J
Juan Manuel Nardin
Researcher at University of Liverpool
Publications - 9
Citations - 1004
Juan Manuel Nardin is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Standardized mortality ratio. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 923 citations.
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Moving beyond essential interventions for reduction of maternal mortality (the WHO Multicountry Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health): a cross-sectional study
João Paulo Souza,Ahmet Metin Gülmezoglu,Joshua P. Vogel,Guillermo Carroli,Pisake Lumbiganon,Zahida Qureshi,Maria José Costa,Bukola Fawole,Yvonne Mugerwa,Idi Nafiou,Isilda Neves,Jean José Wolomby-Molondo,Hoang Thi Bang,Kannitha Cheang,Kang Chuyun,Kapila Jayaratne,Chandani Anoma Jayathilaka,Syeda Batool Mazhar,Rintaro Mori,Mir Lais Mustafa,Laxmi Raj Pathak,Deepthi Perera,Tung Rathavy,Zenaida Dy Recidoro,Malabika Roy,P. Ruyan,N Shrestha,Surasak Taneepanichsku,Nguyen Viet Tien,Togoobaatar Ganchimeg,Mira A. Wehbe,Buyanjargal Yadamsuren,Wang Yan,Khalid Yunis,Vicente Bataglia,José Guilherme Cecatti,Bernardo Hernández-Prado,Juan Manuel Nardin,Alberto Narváez,Eduardo Ortiz-Panozo,Ricardo Pérez-Cuevas,Eliette Valladares,Nelly Zavaleta,Anthony Armson,Caroline A Crowther,Carol J. R. Hogue,Gunilla Lindmark,Suneeta Mittal,Robert Clive Pattinson,Mary Ellen Stanton,Liana Campodonico,Cristina Beatriz Cuesta,Daniel Giordano,N. Intarut,Malinee Laopaiboon,Rajiv Bahl,Jose Martines,Matthews Mathai,Mario Merialdi,Lale Say +59 more
TL;DR: High coverage of essential interventions did not imply reduced maternal mortality in the health-care facilities the authors studied, and the maternal severity index (MSI) had good accuracy for maternal death prediction in women with markers of organ dysfunction.
Journal ArticleDOI
Moving beyond essential interventions for reduction of maternal mortality (the WHO Multicountry Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health): a cross-sectional study
João Paulo Souza,Ahmet Metin Gülmezoglu,Joshua P. Vogel,Guillermo Carroli,Pisake Lumbiganon,Zahida Qureshi,Maria José Costa,Bukola Fawole,Yvonne Mugerwa,Idi Nafiou,Isilda Neves,Jean José Wolomby-Molondo,Hoang Thi Bang,Kannitha Cheang,Kang Chuyun,Kapila Jayaratne,Chandani Anoma Jayathilaka,Syeda Batool Mazhar,Rintaro Mori,Mir Lais Mustafa,Laxmi Raj Pathak,Deepthi Perera,Tung Rathavy,Zenaida Dy Recidoro,Malabika Roy,P. Ruyan,N Shrestha,Surasak Taneepanichsku,Nguyen Viet Tien,Togoobaatar Ganchimeg,Mira A. Wehbe,Buyanjargal Yadamsuren,Wang Yan,Khalid Yunis,Vicente Bataglia,José Guilherme Cecatti,Bernardo Hernández-Prado,Juan Manuel Nardin,Alberto Narváez,Eduardo Ortiz-Panozo,Ricardo Pérez-Cuevas,Eliette Valladares,Nelly Zavaleta,Anthony Armson,Caroline A Crowther,Carol J. R. Hogue,Gunilla Lindmark,Suneeta Mittal,Robert Clive Pattinson,Mary Ellen Stanton,Liana Campodonico,Cristina Beatriz Cuesta,Daniel Giordano,N. Intarut,Malinee Laopaiboon,Rajiv Bahl,Jose Martines,Matthews Mathai,Mario Merialdi,Lale Say +59 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report the main findings of the WHO Multicountry Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health (WHOMCS), which aimed to assess the burden of complications related to pregnancy, the coverage of key maternal health interventions, and use of the maternal severity index (MSI) in a global network of health facilities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Combination of tocolytic agents for inhibiting preterm labour.
TL;DR: The effects on maternal, fetal and neonatal outcomes of any combination of tocolytic drugs for the treatment of preterm labour when compared with any other treatment, no treatment or placebo are assessed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Techniques for the interruption of tubal patency for female sterilisation
TL;DR: To compare the different tubal occlusion techniques for tubal sterilisation in terms of major and minor morbidity, failure rates (pregnancies), technical failures and difficulties, and women's and surgeons' satisfaction, a review of randomized controlled trials was conducted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Accuracy of diagnostic tests to detect asymptomatic bacteriuria during pregnancy.
Luciano Mignini,Guillermo Carroli,Edgardo Abalos,Mariana Widmer,Susana Amigot,Juan Manuel Nardin,Daniel Giordano,Mario Merialdi,Graciela Arciero,Maria del Carmen Hourquescos +9 more
TL;DR: A pregnant woman with a positive dipslide test is very likely to have a definitive diagnosis of asymptomatic bacteriuria, whereas a negative result effectively rules out the presence of bacteriuri.