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PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Journal Abstract Search


750 related items for PubMed ID: 31500636

  • 1. Implementing the skilled birth attendance strategy in Uganda: a policy analysis.
    Munabi-Babigumira S, Nabudere H, Asiimwe D, Fretheim A, Sandberg K.
    BMC Health Serv Res; 2019 Sep 10; 19(1):655. PubMed ID: 31500636
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]

  • 2. Losing women along the path to safe motherhood: why is there such a gap between women's use of antenatal care and skilled birth attendance? A mixed methods study in northern Uganda.
    Anastasi E, Borchert M, Campbell OM, Sondorp E, Kaducu F, Hill O, Okeng D, Odong VN, Lange IL.
    BMC Pregnancy Childbirth; 2015 Nov 04; 15():287. PubMed ID: 26538084
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]

  • 3. Improving access to skilled attendance at delivery: a policy brief for Uganda.
    Nabudere H, Asiimwe D, Amandua J.
    Int J Technol Assess Health Care; 2013 Apr 04; 29(2):207-11. PubMed ID: 23514708
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  • 5. Increasing skilled birth attendance through midwifery workforce management.
    Rosskam E, Pariyo G, Hounton S, Aiga H.
    Int J Health Plann Manage; 2013 Apr 04; 28(1):e62-71. PubMed ID: 23065900
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  • 6. Public-sector maternal health programmes and services for rural Bangladesh.
    Mridha MK, Anwar I, Koblinsky M.
    J Health Popul Nutr; 2009 Apr 04; 27(2):124-38. PubMed ID: 19489411
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  • 7. Can community health officer-midwives effectively integrate skilled birth attendance in the community-based health planning and services program in rural Ghana?
    Sakeah E, McCloskey L, Bernstein J, Yeboah-Antwi K, Mills S, Doctor HV.
    Reprod Health; 2014 Dec 17; 11():90. PubMed ID: 25518900
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  • 8. Weighing the options for delivery care in rural Malawi: community perceptions of a policy promoting exclusive skilled birth attendance and banning traditional birth attendants.
    Uny I, de Kok B, Fustukian S.
    Health Policy Plan; 2019 Apr 01; 34(3):161-169. PubMed ID: 30941399
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  • 9. Factors that influence the provision of intrapartum and postnatal care by skilled birth attendants in low- and middle-income countries: a qualitative evidence synthesis.
    Munabi-Babigumira S, Glenton C, Lewin S, Fretheim A, Nabudere H.
    Cochrane Database Syst Rev; 2017 Nov 17; 11(11):CD011558. PubMed ID: 29148566
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  • 10. Are health facilities well equipped to provide basic quality childbirth services under the free maternal health policy? Findings from rural Northern Ghana.
    Dalinjong PA, Wang AY, Homer CSE.
    BMC Health Serv Res; 2018 Dec 12; 18(1):959. PubMed ID: 30541529
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  • 12. Challenges in implementing emergency obstetric care (EmOC) policies: perspectives and behaviours of frontline health workers in Uganda.
    Mukuru M, Kiwanuka SN, Gibson L, Ssengooba F.
    Health Policy Plan; 2021 Apr 21; 36(3):260-272. PubMed ID: 33515014
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  • 14. Designing a Midwife-Led Birth Center Program Based on the MAP-IT Model: A Sequential Explanatory Mixed-Methods Study.
    Bakhshi M, Mollazadeh S, Khadivzadeh T, Moghri J, Saki A, Firoozi M.
    Reprod Health; 2024 Jul 04; 21(1):102. PubMed ID: 38965578
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  • 15. Availability, utilisation and quality of maternal and neonatal health care services in Karamoja region, Uganda: a health facility-based survey.
    Wilunda C, Oyerinde K, Putoto G, Lochoro P, Dall'Oglio G, Manenti F, Segafredo G, Atzori A, Criel B, Panza A, Quaglio G.
    Reprod Health; 2015 Apr 08; 12():30. PubMed ID: 25884616
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  • 16. Effect of an integrated maternal health intervention on skilled provider's care for maternal health in remote rural areas of Bangladesh: a pre and post study.
    Huq NL, Ahmed A, Haque NA, Hossaine M, Uddin J, Ahmed F, Quaiyum MA.
    BMC Pregnancy Childbirth; 2015 Apr 28; 15():104. PubMed ID: 25928009
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  • 17. Toward communities as systems: a sequential mixed methods study to understand factors enabling implementation of a skilled birth attendance intervention in Nampula Province, Mozambique.
    Cole CB, Pacca J, Mehl A, Tomasulo A, van der Veken L, Viola A, Ridde V.
    Reprod Health; 2018 Aug 03; 15(1):132. PubMed ID: 30075791
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  • 18. Empowering change: realist evaluation of a Scottish Government programme to support normal birth.
    Cheyne H, Abhyankar P, McCourt C.
    Midwifery; 2013 Oct 03; 29(10):1110-21. PubMed ID: 23968777
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  • 19. Boosting facility deliveries with results-based financing: a mixed-methods evaluation of the government midwifery incentive scheme in Cambodia.
    Ir P, Korachais C, Chheng K, Horemans D, Van Damme W, Meessen B.
    BMC Pregnancy Childbirth; 2015 Aug 15; 15():170. PubMed ID: 26276138
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]

  • 20. Healthcare service providers' and facility administrators' perspectives of the free maternal healthcare services policy in Malindi District, Kenya: a qualitative study.
    Lang'at E, Mwanri L.
    Reprod Health; 2015 Jun 27; 12():59. PubMed ID: 26116432
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related]


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