A
Adaeze C. Wosu
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University
Publications - 13
Citations - 207
Adaeze C. Wosu is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & COPD. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 13 publications receiving 123 citations. Previous affiliations of Adaeze C. Wosu include Makerere University.
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Quality of antenatal care predicts retention in skilled birth attendance: a multilevel analysis of 28 African countries
TL;DR: Higher quality of ANC predicts retention in SBA in Africa, and improving quality of skilled care received prenatally may increase client retention during delivery, reducing maternal mortality.
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Noncommunicable Disease Risk Factors and Mobile Phones: A Proposed Research Agenda.
TL;DR: A research agenda is proposed that could address important knowledge gaps in optimizing MPS for the collection of NCD risk factor data in LMICs and an example of a multicountry project where elements of that agenda aim to be integrated over the next two years is provided.
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Effect of airtime incentives on response and cooperation rates in non-communicable disease interactive voice response surveys: Randomised controlled trials in Bangladesh and Uganda
Dustin G. Gibson,Adaeze C. Wosu,George Pariyo,Saifuddin Ahmed,Joseph Ali,Alain B. Labrique,Iqbal Ansary Khan,Elizeus Rutebemberwa,Meerjady Sabrina Flora,Adnan A. Hyder,Adnan A. Hyder +10 more
TL;DR: In two diverse settings, the provision of an airtime incentive significantly improved both the cooperation and response rates of an IVR survey, with no significant difference between the two incentive amounts.
Journal ArticleDOI
Moving the Agenda on Noncommunicable Diseases: Policy Implications of Mobile Phone Surveys in Low and Middle-Income Countries
TL;DR: MPS have potential to become a powerful data collection tool to inform policies that address public health challenges such as NCDs, using the policy cycle as a frame of reference.
Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of Mechanisms to Improve Performance of Mobile Phone Surveys in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Research Protocol.
Dustin G. Gibson,George Pariyo,Adaeze C. Wosu,Abigail R Greenleaf,Joseph Ali,Saifuddin Ahmed,Alain B. Labrique,Khaleda Islam,Honorati Masanja,Elizeus Rutebemberwa,Adnan A. Hyder +10 more
TL;DR: A series of sub-studies aimed at optimizing the delivery of interactive voice response (IVR) and computer-assisted telephone interviews (CATI) for NCD risk factor data collection in LMICs are described.