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Paul Hutchinson

Researcher at Tulane University

Publications -  64
Citations -  2855

Paul Hutchinson is an academic researcher from Tulane University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health care. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 57 publications receiving 2597 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Hutchinson include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & World Bank.

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Health-care facility choice and the phenomenon of bypassing

TL;DR: The answer to the bypassing dilemma seems to be for providers to provide as good quality care relative to the money charged (if any), as other, often further away, providers.
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Power control and intimate partner sexual violence in Haiti.

TL;DR: Strong positive effects on intimate partner sexual violence were found for husband's jealousy and perpetration of controlling behavior and women's endorsement of traditional norms concerning a husband's rights to beat his wife.
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Malaria prevention in pregnancy, birthweight, and neonatal mortality: a meta-analysis of 32 national cross-sectional datasets in Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the authors tried to limit confounding bias through exact matching on potential confounding factors associated with both exposure to malaria prevention (IPTp or ITNs) in pregnancy and birth outcomes, including local malaria transmission, neonatal tetanus vaccination, maternal age and education, and household wealth.
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Utilization of voluntary counseling and testing services in the Eastern Cape, South Africa.

TL;DR: While overall use of VCT services is low, utilization of V CT services is positively associated with age, education, socioeconomic status, proximity to clinics, availability of rapid testing and outreach services and lower levels of HIV/AIDS stigma.
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Measuring client satisfaction and the quality of family planning services: A comparative analysis of public and private health facilities in Tanzania, Kenya and Ghana

TL;DR: Because the public sector represents the major source of family planning services in developing countries, governments and Ministries of Health should continue to implement and to encourage incentives to improve quality at public sector health facilities, as well as to strengthen regulatory and monitoring structures to ensure quality at both public and private facilities.