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1 maternal mortality substantially and protect maternal health.
2 d, along with its implications for long-term maternal health.
3 y of country contexts and of determinants of maternal health.
4 nnium Development Goals (MDGs) for child and maternal health.
5 urces needed to reach the MDGs for child and maternal health.
6 opment based on general obstetric markers of maternal health.
7 wth and development is affected more than is maternal health.
8 serting that mental health is fundamental to maternal health.
9 ly for those at greatest risk, could improve maternal health.
10 ned this association for indices tailored to maternal health.
11 k factors is crucial in optimizing long-term maternal health.
12 en from being exposed to PM(2.5) can improve maternal health.
13 and explore factors that might affect future maternal health.
14 of open fires, which have been shown to harm maternal health.
15 ub-Saharan Africa hold promise for improving maternal health.
16 a key factor associated with disparities in maternal health.
17 c and fetal development and is necessary for maternal health.
18 eded to optimize timing of interventions for maternal health.
19 unities to apply precision-based medicine in maternal health.
20 cific contexts to accelerate improvements in maternal health.
21 and underscores their clinical relevance in maternal health.
22 considering insurance expansions to improve maternal health.
23 uctural racism are warranted to help improve maternal health.
24 n in Scotland intended to improve infant and maternal health.
25 ty and mortality are important indicators of maternal health.
26 d immune function, and racial disparities in maternal health.
27 ial interventions and quality improvement in maternal health.
28 egnancy is crucial for placental, fetal, and maternal health.
29 to dealing with high-risk factors linked to maternal health.
30 een different Medicaid ACO model designs and maternal health.
31 hour activity cycle in pregnancy can improve maternal health.
32 rstanding the potential role of the liver in maternal health.
33 ages to a set of three questions relating to maternal health.
34 lity of outputs generated by LLMs addressing maternal health.
35 , lifelong health, and development, and also maternal health.
36 n pregnancy outcomes, fetal development, and maternal health.
37 f breastfeeding or child health and none for maternal health.
38 r child and newborn health, and 9.8% was for maternal health.
39 standing the ways in which lactation affects maternal health.
40 that they may in part reflect differences in maternal health.
41 or for mother-to-child transmission and poor maternal health.
42 ths are needed to inform policies to improve maternal health.
43 luding family planning; and worse underlying maternal health.
44 gestational weight gain (GWG) with long-term maternal health.
45 nts <200/microL) and required zidovudine for maternal health (24% received zidovudine before pregnanc
48 born babies are delivered-the sheer scale of maternal health alone makes maternal well being and surv
49 es, but recognise that understanding of poor maternal health also warrants other perspectives, such a
53 ighlight some of the most pressing issues in maternal health and ask: what steps can be taken in the
54 However, community-level indices specific to maternal health and associations with preterm birth (PTB
59 adverse effects of choline were observed in maternal health and delivery, birth, or infant developme
61 from the past 20 years on the links between maternal health and development to examine maternal heal
65 l morbidity (SMM) is critical for monitoring maternal health and evaluating clinical quality improvem
68 s to and continued use of ART by integrating maternal health and HIV services must identify and addre
69 to revitalize existing policies on child and maternal health and implement interventions to prevent d
70 rability to infections, which can compromise maternal health and increase the risk of neurodevelopmen
72 nce 1990, 28.0% of all DAH was allocated for maternal health and newborn and child health; 23.2% for
74 festations of the prevailing determinants of maternal health and persistent inequities in global heal
78 (ART) during pregnancy is important for both maternal health and prevention of perinatal HIV-1 transm
82 s and current policy approaches to improving maternal health and suggests additional potentially impa
84 ta on associations between housing costs and maternal health and the role of publicly supported affor
85 ue role in advocating for efforts to improve maternal health and to enhance access to and delivery of
89 for broader, multipronged actions to improve maternal health and wellbeing and accelerate sustainable
90 ities and services, are essential to improve maternal health and wellbeing and reduce maternal mortal
94 osis, malaria, child and newborn health, and maternal health) and non-MDG-related focus areas (other
95 em to ANC, (ii) counseling pregnant women on maternal health, and (iii) providing home visits to wome
96 Overall levels of coverage of reproductive, maternal health, and child health indicators remained lo
98 educing the number of stillbirths, improving maternal health, and contributing to a positive economic
99 l flora during pregnancy, its association to maternal health, and its implications to birth outcomes
102 reduction of child mortality, improvement of maternal health, and reversal of the spread of HIV/AIDS.
