M
M. Abrahamowicz
Researcher at McGill University
Publications - 10
Citations - 1476
M. Abrahamowicz is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Medical prescription. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 1426 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Utilisation des données recueillies en routine pour évaluer l'activité des maternités au Mali et au Sénégal (essai QUARITE)
Alexandre Dumont,Alexandre Dumont,M. Gueye,A. Sow,Idrissa Diop,M.K. Konate,P. Dambé,M. Abrahamowicz,Pierre Fournier +8 more
TL;DR: Assessment of the quality of data collected in referral hospitals in Mali and Senegal after the routine information system (RIS) was strengthened sets up an economically and technologically appropriate system for monitoring maternal and perinatal health in Senegal and Mali.
Journal ArticleDOI
1: Quality of care, obstetrics risk management and mode of delivery in Quebec (QUARISMA): a cluster-randomized trial
Nils Chaillet,Alexandre Dumont,Emmanuel Bujold,Jean-Charles Pasquier,François Audibert,Eric Dubé,Marylène Dugas,Rebecca Burne,M. Abrahamowicz,William D. Fraser +9 more
Journal Article
Individual and institutional predictors for caesarean delivery and maternal mortality in referral hospitals in Senegal and Mali : a cross-sectional epidemiological survey
Valérie Briand,Laurence Watier,M. Abrahamowicz,Mamadou Traoré,Pierre Fournier,Alexandre Dumont +5 more
Journal ArticleDOI
SAT0347 Comparisons of Reporting and Level of Agreement of Co-Morbidities Ascertained from Rheumatologists, Patients and Health Administrative Data: A Data Linkage Study Among Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis
Jessica Widdifield,Sasha Bernatsky,M. Paterson,M. Abrahamowicz,Bindee Kuriya,George Tomlinson,M. Tatangelo,Carter Thorne,Janet E. Pope,J. Luo,Claire Bombardier +10 more
TL;DR: There was substantial correlation between rheumatologists, patients and health administrative data, but the prevalence varied by data source; linkages between clinical registries and administrative data may overcome some of the limitations of imperfect ascertainment from using one data source alone.
Journal ArticleDOI
THU0198 Risk of Hospitalized Serious Infection in Spondylitis Ankylosing (AS) Patients Using Nbdmard or Anti-TNF
Cristiano Soares de Moura,Elham Rahme,Walter P. Maksymowych,M. Abrahamowicz,Louis Bessette,Sasha Bernatsky +5 more
TL;DR: Novel findings are presented demonstrating that the risk of serious infection in AS is 3% per year, and age, prior health service use, and use of corticosteroids in the previous year were associated with increased risk of infection in the authors' multivariate analysis.