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5101“…Knowledge of pregnancy complications, Educational status, and religion of women were found to be significantly associated with antenatal health care, delivery and postnatal health care service seeking behaviours triangulated with individual, institutional and socio-cultural qualitative data. …”
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5102por Sealy-Jefferson, Shawnita, Slaughter-Acey, Jaime, Caldwell, Cleopatra H., Kwarteng, Jamila, Misra, Dawn P.“…Three domains of religious coping were assessed: organizational (church attendance), non-organizational (praying for self and asking others for prayer), and personal or subjective (experiences, perceptions, and sentiments about religion), and all were dichotomized as frequent/infrequent or satisfied/not satisfied. …”
Publicado 2016
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5103por Brathwaite, Rachel, Addo, Juliet, Kunst, Anton E., Agyemang, Charles, Owusu-Dabo, Ellis, de-Graft Aikins, Ama, Beune, Erik, Meeks, Karlijn, Klipstein-Grobusch, Kerstin, Bahendeka, Silver, Mockenhaupt, Frank P., Amoah, Stephen, Galbete, Cecilia, Schulze, Matthias B., Danquah, Ina, Smeeth, Liam“…Factors associated with a higher prevalence of smoking among Ghanaian men included European residence, being divorced or widowed, living alone, Islam religion, infrequent attendance at religious services, assimilation (cultural orientation), and low education. …”
Publicado 2017
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5104por Fles, R ., Bos, A. C. R. K., Supriyati, Rachmawati, D., Waliyanti, E., Tan, I. B., Haryana, S. M., Schmidt, M. K., Dewi, F. S. T.“…The main reason for this delay was the lack of awareness among the patients, which was influenced by their environment, economic status, family, culture, and religion. The perceived barriers to seeking medical help included direct non-medical costs not covered by health insurance, complex and time-consuming insurance and referral systems, and negative experiences in the past. …”
Publicado 2017
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5105por Calu Costa, Janaína, Wehrmeister, Fernando C, Barros, Aluísio JD, Victora, Cesar G“…Ecological analyses were carried out to assess if sex ratios varied by world region, religion, national income and its distribution, and gender inequality indices. …”
Publicado 2017
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5106“…We observed no major associations between the PHQ-9 scores and adolescent religion or immigrant background. Further, school grade, not living together with both biological parents, and diagnosed chronic illness were differently associated with elevated depressive symptoms for boys and girls. …”
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5107por Zhabagin, Maxat, Balanovska, Elena, Sabitov, Zhaxylyk, Kuznetsova, Marina, Agdzhoyan, Anastasiya, Balaganskaya, Olga, Chukhryaeva, Marina, Markina, Nadezhda, Romanov, Alexey, Skhalyakho, Roza, Zaporozhchenko, Valery, Saroyants, Liudmila, Dalimova, Dilbar, Davletchurin, Damir, Turdikulova, Shahlo, Yusupov, Yuldash, Tazhigulova, Inkar, Akilzhanova, Ainur, Tyler-Smith, Chris, Balanovsky, Oleg“…The Mongol expansion, in contrast, had enormous demic success, but did not impact cultural elements like language and religion. The genealogy of Muslim missionaries within the settled agricultural communities of Transoxiana was based on spiritual succession passed from teacher to disciple. …”
Publicado 2017
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5108“…Self-rated importance of religion was the strongest predictor of SSH attitudes/practices. …”
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5109por Oleribe, Obinna, Kumar, Vibha, Awosika-Olumo, Adebowale, Taylor-Robinson, Simon David“…Maternal age, geographical location, education, religion, literacy, wealth index, marital status, and occupation were significantly associated with immunization coverage. …”
Publicado 2017
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5110“…Categorical variables such as age group, sex, religion, location, work experience of DOT providers are measured in frequency and percentage. …”
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5111por Jones, Leah Ffion, Ricketts, Ellie, Town, Katy, Rugman, Claire, Lecky, Donna, Folkard, Kate, Nardone, Anthony, Hartney, Thomas Nathan, McNulty, Cliodna“…Barriers identified for patients were embarrassment, unease, lack of time, religion, and patients believing that certain patients could take offence. …”
Publicado 2017
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5112“…None of the women had sought professional help for their distress. Religion and informal support from friends and family appear to help these women cope with many of the challenges they face as immigrant women living and working abroad. …”
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5113por Chadeka, Evans Asena, Nagi, Sachiyo, Sunahara, Toshihiko, Cheruiyot, Ngetich Benard, Bahati, Felix, Ozeki, Yuriko, Inoue, Manabu, Osada-Oka, Mayuko, Okabe, Mayuko, Hirayama, Yukio, Changoma, Mwatasa, Adachi, Keishi, Mwende, Faith, Kikuchi, Mihoko, Nakamura, Risa, Kalenda, Yombo Dan Justin, Kaneko, Satoshi, Hirayama, Kenji, Shimada, Masaaki, Ichinose, Yoshio, Njenga, Sammy M., Matsumoto, Sohkichi, Hamano, Shinjiro“…The intensity of S. haematobium infection was associated with religion and socioeconomic status (SES), while that of hookworm infection was related to SES, sex, distance to river and history of anthelmintic treatment. …”
Publicado 2017
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5114por Ibragimov, Umedjon, Cooper, Hannah L., Haardörfer, Regine, Dunkle, Kristin L., Zule, William A., Wong, Frank Y.“…RESULTS: The main themes included the significance of religion in defining attitudes towards drug use, labelling of PWID, negative stereotypes (PWID are prone to crime, violence, and irrational aggression; inflict harm to families and society; are able to control drug use), emotions triggered by PWID (fear, sympathy) and discrimination against PWID (rejection, isolation, ostracism, limiting resources to PWID). …”
Publicado 2017
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5115“…Results reveal that age, region, religion, socio-economic status, education, contraceptive use have significant (p<0.01) effects on women’s knowledge about HIV/AIDS. …”
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5116“…The majority of participants were female (58%), White (68%) and had no religion (58%). Participants were aged 18 to 42 (mean age=23.6). …”
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5117por Umeh, Nkeiruka I., Ajegba, Brittany, Buscetta, Ashley J., Abdallah, Khadijah E., Minniti, Caterina P., Bonham, Vence L.“…Major themes identified included:1) pain (acute and chronic); 2) compromised physical function as demonstrated by decreased ability to walk, run, and play sports; 3) social isolation from activities either by others or self-induced as a means of avoiding certain emotions, such as embarrassment; 4) social relationships (family support and social network); 5) support and comfort through their religion or spirituality. CONCLUSIONS: SCD patients with leg ulcers expressed that they experience social isolation, intense and frequent ulcer pain, and difficulty in physical function. …”
Publicado 2017
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5118por Fonseca del Pozo, Francisco Javier, Alonso, Joaquín Valle, Álvarez, Manuel Vaquero, Orr, Siobhan, Cantarero, Francisco Jesús Llorente“…Students who achieve better PF score better in Maths, (P=0.019), Natural Sciences (P=0.024), Religion (P=0.018) and Physical Education (P<0.001). …”
Publicado 2017
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5119por Sathwara, Jignasa Amrutlal, Balasubramaniam, Ganesh, Bobdey, Saurabh C, Jain, Aanchal, Saoba, Sushama“…Sociodemographic factors included were age, place of residence, religion, marital status, level of education, and occupation. …”
Publicado 2017
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5120“…The patients fulfilling inclusion criteria, attending outpatient and inpatient departments, irrespective of their sex, race, religion, occupation, etc., were selected and divided into two groups with open-labeled randomization. …”
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