Key considerations when meeting a biostatistician. Explain the issue, primary research question, outcomes, exposures and the design. With @TonyaM6000@SUhealthsci
A new study finds that the risk of mortality after C section is 50 times higher in African hospitals compared to those in high-income hospitals!! questions about quality of hospital care in Africa
https://t.co/HspyX9CNkP
In the African Surgical Outcomes Caesarean Section Sub-study, we found that women in Africa were 50 times more likely to die after a c-section, than women in HICs. Women in LMICS need access to high quality surgical care.#Lancet@BruceBiccard . https://t.co/aBRa7OcUKl
Maternal mortality after caesarean delivery in Africa is 50 times higher than that of high-income countries. https://t.co/iy2fes45St
In every country of the world unnecessary Caesarean sections are rising. This is a pandemic of poor care, misinformation + exploitation by doctors
Maternal deaths following #Csection are 50-times higher in Africa compared with in high-income countries: finding from a 7-day prospective observational cohort from the African Surgical Outcomes Study @LancetGH https://t.co/2SJya1CuC4
Maternal and neonatal outcomes after caesarean delivery in the African Surgical Outcomes Study: a 7-day prospective observational cohort study https://t.co/CglUjhYnvA
I will be facilitating a workshop on the Smith and Vance ASCCR framework in biostatistical consulting today at 14:45 at the SATA International conference on Clinical Biostatistics and Epidemiology in Cape Town.
Reminder: Monthly Biostats Clinic today from 13:00-17:00. First come first serve. 20-30 min max per consultation. We will be in the @SUhealthsci library Room 8! See you there