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Asri C. Adisasmita

Researcher at University of Indonesia

Publications -  41
Citations -  543

Asri C. Adisasmita is an academic researcher from University of Indonesia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 31 publications receiving 457 citations.

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Obstetric near miss and deaths in public and private hospitals in Indonesia.

TL;DR: This is the first study to document near miss in public and private hospitals in Indonesia; close to a fifth of admissions in public hospitals were associated with near miss; and the critical state in which the women arrived suggest important delays in reaching the hospitals.
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Did the strategy of skilled attendance at birth reach the poor in Indonesia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined trends in the percentage of births attended by a health professional and deliveries via caesarean section and found that the greatest increases in professional attendance occurred among the poorest two quintiles compared with 6% per year for women in the middle quintile (P = 0.02).
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Assessing quality of care provided by Indonesian village midwives with a confidential enquiry

TL;DR: A confidential enquiry was a diagnostic tool to identify opportunities for improving care and practitioners had a unique insight into factors that contribute to quality care and how feasible interventions might be made.
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Did professional attendance at home births improve early neonatal survival in Indonesia

TL;DR: Report of first-day mortality did not decrease significantly between 1986 and 2002, whereas early neonatal mortality decreased by an average of 3.2% annually, suggesting a need for improved training in immediate newborn care, strengthened emergency referral, and continued support for family planning policies.
Journal Article

Prevalence and predictors of undiagnosed diabetes mellitus in Indonesia.

TL;DR: By recognizing the prediction factors, epidemiological modeling and scoring system of undiagnosed diabetes mellitus in Indonesia can be used as a screening tool in primary health care and health care with minimal diagnostic facility.