Drivers of prenatal care quality and uptake of supervised delivery services in Ghana

scientific article

Drivers of prenatal care quality and uptake of supervised delivery services in Ghana is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.4103/2141-9248.141970
P2888exact matchhttp://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/6573
P932PMC publication ID4212388
P698PubMed publication ID25364600
P5875ResearchGate publication ID266403062
P8602University of Ghana Digital Collections (UGSpace) ID6573

P2093author name stringAdongo, P.B.
Aa Baku
Atinga, R.A.,
Baku, A.A.,
Pb Adongo
Ra Atinga
P2860cites workMobility and maternal position during childbirth in Tanzania: an exploratory study at four government hospitalsQ24806158
Please understand when I cry out in pain: women's accounts of maternity services during labour and delivery in GhanaQ25256194
Too far to walk: maternal mortality in contextQ28245627
Barriers to the utilization of maternal health care in rural MaliQ30039907
Estimates of maternal mortality worldwide between 1990 and 2005: an assessment of available dataQ31132957
Still too far to walk: literature review of the determinants of delivery service use.Q33492578
High ANC coverage and low skilled attendance in a rural Tanzanian district: a case for implementing a birth plan interventionQ33543356
Utilization of maternal health services among young women in Kenya: insights from the Kenya Demographic and Health Survey, 2003.Q33788535
Health for some? The effects of user fees in the Volta Region of GhanaQ33902173
Overcoming barriers to health service access: influencing the demand sideQ35675095
Reliability and validity of a new measure of patient satisfaction with out of hours primary medical care in the United Kingdom: development of a patient questionnaireQ36242289
Effective financing of maternal health services: a review of the literatureQ36317702
Hospital based maternity care in ghana - findings of a confidential enquiry into maternal deathsQ36517510
Effect of delivery care user fee exemption policy on institutional maternal deaths in the central and volta regions of ghana.Q36517519
Going to scale with professional skilled careQ36625996
Women deliver for developmentQ36969610
Continuum of care for maternal, newborn, and child health: from slogan to service deliveryQ36969614
Maternal health in resource-poor urban settings: how does women's autonomy influence the utilization of obstetric care services?Q37252947
Barriers in accessing maternal healthcare: evidence from low-and middle-income countries.Q37445832
The quality of the maternal health system in EritreaQ38420899
Accessibility and utilisation of delivery care within a Skilled Care Initiative in rural Burkina FasoQ38439157
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Determinants of use of maternal-child health services in rural Ghana.Q38859953
Factors influencing choice of delivery sites in Rakai district of UgandaQ38886317
Social costs of skilled attendance at birth in rural GhanaQ38898027
Household characteristics affecting where mothers deliver in rural KenyaQ39069963
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The familial technique for linking maternal death with povertyQ43307491
Determinants of utilisation of maternal care services after the reduction of user fees: a case study from rural Burkina FasoQ43930612
Bypassing primary care facilities for childbirth: a population-based study in rural TanzaniaQ43943379
Factors affecting home delivery in rural TanzaniaQ43945638
Why some women deliver in health institutions and others do not: a cross sectional study of married women in Ghana, 2008.Q46320842
Maternal education and child healthcare in BangladeshQ46337877
The experience of Ghana in implementing a user fee exemption policy to provide free delivery careQ46338212
Access to health: women's status and utilization of maternal health services in NepalQ46339815
The skilled attendance index: proposal for a new measure of skilled attendance at deliveryQ46345321
WHO antenatal care randomised trial for the evaluation of a new model of routine antenatal careQ46353259
Decision making in childbirth: the influence of traditional structures in a Ghanaian villageQ47227280
Gate-keeping and women's health seeking behaviour in navrongo, northern GhanaQ47388904
Bargaining power within couples and use of prenatal and delivery care in IndonesiaQ48669746
On the spatial inequalities of institutional versus home births in Ghana: a multilevel analysisQ50120424
Access to health care in developing countries: breaking down demand side barriers.Q53164301
Keys to patient satisfaction in the emergency department: results of a multiple facility studyQ77081588
Determinants of skilled birth attendance in rural CambodiaQ82443090
P433issueSuppl 3
P921main subjectGhanaQ117
qualityQ185957
Skilled care countsQ45296951
GhanaQ58178051
Antenatal careQ67659821
Smoking in expectant mothersQ72192532
P304page(s)S264-71
P577publication date2014-01-01
2014-09-01
P1433published inAnnals of Medical and Health Sciences ResearchQ26842462
P1476titleDrivers of prenatal care quality and uptake of supervised delivery services in ghana
P478volume4

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q30203419A prospective observational description of frequency and timing of antenatal care attendance and coverage of selected interventions from sites in Argentina, Guatemala, India, Kenya, Pakistan and Zambia
Q33764159The effect of a self-care program based on the teach back method on the postpartum quality of life

Q64083619Factors influencing the use of supervised delivery services in Garu-Tempane District, Ghanamain subjectP921

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