910 research outputs found

    Memories for Life: A Review of the Science and Technology

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    This paper discusses scientific, social and technological aspects of memory. Recent developments in our understanding of memory processes and mechanisms, and their digital implementation, have placed the encoding, storage, management and retrieval of information at the forefront of several fields of research. At the same time, the divisions between the biological, physical and the digital worlds seem to be dissolving. Hence opportunities for interdisciplinary research into memory are being created, between the life sciences, social sciences and physical sciences. Such research may benefit from immediate application into information management technology as a testbed. The paper describes one initiative, Memories for Life, as a potential common problem space for the various interested disciplines

    Evaluación del trabajo de campo del método de la sobrevivencia de hermanas para medir la mortalidad materna

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    Incluye BibliografíaBase teórica y descripción del método de sobrevivencia de hermanas para estimar la mortalidad materna; trabajo de campo realizado en Gambia y Per

    Post-caesarean section surgical site infections : A retrospective audit and case note review at an Ethiopian referral hospital

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    Acknowledgements We thank the administrative and clinical staff of the maternity department at FHRH, Ethiopia, for their contributions to data collection and allowing the audit to take place. Funding sources A. Rose received funding from several sources to complete this audit while an undergraduate medical student (The Hospital Saturday Fund, The British Medical and Dental Students’ Trust, The European Wound Management Association, The Highland Council Ross & Cromarty Educational Trust and The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow).Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Sources d'information sur la santé et la mortalité en Afrique de l'Ouest : une étude comparative

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    Version anglaise disponible dans la Bibliothèque numérique du CRDI: West African sources of health and mortality information : a comparative revie

    A life in death: reflections of Peter.

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    The frequency of maternal morbidity: A systematic review of systematic reviews.

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    BACKGROUND: Estimates of the burden of maternal morbidity are patchy. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a systematic review of systematic reviews of maternal conditions to: (1) make available the most up-to-date frequency estimates; (2) identify which conditions do not have reliable estimates; and (3) scrutinize the quality of the available reviews. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched Embase, MEDLINE, and CINAHL, combining terms for pregnancy, frequency (e.g. prevalence, incidence), publication type, and specific terms for each of 121 conditions. SELECTION CRITERIA: We included peer-reviewed systematic reviews aiming to estimate the frequency of at least one of the conditions in WHO's list of maternal morbidities, with estimates from at least two countries. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: We present the frequency estimates with their uncertainty bounds by condition, region, and pregnancy/postpartum period. We also assess and present information on the quality of the systematic reviews. MAIN RESULTS: Out of 11 930 found, 48 reviews were selected and one more was added. From 49 reviews we extracted 34 direct and 60 indirect frequency estimates covering 35 conditions. No review was available for 71% of the conditions on the WHO list. The extracted estimates show substantial maternal morbidity, spanning the time before and beyond childbirth. There were several gaps in the quality of the reviews. Notably, one-third of the estimates were based only on facility-based studies. CONCLUSIONS: Good-quality systematic reviews are needed for several conditions, as a research priority

    Evidence to inform the future for maternal and newborn health.

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    Despite the impressive progress gains for maternal and child health during the Millennium Development Goals era, over 5.6 million women and babies died in 2015 due to complications during pregnancy, birth and in the first month of life. In order to achieve the new mortality targets set out in the Sustainable Development Goals, there needs to be intentional efforts to maintain and accelerate action to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths and stillbirths. This paper outlines what progress is required to meet these new 2030 targets based on patterns of progress in the recent past; where the burden is the greatest; when to focus attention along the continuum of care; and what causes of death require concerted efforts. Priority actions include intentional and intensified political attention and investment in maternal-newborn health with particular focus on improving quality and experience of care around the time of birth with implementation at scale of integrated maternal-newborn health interventions across the continuum of care with commensurate investment targeted at the most vulnerable populations. Looking forward, improved data for decision making and accountability will be required. The health and survival of babies and their mothers are inextricably linked, and calls for coordinated efforts and innovation before and during pregnancy, in childbirth, and postnatally, in order to end preventable maternal, neonatal deaths and stillbirths
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