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33 results

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1. The long-term effects of reproductive health education among primary and secondary school students: a longitudinal quasi-experimental study in rural Tanzania.

2. The influence of community factors in the implementation of community-based interventions to improve antenatal care: a qualitative study based on the IMCHA programme in Tanzania.

3. The impact of adding community-based distribution of oral contraceptives and condoms to a cluster randomized primary health care intervention in rural Tanzania.

4. Do efforts to standardize, assess and improve the quality of health service provision to adolescents by government-run health services in low and middle income countries, lead to improvements in service-quality and service-utilization by adolescents?

5. Quality of care during childbirth in Tanzania: identification of areas that need improvement.

6. Unmet need for modern contraception by HIV status: findings from community—based studies implemented before and after earlier ART initiation program in rural Tanzania.

7. Healthcare access and quality of birth care: narratives of women living with obstetric fistula in rural Tanzania.

8. Mitigating disrespect and abuse during childbirth in Tanzania: an exploratory study of the effects of two facility-based interventions in a large public hospital.

9. Adolescent first births in East Africa: disaggregating characteristics, trends and determinants.

10. Parent-child communication about sexual and reproductive health in rural Tanzania: Implications for young people's sexual health interventions.

11. Transactional sex amongst young people in rural northern Tanzania: an ethnography of young women's motivations and negotiation.

12. Associated factors for multidimensional attitudes and behaviors of reproductive health toward pregnancy among early and late adolescents in Tanzania: a cross-sectional study.

13. The impact of training on self-reported performance in reproductive, maternal, and newborn health service delivery among healthcare workers in Tanzania: a baseline- and endline-survey.

14. Health facility-based data on women receiving sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine during pregnancy in Tanzania: lessons to learn from a cross-sectional survey in Mkuranga and Mufindi districts and other national survey reports.

15. Would you offer contraception to a 14-year-old girl? Perspectives of health students and professionals in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

16. "It is painful and unpleasant": experiences of sexual violence among married adolescent girls in Shinyanga, Tanzania.

17. Quality of intrapartum care: direct observations in a low-resource tertiary hospital.

18. Midwives' respect and disrespect of women during facility-based childbirth in urban Tanzania: a qualitative study.

19. Understanding the preference for homebirth; an exploration of key barriers to facility delivery in rural Tanzania.

20. Uptake of hormonal contraceptives and correlates of uptake in a phase III clinical trial in rural South Western Uganda.

21. A community-based study on prevalence and correlates of erectile dysfunction among Kinondoni District Residents, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.

22. Implementation and acceptability of strategies instituted for engaging men in family planning services in Kibaha district, Tanzania.

23. Applying a participatory approach to the promotion of a culture of respect during childbirth.

24. Abortion experiences among Zanzibari women: a chain-referral sampling study.

25. The true cost of maternal death: individual tragedy impacts family, community and nations.

26. Birth preparedness and complication readiness among recently delivered women in chamwino district, central Tanzania: a cross sectional study.

27. Factors influencing men's involvement in antenatal care services: a cross-sectional study in a low resource setting, Central Tanzania.

28. Overview of literature on RMC and applications to Tanzania.

29. Barriers and facilitators to humanizing birth care in Tanzania: findings from semi-structured interviews with midwives and obstetricians.

30. Client satisfaction with family planning services in the area of high unmet need: evidence from Tanzania Service Provision Assessment Survey, 2014-2015.

31. Perceptions on male involvement in pregnancy and childbirth in Masasi District, Tanzania: a qualitative study.

32. Formative research to design an implementation strategy for a postpartum hemorrhage initial response treatment bundle (E-MOTIVE): study protocol.

33. "As a woman who watches how my family is… I take the difficult decisions": a qualitative study on integrated family planning and childhood immunisation services in five African countries.