105 into maternal health as a health issue, but maternal health as a development issue has been less exp
106 There is a large amount of research into maternal health as a health issue, but maternal health a
107 yses the distal and proximal determinants of maternal health, as well as the exposures, risk factors,
109 her fetal neural differences were related to maternal health behaviors, social support, or birth outc
110 her fetal neural differences were related to maternal health behaviors, social support, or birth outc
111 whether an intervention aimed at addressing maternal health behaviours, nutrition, and weight; provi
113 ted with improvements to the determinants of maternal health, but there have been insufficient invest
115 geographically defined populations, in which maternal health care and nutritional needs were met.
116 aborate to develop more adolescent-inclusive maternal health care and research, and specific interven
117 nal health requires action to ensure quality maternal health care for all women and girls, and to gua
121 eps can be taken to ensure that high-quality maternal health care is prioritised for every woman and
125 To provide necessary evidence to inform maternal health care provision, we conducted a nationall
126 heart rate, routinely recorded within public maternal health care, as a possible marker for LQT1 geno
129 gy that combined search terms related to: 1) maternal health care; 2) maternity units; 3) barriers, a
131 lenges to implement high quality, respectful maternal health-care services are key to ensure that eve
132 additional 56 prespecified outcomes measured maternal health-care use, content of care, patient exper
134 inary care solutions that include postpartum maternal health clinics can help optimize short- and lon
137 me is right to shift the focus of the global maternal health community to the challenges of effective
138 Women with GDM are at elevated for numerous maternal health complications, and their infants are at
139 ring additional ways attendees could address maternal health concerns within the health care system.
140 ucose levels, depression, anxiety, and other maternal health conditions can all lead to pregnancy com
141 findings of this study highlight the adverse maternal health consequences of structural racism manife
144 ression models adjusting for child's sex and maternal health, demographic, and socioeconomic factors.
145 ding the health sector ecosystem to mitigate maternal health determinants and tailoring the configura
149 dated, advances can be made toward improving maternal health during the perinatal period and beyond.
150 , antepartum steroids) but with a decline in maternal health (e.g., increased obesity) was seen in th
151 gether diverse stakeholders and champions of maternal health equity to discuss how innovative ideas,
153 tion highlighting the opportunity to improve maternal health especially for women at first mothering.
154 aining to health-care setting and timeframe, maternal health factors, newborn clinical factors, obste
155 eristics (health care setting and timeframe; maternal health factors; child's size factors; child's f
156 in long-term outcomes (retention, adherence, maternal health, fertility intentions, and safety).
158 wth from Aarhus Municipality, Denmark and on maternal health from the patient records at Aarhus Unive
159 To make a sustainable and systemic impact on maternal health, further efforts are necessary at the so
161 her, we find that progress and investment in maternal health have lagged far behind estimates of what
162 rriage and stillbirth with long-term adverse maternal health; however, these data are inconclusive.
165 need to increase financial contributions for maternal health in low-income countries to help fill the
166 ings indicate pervasive associations between maternal health in pregnancy and offspring autism and un
169 s the third in a Series of four papers about maternal health in the perinatal period and beyond.
