Professor

Liamputtong Pranee

Affiliation: VinUniversity, Hanoi, Viet Nam

Introduction

Professor Pranee is a distinguished medical anthropologist whose research focuses on the health and well-being of women, children, immigrants, refugees, the elderly, ethnic minorities, and transgender individuals. Her work is particularly dedicated to maternal and neonatal health, sexual and reproductive health, gender and sexual well-being, psychological health, and chronic illnesses influenced by climate change. Her recent studies have examined gender and sexual health concerns among Asian women, refugee and immigrant women, youth, and transgender women from ethnic minority backgrounds. In Vietnam, she has investigated the effects of air pollution on maternal and neonatal health. Additionally, her research explores the health and overall well-being of ethnic minority women.

Affiliation: VinUniversity, Hanoi, Viet Nam

Research Output

Contraception decision making by Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) Australian youth: an exploratory study

Mpofu Elias, Hossain Syeda Z., Dune Tinashe, Baghbanian Abdolvahab, Aibangbee Michaels, Pithavadian Rashmi, Liamputtong Pranee, Mapedzahama Virginia
  • Australia
  • contraception
  • Cultural diversity
  • networking
  • pregnancy
  • teenagers

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Keyphrases

  • Inclusive education
  • Learning disabilities
  • Medical students
  • National survey
  • Nursing students
  • Vietnamese health professional education
  • air pollution
  • Hanoi
  • knowledge
  • practice
  • sustainability
  • sustainable practices
  • Vietnam
  • Breast health promotion
  • Health literacy
  • Mobile application
  • prevention
  • AID work
  • Community development
  • Critical Whiteness
  • Humanitarian development
  • Philanthropy
  • Whiteness
  • Criminal justice
  • Criminology
  • Policing
  • chronic pain
  • culturally and linguistically diverse
  • emergency department
  • self-management
  • Conspiracy thinking
  • COVID-19
  • COVID-19 vaccine
  • Perception
  • Religious beliefs
  • Trust
  • combat sport
  • marginalized background
  • Muay Thai fighter
  • qualitative study
  • social support
  • Australasia
  • human rights
  • migrant and mobile populations
  • refugee
  • reproductive health
  • sexual health
  • youth
  • Lived experience
  • Mixed method research
  • Photovoice method
  • Research process
  • Sexual violence
  • Trans women of color
  • Migrant
  • Participatory action research
  • Refugee
  • Reproductive health
  • Sexual and reproductive health rights
  • Sexual health
  • Young people
  • Gender norms
  • Homonegativity
  • Internalized homonegativity
  • LGBT
  • Masculinity
  • Breast cancer
  • Female sexual dysfunction
  • Healthcare providers
  • Qualitative study
  • Sexuality
  • Food accessibility
  • Food affordability
  • Food availability
  • Minorities
  • Nutrition knowledge
  • Australia
  • contraception
  • Cultural diversity
  • networking
  • pregnancy
  • teenagers

Computer Science

  • Medicine (all)