7 Papers
69 Citations
Barkat-e-Khuda is an academic researcher from International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Service delivery framework. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
The demand for child curative care in two rural thanas of Bangladesh: effect of income and women's employment
TL;DR: The results of the analysis indicate that a woman's involvement in a credit union or income generation affected the likelihood that curative child care was used, and travel time was statistically significant and was negatively associated with the use of a provider.
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Cost-effectiveness of family planning and maternal health service delivery strategies in rural Bangladesh.
TL;DR: Two alternative service delivery strategies to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of the Bangladesh national Family Planning and Maternal and Child Health programme have been tested and it is indicated that cluster service delivery of contraceptive services in their present form are not more cost-effective than home delivery services.
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An economic appraisal of alternative strategies for the delivery of MCH-FP services in urban Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Subrata Routh,Barkat-e-Khuda +1 more
TL;DR: Provision of health and family planning services from clinics--complemented with a reduced system of outreach workers to inform and target the hard-to-reach clients--was found to be the most cost-effective service-delivery alternative.
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Consequences of the shift from domiciliary distribution to site-based family planning services in Bangladesh.
TL;DR: The recent change in the family planning program toward clinic-based delivery of an integrated package of essential health and family planning services appears likely to maintain and perhaps even increase contraceptive prevalence levels in Bangladesh.
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Socioeconomic and health implications of adult deaths in families of rural Bangladesh.
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of adult deaths on subsequent health and socioeconomic well-being of rural families of Bang- ladesh were examined and the negative impact was more pronounced among the children of poor families, and the female children were most severely affected.
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