170 persistent, altered postpartum microbiota on maternal health, including outcomes of pregnancies follo
171 onsequences of the pandemic adversely affect maternal health, including reduced access to reproductiv
172 postpartum depression, have consequences for maternal health, increasing risk for major depressive di
174 e explore the role of social determinants of maternal health, individual characteristics, and health-
180 ertain, concurrent improvements in essential maternal health interventions suggest parallel survival
183 ective preventive interventions in child and maternal health is constrained in many developing countr
187 After two decades of efforts to improve maternal health, it might be expected that a higher prop
189 omen's Survey mother-offspring birth cohort, maternal health, lifestyle, and diet were assessed prepr
196 We used the empirically calibrated Global Maternal Health microsimulation model, which simulates i
197 leveraged wearable technologies for in-home maternal health monitoring, offering continuous assessme
198 from discharge through 12 weeks postpartum, maternal health needs, care access, and system improveme
200 ocus areas: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, maternal health, newborn and child health, other infecti
201 ng human rights frameworks and approaches to maternal health offers strategies and tools to address t
202 Early prenatal care is vital for improving maternal health outcomes and health behaviors, but medic
204 e postpartum care is essential for improving maternal health outcomes and promoting maternal health e
206 te the effect of SBBS on selected infant and maternal health outcomes at population and subgroup leve
209 th system coverage, and associated child and maternal health outcomes in 89 low-income and middle-inc
210 gap in longevity and approaches to improving maternal health outcomes in countries that still face hi
212 nent, multilevel interventions for improving maternal health outcomes in this highly vulnerable popul
214 ynamic marker is cost-effective in improving maternal health outcomes, and cost-saving for obstetric
216 Various factors contribute to these adverse maternal health outcomes, ranging from patient-level to
218 rbidity (SMM)-a composite measure of adverse maternal health outcomes-among this high-risk group.
225 yan government has made efforts to invest in maternal health over the past 15 years, there is no evid
227 on of effective therapies that might improve maternal health, pregnancy, and birth outcomes, and avoi
228 confounders related to socioeconomic status, maternal health, pregnancy-related events and conditions
229 's groups in the Mchinji district identified maternal health problems (172 groups, 3171 women) and pr
230 n adjusted suggests that other abuse-related maternal health problems (notably low weight gain and po
231 atory groups showed a developed awareness of maternal health problems and the concern and motivation
237 l records of deceased children, and relevant maternal health records were also extracted for stillbir
241 or increased assessment of nativity in Black maternal health research and specific strategies to redu
245 sed approach can help medical experts assess maternal health risks, saving lives and preventing compl
246 e to be at the baby's bedside as a driver of maternal health-seeking behaviors, with women not seekin
247 ransfer programmes on 17 outcomes related to maternal health service use, fertility and reproductive
248 socioeconomic status, sanitation conditions, maternal health services access, and family planning.
250 ers and planners can use to evaluate whether maternal health services are functioning to meet needs o
251 development of more accessible and effective maternal health services around the world and improve th
254 Universal screening and convenient access to maternal health services for NICU mothers should be expl
255 equality and strengthen the reproductive and maternal health services in Africa, Eastern Mediterranea
257 emerge for all partners: prioritise quality maternal health services that respond to the local speci
258 ether access to the MHVS was associated with maternal health services utilization, stillbirth, and ne
260 equity through universal coverage of quality maternal health services, including for the most vulnera
261 n infrastructure, and improved access to key maternal health services, including optimal antenatal ca
262 eholds pay too great a share of the costs of maternal health services, or do not seek care because th
265 cations, and other interventions to optimize maternal health should not be withheld solely because a
271 A global approach to quality and equitable maternal health, supporting the implementation of respec
273 f PrEP exposure and outcomes within existing maternal health systems, yet scarce implementation data
274 cuss the shocks from outside of the field of maternal health that will influence maternal survival in
275 n can improve malaria prevention, as well as maternal health through reduction in hospital admissions
276 nancy, underscoring its potential to improve maternal health through targeted metabolic and immune sy
278 address the racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health, to effectively reduce inequities in car
279 ammes, which cover a wide range of child and maternal health topics and provide estimates of many Mil
280 recurrence rate appeared to be unaffected by maternal health, use of steroids, antibody status, sever
283 ted despite safer breastfeeding and improved maternal health with maternal antiretroviral therapy.
284 s offer new insights into mechanisms linking maternal health with neuropsychiatric outcomes of childr