Publicaties
Mismatch between antenatal care attendance and institutional delivery in south Ethiopia: a multilevel analysis Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde
Objectives: Uptake of maternal health services remains suboptimal in Ethiopia. Significant proportions of antenatal care attendees give birth at home. This study was conducted to identify the predictors of non-institutional delivery among women who received antenatal care in the Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples Region, Ethiopia.
Design: A community-based cross-sectional survey was conducted among women who delivered in the ...
Multilevel Models in Health Care Research: application to Nurse Staffing Research KU Leuven
Multilevel models in traffic safety research: An investigation and illustration of a flexible solution to improve upon classical statistical analysis techniques Universiteit Hasselt
Multilevel Correlates of Immunosuppressive Nonadherence in Kidney Transplant Patients: The Multicenter ADHERE BRAZIL Study KU Leuven
Determinants of unit nonresponse in multi-mode data collection: A multilevel analysis Universiteit Hasselt KU Leuven
Pooled prevalence and risk factors of malaria among children aged 6-59 months in 13 sub-Saharan African countries: a multilevel analysis using recent malaria indicator surveys Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde
Every 75 seconds, a child under five dies of malaria. Mainly children, aged between six months and five years, are at the highest risk for malaria. These children lost maternal immunity and did not yet developed specific immunity to the infection. Under the age of five, children bear the highest burden of malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Many individual and community level factors could contribute to malaria prevalence ...
AIDS knowledge and sexual activity among Flemish secondary school students: a multilevel analysis of the effects of type of education Universiteit Gent
Importance of household-level risk factors in explaining micro-epidemiology of asymptomatic malaria infections in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde Universiteit Antwerpen
Heterogeneity in malaria risk is considered a challenge for malaria elimination. A cross-sectional study was conducted to describe and explain micro-epidemiological variation in Plasmodium infection prevalence at household and village level in three villages in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia. A two-level logistic regression model with a random intercept fitted for each household was used to model the odds of Plasmodium infection, with ...