Despite compulsory health insurance in Europe, ethnic differences in access to health care exist. The objective of this study is to investigate how ethnic differences between Dutch and non-Dutch women with respect to late entry into antenatal care provided by community midwifes can be explained by need, predisposing and enabling factors. Data were obtained from the Generation R Study. The Generation R Study is a multi-ethnic population-based prospective cohort study conducted in the city of Rotterdam. In total, 2,093 pregnant women with a Dutch, Moroccan, Turkish, Cape Verdean, Antillean, Surinamese Creole and Surinamese Hindustani background were included in this study. We examined whether ethnic differences in late antenatal care entry co...
Background: In many industrialized western countries non-western women constitute a substantial part...
Background: Differential utilisation of antenatal care among ethnic minority mothers is a contribut...
Objectives Evidence about sociodemographic factors associated with late attendance for antenatal ca...
Despite compulsory health insurance in Europe, ethnic differences in access to health care exist. Th...
Objective: to determine differences in antenatal care use between the native population and differen...
Objective: to determine differences in antenatal care use between the native population and differen...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
<div><p>In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
Background One of the mechanisms explaining perinatal health inequalities could be inadequate antena...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
The proportion of pregnant women from ethnic minorities is increasing in the Netherlands. A recent s...
Background: In many industrialized western countries non-western women constitute a substantial part...
Background: Differential utilisation of antenatal care among ethnic minority mothers is a contribut...
Objectives Evidence about sociodemographic factors associated with late attendance for antenatal ca...
Despite compulsory health insurance in Europe, ethnic differences in access to health care exist. Th...
Objective: to determine differences in antenatal care use between the native population and differen...
Objective: to determine differences in antenatal care use between the native population and differen...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
To assess whether there are differences in the timing of first antenatal care visit between 1st and ...
<div><p>In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
Background One of the mechanisms explaining perinatal health inequalities could be inadequate antena...
In the Netherlands, non-Western ethnic minority women make their first antenatal visit later than na...
The proportion of pregnant women from ethnic minorities is increasing in the Netherlands. A recent s...
Background: In many industrialized western countries non-western women constitute a substantial part...
Background: Differential utilisation of antenatal care among ethnic minority mothers is a contribut...
Objectives Evidence about sociodemographic factors associated with late attendance for antenatal ca...