Use of cellular phone contacts to increase return rates for immunization services in Kenya

scientific article

Use of cellular phone contacts to increase return rates for immunization services in Kenya is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.11604/PAMJ.2017.28.24.12631
P932PMC publication ID5681005
P698PubMed publication ID29138660

P2093author name stringEvans Mokaya
Isaac Mugoya
Jane Raburu
Lora Shimp
P2860cites workVaccination greatly reduces disease, disability, death and inequity worldwideQ24648884
Perspectives of men on antenatal and delivery care service utilisation in rural western Kenya: a qualitative studyQ34783198
Reducing routine vaccination dropout rates: evaluating two interventions in three Kenyan districts, 2014Q35924567
The feasibility of using mobile-phone based SMS reminders and conditional cash transfers to improve timely immunization in rural KenyaQ36154857
Effect of a text messaging intervention on influenza vaccination in an urban, low-income pediatric and adolescent population: a randomized controlled trialQ38005665
Why children are not vaccinated: a review of the grey literatureQ38136875
RED for PMTCT: an adaptation of immunization's Reaching Every District approach increases coverage, access, and utilization of PMTCT care in Bondo District, KenyaQ40792531
Determinants of immunisation coverage in Butere-Mumias district, Kenya.Q46880580
Factors influencing immunisation coverage in Mathare Valley, NairobiQ84294933
Text4Health: a qualitative evaluation of parental readiness for text message immunization remindersQ84734642
P921main subjectKenyaQ114
immunizationQ1415366
P304page(s)24
P577publication date2017-09-13
P1433published inThe Pan African medical journalQ27722840
P1476titleUse of cellular phone contacts to increase return rates for immunization services in Kenya
P478volume28