Pages that link to "Q33947382"
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The following pages link to Unwanted caesarean sections among public and private patients in Brazil: prospective study (Q33947382):
Displaying 50 items.
- Cesarean delivery for the prevention of anal incontinence (Q24240047) (← links)
- Information for pregnant women about caesarean birth (Q24247480) (← links)
- Indications for and Risks of Elective Cesarean Section (Q28088436) (← links)
- Prevalence and determinants of caesarean section in private and public health facilities in underserved South Asian communities: cross-sectional analysis of data from Bangladesh, India and Nepal (Q28652735) (← links)
- II. The unfacts of 'request' caesarean section (Q29027295) (← links)
- Determinants and materno-fetal outcomes related to cesarean section delivery in private and public hospitals in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol (Q30835030) (← links)
- Quality of routine essential care during childbirth: clinical observations of uncomplicated births in Uttar Pradesh, India (Q33777480) (← links)
- Consumer demand for caesarean sections in Brazil. Demand should be assessed rather than inferred (Q33811563) (← links)
- Who gives birth in private facilities in Asia? A look at six countries (Q33893562) (← links)
- The obstetric dilemma: an ancient game of Russian roulette, or a variable dilemma sensitive to ecology? (Q34310696) (← links)
- Medical students' personal choice for mode of delivery in Santa Catarina, Brazil: a cross-sectional, quantitative study (Q34346507) (← links)
- The Brazilian preference: cesarean delivery among immigrants in Portugal (Q34653424) (← links)
- Disintegrated care: the Achilles heel of international health policies in low and middle-income countries. (Q35049603) (← links)
- The impact of payment source and hospital type on rising cesarean section rates in Brazil, 1998 to 2008. (Q35589391) (← links)
- Women's preference for caesarean section: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies. (Q35851814) (← links)
- Effects of Recruiting Midwives into a Family Physician Program on Women's Awareness and Preference for Mode of Delivery and Caesarean Section Rates in Rural Areas of Kurdistan (Q35983883) (← links)
- National Variation in Caesarean Section Rates: A Cross Sectional Study in Ireland (Q36046772) (← links)
- Differences in nulliparous caesarean section rates across models of care: a decomposition analysis (Q36071837) (← links)
- Profile of maternal and foetal complications during labour and delivery among women giving birth in hospitals in Matlab and Chandpur, Bangladesh (Q36096277) (← links)
- An examination of women experiencing obstetric complications requiring emergency care: perceptions and sociocultural consequences of caesarean sections in Bangladesh (Q36096287) (← links)
- Women's preferences for childbirth experiences in the Republic of Ireland; a mixed methods study (Q36244644) (← links)
- Impact of organizational change on the delivery of reproductive services: a review of the literature (Q36247289) (← links)
- Women's preferences and mode of delivery in public and private hospitals: a prospective cohort study (Q36560803) (← links)
- Systematic review of nulliparous women's views of planned cesarean birth: the missing component in the debate about a term cephalic trial (Q36583798) (← links)
- Going to scale with professional skilled care (Q36625996) (← links)
- Family planning: the unfinished agenda (Q36657032) (← links)
- Elective cesarean section and decision making: a critical review of the literature (Q36745724) (← links)
- Role of public and private funding in the rising caesarean section rate: a cohort study. (Q36821732) (← links)
- Neonatal complications in public and private patients: a retrospective cohort study. (Q36893576) (← links)
- Are there socio-economic differences in caesarean section rates in Canada? (Q36978254) (← links)
- Delivery settings and caesarean section rates in China (Q37085145) (← links)
- Primary cesarean delivery among parous women in the United States, 1990-2003. (Q37249060) (← links)
- Reducing maternal mortality and improving maternal health: Bangladesh and MDG 5. (Q37284958) (← links)
- Use of Robson classification to assess cesarean section rate in Brazil: the role of source of payment for childbirth (Q37356643) (← links)
- The relationship between indicators of socioeconomic status and cesarean section in public hospitals (Q37688005) (← links)
- A national review of cesarean delivery in Ethiopia (Q37922995) (← links)
- Maternal request: a reason for rising rates of cesarean section? (Q37992509) (← links)
- A comparison of trends in cesarean delivery in Paraguay between 1995 and 2008. (Q38420039) (← links)
- International health policy and stagnating maternal mortality: is there a causal link? (Q38436250) (← links)
- Measuring the cost-effectiveness of midwife-led versus physician-led intrapartum teams in developing countries (Q38563704) (← links)
- Beyond the simple economics of cesarean section birthing: women's resistance to social inequality. (Q38927834) (← links)
- Preference toward future mode of delivery: how do antepartum preferences and prior delivery experience contribute? (Q39130662) (← links)
- Association between institutional factors, birth care profile, and cesarean section rates in Santa Catarina (Q39184083) (← links)
- A study on personal mode of delivery among Chinese obstetrician-gynecologists, midwives and nurses (Q39566459) (← links)
- The place of birth: Childbearing and kinship in Calcutta middle-class families (Q39668260) (← links)
- Physicians' responses to patient-requested cesarean delivery (Q39701454) (← links)
- The challenge of reducing neonatal mortality in middle-income countries: findings from three Brazilian birth cohorts in 1982, 1993, and 2004. (Q39709936) (← links)
- Medicalization, reproductive agency, and the desire for surgical sterilization among low-income women in urban Brazil (Q39764847) (← links)
- Why are the rates of cesarean section in Brazil higher in more developed cities than in less developed ones? (Q39809632) (← links)
- Pregnant women's perception of cesarean section on demand (Q39872676) (← links)