Nan Wang
5 Papers
Nan Wang is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Air quality index. The author has co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Beyond mothers: the crucial role of family caregivers’ knowledge on exclusive breastfeeding in rural western China
Jingchun Nie,Jinbiao Ye,Shichong Wu,Nan Wang,Yangyuan Li,Yunjie Liu,Z. Reheman,Junhao Wu,Jie Yang,Yaojiang Shi +9 more
TL;DR: The characteristics of the primary family caregiver play a large role in exclusive breastfeeding in rural China, and interventions should address the needs of the whole family instead of just mothers.
4
The compliance of free folic acid supplements among pregnant women in rural areas of Northwestern China: The role of related knowledge
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated if and how knowledge can influence the picking up and intake of the free folic acid supplements distributed by the government and found that there were 76.4% of pregnant women would pick up and periconceptional intake of Folic acid before and during conception.
4
Anxiety and Insomnia Mediate the Association of Fear of Infection and Fatigue: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Nurses Deployed to a COVID-19 Epicenter in China
Zhixin Liu,Huanyu Zhang,Nan Wang,Yajie Feng,Junping Liu,Lina Wu,Zhaoyue Liu,Xinru Liu,Libo Liang,Jie Liu,Qunhong Wu,Chao-jun Liu +11 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that anxiety and insomnia play a mediating role in the relationship between fear of infection and fatigue, and the importance of implementing targeted mental health interventions and work arrangements to address the well-being of healthcare professionals is emphasized.
2
The mental health benefit of a community-based home-visiting program for prenatal women: evidence from a randomized controlled trial in China
Nan Wang,Baowei Li,Jie Yang,Zhuo Liu,Yaojiang Shi,Jingchun Nie +5 more
TL;DR: A community-based home-visiting program in rural China, facilitated by local Community Health Workers, showed no overall positive impact on maternal mental health, but had significant benefits for pregnant women with supportive family relationships and husbands accompanying antenatal care.
Air pollution and refraining from visiting health facilities: a cross-sectional study of domestic migrants in China
Zhixin Liu,Chaojie Liu,Yu Cui,Junping Liu,Huanyu Zhang,Yajie Feng,Nan Wang,Mingli Jiao,Zheng Kang,Xiaoxue Xu,Juan Zhao,Chen Wang,Dandan Zou,Libo Liang,Qunhong Wu,Yanhua Hao +15 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the link between air pollution and healthcare-seeking behaviors in domestic migrants in China and found that one unit (µg/m 3 ) increase in monthly average PM 2.5 was associated with 1.8% increase in the probability of refraining from visiting health facilities.