F. Ory
Royal Tropical Institute
30 Papers
178 Citations
F. Ory is an academic researcher from Royal Tropical Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cohort study & Population. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 30 publications.
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Papers
Severe maternal morbidity during pregnancy, delivery and puerperium in the Netherlands: a nationwide population-based study of 371,000 pregnancies.
TL;DR: Assessment of incidence, case fatality rate, risk factors and substandard care in severe maternal morbidity in the Netherlands finds that women with a history of maternal disease are more likely to die than those with a clean bill of health.
377
Occupational health and the environment in an urban slum in India.
Abhay Shukla,Satish Kumar,F. Ory +2 more
TL;DR: The Indo-Dutch Environmental & Sanitary Engineering Project under the Ganga action Plan in Kanpur and Mirzapur is being executed within the Indo- Dutch bilateral development cooperation framework to integrate physical, social and health related improvements.
45
An occupational health programme for adults and children in the carpet weaving industry, Mirzapur, India: A case study in the informal sector
P.K. Das,K.P. Shukla,F. Ory +2 more
TL;DR: The Occupational Health Programme in Mirzapur was conceived by the SEU to improve the health and living conditions of child and adult weavers and proved to be a successful approach in this segment of the informal sector, where child labour plays an important role.
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Results of breast cancer screening in first generation migrants in Northwest Netherlands.
TL;DR: Although women born in non-western countries attend breast cancer screening less frequently than womenBorn in the Netherlands, they also have a low detection rate, which justifies a passive attitude towards the low attendance.
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Breast cancer risk among first-generation migrants in the Netherlands
TL;DR: The standardised incidence ratio for breast cancer in Northwest-Netherlands was statistically significantly reduced for women born in Surinam, Turkey, Turkey and Morocco, and the proportion of women with advanced stages did not differ significantly between migrants and womenBorn in the Netherlands.