Perinatal Mortality 2012
DOI: 10.5772/32328
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Current Trends in Perinatal Mortality in Developing Countries: Nigeria as a Case Study

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In addition, one study showed that nulliparous women of <18 years have the highest odds of adverse neonatal outcomes in general [15]. Women in developing countries generally tend to have many pregnancies [16] and research provides conflicting views about whether increasing parity increases the risk of perinatal mortality. Previous studies demonstrated that maternal parity > 4 [17] [18] was significantly associated with perinatal mortality and newborn deaths, respectively.…”
Section: Paritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, one study showed that nulliparous women of <18 years have the highest odds of adverse neonatal outcomes in general [15]. Women in developing countries generally tend to have many pregnancies [16] and research provides conflicting views about whether increasing parity increases the risk of perinatal mortality. Previous studies demonstrated that maternal parity > 4 [17] [18] was significantly associated with perinatal mortality and newborn deaths, respectively.…”
Section: Paritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to OSSAP-MDG 2013 report, this sector-specific manifested majorly in service delivery (supply-side) in terms of cost of care; shortage of skilled health care personnel; waiting time due to delays in getting treatment; shortage of emergency obstetric care services; inadequate critical supplies in PHCs; and lack of adequate attention to special (disadvantaged) groups of mothers particularly in the case of obstetric and childcare [26] . Most affected are patients in Nigeria's rural areas, as the majority of them lack access to health care facilities and health personnel [27] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%