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Maria Mayan

Researcher at University of Alberta

Publications -  72
Citations -  5995

Maria Mayan is an academic researcher from University of Alberta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Qualitative research. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 69 publications receiving 5338 citations. Previous affiliations of Maria Mayan include International Institute of Minnesota.

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Verification Strategies for Establishing Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research

TL;DR: The authors argue that qualitative researchers should reclaim responsibility for reliability and validity by implementing verification strategies integral and self-correcting during the conduct of inquiry itself, which ensures the attainment of rigor using strategies inherent within each qualitative design, and moves the responsibility for incorporating and maintaining reliability and validation from external reviewers' judgements to the investigators themselves.
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Cultural continuity, traditional Indigenous language, and diabetes in Alberta First Nations: a mixed methods study

TL;DR: First Nations that have been better able to preserve their culture may be relatively protected from diabetes and those First Nations that appeared to have more cultural continuity had significantly lower diabetes prevalence after adjustment for socio-economic factors.
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The necessary conditions of engagement for the therapeutic relationship in physiotherapy: an interpretive description study

TL;DR: These conditions of engagement are needed for physiotherapist and patient to “be” in a therapeutic relationship, and there are characteristics of the therapeutic relationship specific to physiotherapy.
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Worth the Risk? Muddled Relationships in Community-Based Participatory Research

TL;DR: The purpose is to expose the muddled relationships that can be created between academics and community members in CBPR projects, and to explore whether good research is conducted at the expense of muddling relationships.
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Women's perceptions of discussions about gestational weight gain with health care providers during pregnancy and postpartum: a qualitative study.

TL;DR: This study explored women’s experiences with GWG and their perceptions of discussions about GWG with HCPs during pregnancy and postpartum to identify gaps in service delivery and highlight areas for improvement that may better support women to achieve GWG recommendations leading to better health outcomes for women and children.