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Martin Njoroge

Researcher at Wellcome Trust

Publications -  7
Citations -  199

Martin Njoroge is an academic researcher from Wellcome Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & FEV1/FVC ratio. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 130 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin Njoroge include Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.

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A systematic review of electronic audit and feedback: intervention effectiveness and use of behaviour change theory

TL;DR: The effects of e-A&F interventions were found to be highly variable and to implicitly target only a fraction of known theoretical domains, even after omitting domains presumed not to be linked to e- A&F.
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Assessing the feasibility of eHealth and mHealth: a systematic review and analysis of initiatives implemented in Kenya

TL;DR: There is a myriad of eHealth projects being implemented in Kenya, mainly in the mHealth strategic area and focusing mostly on primary care and HIV/AIDs, although few projects are implemented in marginalised areas and least urbanized counties with more health care needs.
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Patient costs of hypertension care in public health care facilities in Kenya.

TL;DR: High rates of catastrophic costs illustrate the urgency of improving financial risk protection for these patients and strengthening primary care to ensure affordability of hypertension care.
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Patient costs of diabetes mellitus care in public health care facilities in Kenya.

TL;DR: There are substantial direct and indirect costs borne by diabetic patients in seeking care from public facilities in Kenya, suggesting diabetes services are unaffordable to majority of diabetic patients and illustrating the urgent need to improve financial risk protection to ensure access to care.
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Cohort profile: The Chikwawa lung health cohort; a population-based observational non-communicable respiratory disease study of adults in Malawi.

TL;DR: The authors in this article provided a detailed description of the Chikwawa lung health cohort which was established in rural Malawi to prospectively determine the prevalence and causes of lung disease amongst the general population of adults living in a low-income rural setting in Sub-Saharan Africa.