Objective: To determine whether female adolescents from low-income areas in Managua were satisfied with the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) care provided through a competitive voucher programme and to analyse the determinants of their satisfaction. Design: A community-based quasi-experimental intervention study from 2000 to 2002. Setting: Low-income areas of Managua. Intervention: Distribution of 28,711 vouchers giving adolescents free-access to SRH care in 19 clinics; training and support for health care providers. Study participants: A random sample of 3009 girls from 12 to 20 years completed self-administered questionnaires: 700 respondents had used this care in the last 15 months, 221 with voucher (users-with-voucher) and 479 witho...
BackgroundRwandan adolescents have limited access to high-quality family planning and reproductive h...
BACKGROUND:Over the last quarter century, there has been an emergence of evidence-based research dir...
Objectives: To elicit the views of primary healthcare providers from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua...
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether female adolescents from low-income areas in Managua were satisfied w...
Background: Little is known about how sexual and reproductive (SRH) health can be made accessible an...
BACKGROUND: To meet the needs of female adolescents from low-income urban areas for sexual and repro...
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether participation in a competitive voucher programme designed to improve...
Objectives: To identify where vouchers have been used for reproductive health (RH) services, to what...
AbstractAccess to youth friendly health services is vital for ensuring sexual and reproductive healt...
PURPOSE: Report effects on knowledge of sexual health and gender from an intervention using peer met...
Background: Adolescents in less developed countries such as Zambia often face multi-faceted challeng...
Objectives: To elicit the views of primary healthcare providers from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua...
Background: Developing countries face challenges in financing healthcare; often the poor do not rece...
AbstractObjectivesTo evaluate provision of vouchers for family planning and sexual and reproductive ...
Background: Alternatives to the traditional ‘supply-side’ approach to financing service delivery are...
BackgroundRwandan adolescents have limited access to high-quality family planning and reproductive h...
BACKGROUND:Over the last quarter century, there has been an emergence of evidence-based research dir...
Objectives: To elicit the views of primary healthcare providers from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua...
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether female adolescents from low-income areas in Managua were satisfied w...
Background: Little is known about how sexual and reproductive (SRH) health can be made accessible an...
BACKGROUND: To meet the needs of female adolescents from low-income urban areas for sexual and repro...
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether participation in a competitive voucher programme designed to improve...
Objectives: To identify where vouchers have been used for reproductive health (RH) services, to what...
AbstractAccess to youth friendly health services is vital for ensuring sexual and reproductive healt...
PURPOSE: Report effects on knowledge of sexual health and gender from an intervention using peer met...
Background: Adolescents in less developed countries such as Zambia often face multi-faceted challeng...
Objectives: To elicit the views of primary healthcare providers from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua...
Background: Developing countries face challenges in financing healthcare; often the poor do not rece...
AbstractObjectivesTo evaluate provision of vouchers for family planning and sexual and reproductive ...
Background: Alternatives to the traditional ‘supply-side’ approach to financing service delivery are...
BackgroundRwandan adolescents have limited access to high-quality family planning and reproductive h...
BACKGROUND:Over the last quarter century, there has been an emergence of evidence-based research dir...
Objectives: To elicit the views of primary healthcare providers from Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua...