戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。

今後説明を表示しない

[OK]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 opment based on general obstetric markers of maternal health.
2 wth and development is affected more than is maternal health.
3 f breastfeeding or child health and none for maternal health.
4 r child and newborn health, and 9.8% was for maternal health.
5 standing the ways in which lactation affects maternal health.
6 that they may in part reflect differences in maternal health.
7 or for mother-to-child transmission and poor maternal health.
8 ths are needed to inform policies to improve maternal health.
9 luding family planning; and worse underlying maternal health.
10 gestational weight gain (GWG) with long-term maternal health.
11 maternal mortality substantially and protect maternal health.
12 d, along with its implications for long-term maternal health.
13 y of country contexts and of determinants of maternal health.
14 nnium Development Goals (MDGs) for child and maternal health.
15 urces needed to reach the MDGs for child and maternal health.
16 nts <200/microL) and required zidovudine for maternal health (24% received zidovudine before pregnanc
17                                              Maternal health advocates proposed minimum caesarean del
18 born babies are delivered-the sheer scale of maternal health alone makes maternal well being and surv
19 es, but recognise that understanding of poor maternal health also warrants other perspectives, such a
20                                         Poor maternal health among Indian women is of global signific
21 ed to monitor progress toward improvement of maternal health and access to family planning.
22 ighlight some of the most pressing issues in maternal health and ask: what steps can be taken in the
23 ors included demographic characteristics and maternal health and behavior.
24 tation for pregnant women to prevent adverse maternal health and birth outcomes.
25  anemia in pregnant women to prevent adverse maternal health and birth outcomes.
26                      This was independent of maternal health and class of antiretroviral therapy.
27  adverse effects of choline were observed in maternal health and delivery, birth, or infant developme
28 nitively substantiate how and to what extent maternal health and development affect each other.
29  from the past 20 years on the links between maternal health and development to examine maternal heal
30 icrochimerism and the role of fetal cells in maternal health and disease.
31 s to and continued use of ART by integrating maternal health and HIV services must identify and addre
32                          Since 2010, DAH for maternal health and newborn and child health has continu
33 nce 1990, 28.0% of all DAH was allocated for maternal health and newborn and child health; 23.2% for
34                                              Maternal health and nutrition are key determinants in in
35 n this paper, we take a broad perspective on maternal health and place it in its wider context.
36 -income women of childbearing age, threatens maternal health and pregnancy outcomes.
37                      The benefits of ART for maternal health and prevention of perinatal transmission
38      INTERPRETATION: The benefits of ART for maternal health and prevention of perinatal transmission
39 he Millennium Development Goals of improving maternal health and reducing child mortality.
40 ss is deleterious for lactation and also for maternal health and survival.
41 osis, malaria, child and newborn health, and maternal health) and non-MDG-related focus areas (other
42  Overall levels of coverage of reproductive, maternal health, and child health indicators remained lo
43  in coverage and equity of key reproductive, maternal health, and child health indicators.
44 tially since 1990, with a focus on HIV/AIDS, maternal health, and newborn and child health.
45 reduction of child mortality, improvement of maternal health, and reversal of the spread of HIV/AIDS.
46  into maternal health as a health issue, but maternal health as a development issue has been less exp
47     There is a large amount of research into maternal health as a health issue, but maternal health a
48 resents an important opportunity to optimise maternal health before the next pregnancy.
49 geographically defined populations, in which maternal health care and nutritional needs were met.
50 nal health requires action to ensure quality maternal health care for all women and girls, and to gua
51 Despite its high priority, implementation of maternal health care has been intermittent.
52  barriers to the provision of evidence-based maternal health care in developing countries.
53 eps can be taken to ensure that high-quality maternal health care is prioritised for every woman and
54               Where insurance schemes exist, maternal health care needs to be included in the benefit
55                                              Maternal health care planners can consider adapting this
56 heart rate, routinely recorded within public maternal health care, as a possible marker for LQT1 geno
57                          On the continuum of maternal health care, two extreme situations exist: too
58 gy that combined search terms related to: 1) maternal health care; 2) maternity units; 3) barriers, a
59 tion to address the many factors influencing maternal health-care provision and use.
60 lenges to implement high quality, respectful maternal health-care services are key to ensure that eve
61 additional 56 prespecified outcomes measured maternal health-care use, content of care, patient exper
62 at four publicly funded inner-city community maternal health clinics in Dallas County (N=802).
63                  In 2014 and 2015, child and maternal health commodities had fewer bottlenecks than r
