Halima Iqbal
10 Papers
16 Citations
Halima Iqbal is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Anatomy 'Peer Teaching' in Medical School: A literature review
TL;DR: This review attempts to bring together the different teaching methodologies used in medical schools in this new era, with the recent introduction of non-conventional teaching techniques such as problem based learning, encourage cognitive thinking, teamwork and professionalism.
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Exploring the obesity concerns of British Pakistani women living in deprived inner‐city areas: A qualitative study
TL;DR: Recommendations include training health practitioners to be culturally aware of the diet and eating practices of this community, exploring different ways to support socially isolated women to be more physically active at home, and designing obesity management information materials appropriate for a range of literacy levels.
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The Impact of the Pandemic on Mental Health in Ethnically Diverse Mothers: Findings from the Born in Bradford, Tower Hamlets and Newham COVID-19 Research Programmes
Claire McIvor,Yassaman Vafai,Brian Kelly,Sarah O’Toole,Michelle Heys,Ellena Badrick,Halima Iqbal,Kate E. Pickett,Claire Cameron,Josie Dickerson +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors describe the mental health experiences of mothers from a large and highly ethnically diverse population during the COVID-19 pandemic, using secondary analysis of existing data from three COVID19 research studies completed in Bradford and London (Tower Hamlets and Newham).
People powered research: what do communities identify as important for happy and healthy children and young people? A multi-disciplinary community research priority setting exercise in the City of Bradford, United Kingdom (UK)
Chris Cartwright,Aamnah Rahman,Shahidul Islam,Bridget Lockyer,Rosemary R. C. McEachan,Peter L. Horner,Halima Iqbal +6 more
TL;DR: The Born in Bradford (BiB) research programme as discussed by the authors identified priorities for keeping children happy and healthy and was undertaken by the BiB research programme to inform future research agendas. But these exercises often lack clarity in how communities are involved and the extent to which priorities are acted upon is unclear.
Developing an obesity research agenda with British Pakistani women living in deprived areas with involvement from multisectoral stakeholders: Research priority setting with a seldom heard group
TL;DR: To ascertain what multisectoral professionals perceive to be the most pressing unmet obesity needs or topic areas that need more research in relation to Pakistani women living in deprived areas of Bradford and to determine the top 10 obesity health priorities for this group to develop an obesity research agenda.
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