Soil and Water Nutrient DynamicsFish Ecology and Management StudiesHemodynamic Monitoring and TherapyGlobal Health and SurgeryGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening
We prepare their research opportunity report and reach out personally to introduce you — their contact details stay private.
Their published papers and profiles list institutional contact details.
This profile was built automatically from public publication records and has not yet been claimed by the researcher.
Research opportunities
Study designs adjacent to this body of work — each grounded in the published record and scoped so a trainee could run it.
Claim your researcher profile
This profile was built from your public publication record — claim it to manage it.
What is the comparative effectiveness of telemedicine versus traditional in-person care in maintaining essential antenatal coverage and reducing maternal mortality in low-income and middle-income countries during future health system shocks?
Why this gap exists: While abstracts [4], [7], [8], and [9] discuss digital tools and maternity care in low- and middle-income countries, none provide a direct comparative effectiveness analysis of telemedicine versus in-person care regarding maternal mortality during health system shocks, leaving the specific question unresolved.
How does the consumption of plant-based proteins, specifically those high in anti-nutritional factors like phytates and trypsin inhibitors, affect mineral bioavailability and growth outcomes in children relying on these proteins as primary staples?
Why this gap exists: While the retrieved papers confirm that anti-nutritional factors like phytates and trypsin inhibitors reduce mineral bioavailability [0, 2], they focus on general adult health or crop improvement [1, 6] and do not provide direct evidence on the specific growth outcomes in children relying on these proteins as primary staples.
How do specific policy interventions aimed at improving female education and labor force participation accelerate the 'maternal mortality transition' in regions currently experiencing high maternal mortality?
Why this gap exists: While the retrieved literature establishes links between female education, political power, and health outcomes (e.g., [3], [6], [9]), no study directly addresses how specific labor or education policy interventions accelerate the 'maternal mortality transition' in high-mortality regions, leaving the mechanism and impact of such specific policies unresolved.