64 me is right to shift the focus of the global maternal health community to the challenges of effective
65  Women with GDM are at elevated for numerous maternal health complications, and their infants are at
66                All children were linked with maternal health data using birth certificates and EHRs t
67 her, we find that progress and investment in maternal health have lagged far behind estimates of what
68 and private health-care facilities providing maternal health in Bangladesh.
69 need to increase financial contributions for maternal health in low-income countries to help fill the
70 ergence are defining characteristics of poor maternal health in the 21st century.
71 persistent, altered postpartum microbiota on maternal health, including outcomes of pregnancies follo
72                We investigated the effect of maternal health, infant HIV infection, feeding practices
73                 In this article, four global maternal health initiatives draw on their complementary
74                        Access to life-saving maternal health interventions remains low in rural Nepal
75 ertain, concurrent improvements in essential maternal health interventions suggest parallel survival
76                                              Maternal health is a big issue and is central to sustain
77                                     However, maternal health is also powerfully influenced by the str
78 ective preventive interventions in child and maternal health is constrained in many developing countr
79                        Current investment in maternal health is insufficient to meet the fifth Millen
80      After two decades of efforts to improve maternal health, it might be expected that a higher prop
81 and policy will need to reflect the changing maternal health landscape.
82 omen's Survey mother-offspring birth cohort, maternal health, lifestyle, and diet were assessed prepr
83 ich will facilitate personalized medicine in maternal health management in the future.
84 count for their commitments to achieving the maternal health MDG.
85 sufficient progress for newborn survival and maternal health (MDG 5) and family planning.
86 targeted towards countries with the greatest maternal health needs.
87 ocus areas: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, maternal health, newborn and child health, other infecti
88 ng human rights frameworks and approaches to maternal health offers strategies and tools to address t
89 th literacy in low-resource countries, where maternal health outcomes are at their worst.
90                                    Child and maternal health outcomes have notably improved in Mexico
91 th system coverage, and associated child and maternal health outcomes in 89 low-income and middle-inc
92 eeding by different durations, and infant or maternal health outcomes were recorded.
93        Main Outcomes and Measures: Child and maternal health outcomes, rates and duration of breastfe
94  effects of these interventions on child and maternal health outcomes.
95  infant health outcomes; no studies reported maternal health outcomes.
96 confounders related to socioeconomic status, maternal health, pregnancy-related events and conditions
97 's groups in the Mchinji district identified maternal health problems (172 groups, 3171 women) and pr
98 n adjusted suggests that other abuse-related maternal health problems (notably low weight gain and po
99 atory groups showed a developed awareness of maternal health problems and the concern and motivation
100   Surveys have indicated a poor awareness of maternal health problems by individual women.
101                                          The maternal health problems most commonly identified by mor
102 le evidence highlights the dynamic burden of maternal health problems.
103 nderstanding of determinants to guide future maternal health programmes.
104                                   To improve maternal health requires action to ensure quality matern
105 resources are needed to scale up coverage of maternal health services and create demand.
106 ers and planners can use to evaluate whether maternal health services are functioning to meet needs o
107 e effort to implement equitable, sustainable maternal health services at scale.
108 ive in improving the quality and coverage of maternal health services at the population level.
109                   Coverage of cost-effective maternal health services remains poor due to insufficien
110  emerge for all partners: prioritise quality maternal health services that respond to the local speci
111 equity through universal coverage of quality maternal health services, including for the most vulnera
112 eholds pay too great a share of the costs of maternal health services, or do not seek care because th
113             The authors describe the role of maternal health status and prenatal medication usage and
114                                              Maternal health status was characterized as asymptomatic
115 of recurrence of cardiac-NL independently of maternal health status.
116   A global approach to quality and equitable maternal health, supporting the implementation of respec
117 cuss the shocks from outside of the field of maternal health that will influence maternal survival in
118 n can improve malaria prevention, as well as maternal health through reduction in hospital admissions
119 ammes, which cover a wide range of child and maternal health topics and provide estimates of many Mil
120 recurrence rate appeared to be unaffected by maternal health, use of steroids, antibody status, sever
121 n maternal health and development to examine maternal health within a development framework.

WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。
 
Page Top