Sara Rizvi Jafree, PhD, is an Assistant Professor at Forman Christian College University (FCCU) in Lahore, Pakistan, and teaches courses related to Sociology of Gender, Health and Health Systems, Economic Sociology, and Sociology of Globalization. Having completed her BSc. Honors in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), she pursued her M-Phil and PhD in Sociology from the University of Punjab. An active researcher for funded projects in social welfare areas of microfinance and poverty alleviation, patient safety culture and workplace violence, and intergenerational learning for the elderly, she is also now working on her third book; her first book is titled Women, Healthcare and Violence in Pakistan (Oxford University Press, 2017). Dr. Jafree is part of the Lahore Biomedical Group, Special Needs Pakistan, and is an Advisor to Rotary Club FCCU, all of which enable her to stay involved in community service and plan research objectives. Her current work is on digital health literacy interventions for special needs children and disadvantaged women seeking primary healthcare services, specifically in the context of infection prevention.
This timely and accessible volume will be a valuable resource for students and researchers working across a range of areas, including sociology, health studies and development, as well as community health workers and social protection officers ... . I strongly recommend this volume as a valuable book. Because of the accessibility of the language, this collection will be valued by graduate and upper-level undergraduates working in this area. (Parveen Ali, LSE Review of Books, blogs.lse.ac.uk, June 15, 2021) The book invites readers to think through complex interactions between sociocultural and political practices/norms with women's health in South Asia. It is worth mentioning that book discusses women's health comprehensively, including issues like infectious and non-communicable diseases, mental health distress, and injuries and not only maternal health in South Asia. ... The book will be appealing to a wide range of readers, including policy-makers, scholars, students, or anyone interested in South Asian women's health, and deservedly so. (Saman Nazir, The Pakistan Development Review, Vol. 59 (2), 2020)