Per Kåks
PhD student at Department of Women's and Children's Health; Centre for Health and Sustainability
- E-mail:
- per.kaks@uu.se
- Visiting address:
- MTC-huset, Dag Hammarskjöldsväg 14B, 1 tr
75237 Uppsala - Postal address:
- Akademiska sjukhuset
751 85 UPPSALA
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Short presentation
PhD student in the Uppsala Global Health Research on Implementation and Sustainability (UGHRIS) group. I have a background as a physician and my research concerns inequity in child health in Sweden and how current disparities can be bridged through the contextualisation and implementation of a maternal peer support intervention developed in South Africa.
Publications
Recent publications
- Neighborhood income inequality, maternal relative deprivation and neonatal health in Sweden (2025)
- Contextualising a South African social innovation for maternal and child health to mothers with experiences of migration in Sweden (2024)
- Empowerment strategies of the Mentor Mother peer support program among mothers who have migrated to Sweden (2024)
- Implementing a social innovation for community-based peer support for immigrant mothers in Sweden (2024)
- Adapting a South African social innovation for maternal peer support to migrant communities in Sweden (2022)
All publications
Articles
- Neighborhood income inequality, maternal relative deprivation and neonatal health in Sweden (2025)
- Empowerment strategies of the Mentor Mother peer support program among mothers who have migrated to Sweden (2024)
- Implementing a social innovation for community-based peer support for immigrant mothers in Sweden (2024)
- Adapting a South African social innovation for maternal peer support to migrant communities in Sweden (2022)
- Using an urban child health index to detect intra-urban disparities in Sweden. (2021)
- Peer support for disadvantaged parents (2020)
- Empowerment strategies of the Mentor Mother peer support program among immigrant mothers in Sweden: a Photovoice study
- Mentor Mothers as trust brokers between immigrant communities and the Swedish welfare system: A qualitative study