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Journal of Pregnancy and Child Health received 3013 citations as per Google Scholar report
Articles published in Journal of Pregnancy and Child Health have been cited by esteemed scholars and scientists all around the world. Journal of Pregnancy and Child Health has got h-index 21, which means every article in Journal of Pregnancy and Child Health has got 21 average citations.
Following are the list of articles that have cited the articles published in Journal of Pregnancy and Child Health.
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total published articles |
10 | 42 | 63 | 60 | 26 | 49 | 38 | 66 | 99 |
Research, Review articles and Editorials |
7 | 29 | 39 | 20 | 10 | 25 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Research communications, Review communications, Editorial communications, Case reports and Commentary |
5 | 10 | 9 | 4 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Conference proceedings |
0 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Citations received as per Google Scholar, other indexing platforms and portals |
198 | 318 | 365 | 413 | 383 | 319 | 175 | 123 | 514 |
Journal total citations count | 3013 |
Journal impact factor | 5.71 |
Journal 5 years impact factor | 6.28 |
Journal cite score | 6.61 |
Journal h-index | 21 |
Journal h-index since 2019 | 18 |
Boti, N., Bekele, T., Godana, W., Getahun, E., Gebremeskel, F., Tsegaye, B., & Oumer, B. (2018). Adherence to Iron-Folate supplementation and associated factors among Pastoralistâs pregnant women in Burji districts, Segen area Peopleâs zone, southern Ethiopia: community-based cross-sectional study. International journal of reproductive medicine, 2018. |
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Gebremichael, T. G., & Welesamuel, T. G. (2020). Adherence to iron-folic acid supplement and associated factors among antenatal care attending pregnant mothers in governmental health institutions of Adwa town, Tigray, Ethiopia: cross-sectional study. PLoS One, 15(1), e0227090. |
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Desta, M., Kassie, B., Chanie, H., Mulugeta, H., Yirga, T., Temesgen, H., ... & Merkeb, Y. (2019). Adherence of iron and folic acid supplementation and determinants among pregnant women in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Reproductive health, 16(1), 1-14. |
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Thomford, N. E., Dzobo, K., Yao, N. A., Chimusa, E., Evans, J., Okai, E., ... & Dandara, C. (2018). Genomics and epigenomics of congenital heart defects: expert review and lessons learned in Africa. Omics: a journal of integrative biology, 22(5), 301-321. |
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Assefa, H., Abebe, S. M., & Sisay, M. (2019). Magnitude and factors associated with adherence to Iron and folic acid supplementation among pregnant women in Aykel town, Northwest Ethiopia. BMC pregnancy and childbirth, 19(1), 1-8. |
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Molla, T., Guadu, T., Muhammad, E. A., & Hunegnaw, M. T. (2019). Factors associated with adherence to iron folate supplementation among pregnant women in West Dembia district, northwest Ethiopia: a cross sectional study. BMC Research Notes, 12(1), 1-6. |
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Gebremariam, A. D., Tiruneh, S. A., Abate, B. A., Engidaw, M. T., & Asnakew, D. T. (2019). Adherence to iron with folic acid supplementation and its associated factors among pregnant women attending antenatal care follow up at Debre Tabor General Hospital, Ethiopia, 2017. PloS one, 14(1), e0210086. |
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Depression during pregnancy is a âsilentâ danger found to result in negative outcomes. Globally, antepartum depression associated with intimate partner violence (IPV) in low-income urban settlements has become a subject of interest in research. In Kenya, very little, if any, in terms of research has exploited this area. This study sought to find the association between IPV and depression among the antepartum women from low-income urban settlements. Broad objective: To establish the prevalence of depression and IPV experience among antepartum women at the Langâata Health Centre and Maternity Services (LHCMS), Nairobi County . Specific objectives: i).To determine the prevalence of depression among the partcipants. ii). To determine the prevalence of IPV among the participants. iii).To determine sociodemographic factors and pregnancy factors associated with depression and with IPV. iv). To determine the association between depression and IPV Methodology: Using a systematic random sampling technique, the researcher recruited a sample of 331 participants at the LHCMSâ ANC clinic in this cross-sectional analytical study. Structured socio-demographic questionnaire, EPDS, and PCSF-IPV were used to obtain sociodemographic, depressive, and IPV data respectively. Data was cleaned and analysed by SPSS version 20 and reporting done in terms of charts, tables, bar graphs, and narratives. Study results: The prevalence of antepartum depression was 46.5% at ?13 EPDS cut off while the prevalence of IPV was 54.4%. Chi-square tests of associations were mainly conducted to analyse for various associations between the variables. There were significant association between antepartum depression and the following: age (p=0.014); marital status (p=0.003); pregnancy-planned or not (p=0.002); number of children alive (p=0.045); education level (p=0.008); occupation (p=0.043); IPV (p= ?0.001). |
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Yator, O., Mathai, M., Albert, T., & Kumar, M. (2020). Burden of HIV-Related Stigma and Post-Partum Depression: A Cross-Sectional Study of Patients Attending Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Clinic at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 11. |
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Madeghe, B. A., Kogi-Makau, W., Ngala, S., & Kumar, M. (2020). Risk factors and experiences of prepartum depression among pregnant women in urban-low income in Nairobi Kenya: a mixed-method study. F1000Research, 9(1495), 1495. |
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Sitima, M. O. (2020). Translation and Validation of a Swahili Version of the Sinonasal Outcome Test (Snot-22) (Doctoral dissertation, University of Nairobi). |
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Mendenhall, E., & Kim, A. W. (2021). Rethinking Idioms of Distress and Resilience in Anthropology and Global Mental Health. In Global Mental Health Ethics (pp. 157-170). Springer, Cham. |
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Larsen, A., Pintye, J., Bhat, A., Kumar, M., Kinuthia, J., Collins, P. Y., & John-Stewart, G. (2021). Is there an optimal screening tool for identifying perinatal depression within clinical settings of sub-Saharan Africa?. SSM-Mental Health, 100015. |
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Ndungâu, S. W. (2020). Performance of the patient health questionnaire and Edinburgh postnatal depression scale as screening tools for antepartum depression (Doctoral dissertation, University of Nairobi). |
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Madeghe, B. A., Kogi-Makau, W., Ngala, S., & Kumar, M. (2021). Risk factors and experiences of prepartum depressio n in urban-low-income settlement Nairobi Kenya: a mixed-method study [version 3; peer review: 2 approved]. |
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Rajakumar, P. (2016). HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorder with Micro RNA. J Nurs Health Sci| Volume, 2(3). |
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Rajakumar, P. (2016). The Effect of Pre-conceptional Corpulence on Directions of Maternal Lipids amid Incubation. J Nurs Health Sci| Volume, 2(3). |
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Mochache, K. K. (2016). Depression During Pregnancy And Preterm Birth; A Prospective Cohort Study Carried Out Among Women Attending Antenatal Clinic At Pumwani Maternity Hospital (Doctoral dissertation, University Of Nairobi). |
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Ngocho, J. S. (2018). Prevalence and Factors Associated with Depression and Anxiety among HIV-infected Pregnant Women in Kilimanjaro Region, Tanzania (Master's thesis, Faculty of Health Sciences). |
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Reddy, D., & Madhu, R. Research & Reviews: Journal of Medical and Health Sciences. |
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