S
Shreemathi S Mayya
Researcher at Manipal University
Publications - 59
Citations - 830
Shreemathi S Mayya is an academic researcher from Manipal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 50 publications receiving 677 citations. Previous affiliations of Shreemathi S Mayya include Kasturba Medical College, Manipal.
Papers
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Students' perceptions of educational environment: a comparison of academic achievers and under-achievers at kasturba medical college, India.
Shreemathi S Mayya,Sue Roff +1 more
TL;DR: Compared to under-achievers, academic achievers scored significantly higher on perceptions regarding teachers, academic atmosphere and social self-perceptions, and use of the DREEM as a monitoring tool might permit timely interventions to remediate problematic educational environments.
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Quality of Life among Persons with Physical Disability in Udupi Taluk: A Cross Sectional Study.
Kunal Kuvalekar,Ramachandra Kamath,Lena Ashok,Bharatesh Shetty,Shreemathi S Mayya,Varalakshmi Chandrasekaran +5 more
TL;DR: QOL score was found to be low under the psychological domain reflecting on negative feelings, bodily image, appearance, spirituality, and self-esteem of respondents, however, it was found that very few of them are aware about facilities provided under persons with disability act.
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Some basic aspects of statistical methods and sample size determination in health science research
TL;DR: The overall importance of statistical considerations in medical research is discussed with the main emphasis on estimating minimum sample size for different study objectives.
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Relationship between stress, coping and nursing support of parents of preterm infants admitted to tertiary level neonatal intensive care units of Karnataka, India: A cross-sectional survey
Sonia Rosaline Blanch D'Souza,Suja Karkada,Leslie Lewis,Shreemathi S Mayya,Vasudeva Guddattu +4 more
TL;DR: Mild negative correlation found between nursing support and stress implying that nursing support reduced stress and significant difference in mean stress scores among parents indicating mothers experienced more stress when compared to fathers.
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Perception of stigma toward mental illness in South India.
TL;DR: The overall prevalence of stigma toward PWMI was found to be high and was associated with gender with respect to AU, BE and CMHI, suggesting that there is a strong need to eliminate stigma associated with mental illness to improve the mental health status of the region.