Innovations/New Technologies/Improvement Science
Quality improvement practices decrease adverse event rates in a surgical male circumcision program in Malawi
Authors:
P. Kohler ,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA/US
D. Chilongozi,
International Training and Education Center for Health, Lilongwe, MW
D. Namate,
International Training and Education Center for Health, Lilongwe 3, MW
B. Barr,
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Lilongwe, MW
W. Msungama,
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Lilongwe, MW
M. Mwale,
Malawi Ministry of Health, Lilongwe, MW
O. Phiri,
International Training and Education Center for Health, Lilongwe, MW
L. Tenthani,
International Training and Education Center for Health, Lilongwe, MW
T. Perdue,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA/US
S. Barnhart,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA/US
J. Krieger
University of Washington, Seattle, WA/US
How to Cite:
Kohler, P., Chilongozi, D., Namate, D., Barr, B., Msungama, W., Mwale, M., Phiri, O., Tenthani, L., Perdue, T., Barnhart, S. and Krieger, J., 2015. Quality improvement practices decrease adverse event rates in a surgical male circumcision program in Malawi. Annals of Global Health, 81(1), pp.192–193. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.aogh.2015.02.941
Published on
12 Mar 2015.
Peer Reviewed
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