic echinococcosis in Canada was


Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse | 2016

Honoring Indigenous culture-as-intervention: Development and validity of the Native Wellness AssessmentTM

Carina Fiedeldey-Van Dijk; Margo Rowan; Colleen Anne Dell; Christopher J. Mushquash; Carol Hopkins; Barb Fornssler; Laura Hall; David Mykota; Marwa Farag; Bev Shea

8,842 CAD. Cost-utility analysis revealed that dosing dogs with praziquantel (a cestocide) at six week intervals to control cystic echinococcosis is not currently cost-effective at a threshold of


PLOS ONE | 2017

Pediatric cryptosporidiosis: An evaluation of health care and societal costs in Peru, Bangladesh and Kenya

Ellen Rafferty; Janna M. Schurer; Michael B. Arndt; Robert K. M. Choy; Eugenio L. de Hostos; David A Shoultz; Marwa Farag

20,000-100,000 per Quality Adjusted Life Year (QALY) gained, even in a health region with the highest incidence rate in Canada (


International Journal for Equity in Health | 2017

Determinants of self-perceived health for Canadians aged 40 and older and policy implications

William Ian Andrew Bonner; Robert Weiler; Rotimi Orisatoki; Xinya Lu; Mustafa Andkhoie; Dana Ramsay; Mohsen Yaghoubi; Megan Steeves; Michael Szafron; Marwa Farag

666,978 -755,051 per QALY gained). However, threshold analysis demonstrated that the program may become cost-saving at an echinococcosis incidence of 13-85 cases per 100,000 people and therefore, even one additional CE case in a community of 9000 people could result in the monetary benefits of the program outweighing costs.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2016

Toxoplasmosis and Toxocariasis: An Assessment of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Comorbidity and Health-Care Costs in Canada

Janna M. Schurer; Ellen Rafferty; Michael Schwandt; Wu Zeng; Marwa Farag; Emily J. Jenkins

ABSTRACT There is a need for Indigenous-centered research to appraise culture’s role in wellness. Researchers described the development and validity of the Native Wellness Assessment (NWATM). The NWA has culture-as-intervention at its apex. Wellness, culture, and cultural intervention practices (CIPs) are explored from an Indigenous perspective. Indigenous clients completed matching self-report and observer versions of the NWA at three time points during addictions treatment. Statistically and psychometrically, the NWA content and structure performed well, demonstrating that culture is an effective and fair intervention for Indigenous peoples with addictions. The NWA can inform Indigenous health and community-based programs and policy.


Trends in Parasitology | 2018

Just Enough Cooks in the Kitchen: Key Ingredients for International Collaboration

Janna M. Schurer; Sinh Dang-Xuan; Marwa Farag

Cryptosporidium is a leading cause of pediatric diarrhea in resource-limited settings; yet, few studies report the health care costs or societal impacts of this protozoan parasite. Our study examined direct and indirect costs associated with symptomatic cryptosporidiosis in infants younger than 12 months in Kenya, Peru and Bangladesh. Inputs to the economic burden model, such as disease incidence, population size, health care seeking behaviour, hospital costs, travel costs, were extracted from peer-reviewed literature, government documents, and internationally validated statistical tools for each country. Indirect losses (i.e. caregiver income loss, mortality, and growth faltering) were also estimated. Our findings suggest that direct treatment costs per symptomatic cryptosporidiosis episode were highest in Kenya (

Collaboration


Dive into the Marwa Farag's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mohsen Yaghoubi

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mustafa Andkhoie

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Megan Steeves

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael Szafron

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ellen Rafferty

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cindy Feng

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colleen Anne Dell

University of Saskatchewan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge