1. Pan American Health Organization: Renewing Primary Health Care in the Americas: A Position Paper of the Pan American Health Organization/ World Health Organization (PAHO/WHO). Washington D.C; 2007 [http:// www.paho.org/English/AD/THS/PrimaryHealthCare.pdf], (Accessed 15 March 2012).
4. McIntyre D, Garshong G, Mtei G, Meheus F, Thiede M, Akazili J, Ally M, Aikins M, Mulligan J, Goudge J: Beyond fragmentation and towards universal coverage: Insights from Ghana, South Africa and United Republic of Tanzania. Bull World Health Organ 2008, 86:871-876.
6. Carrin G, James C: Reaching universal coverage via social health insurance: Key design features in the transition period. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2004.
7. United Nations Statistics Divisions: The World's Women 2010: Trends and Statistics. New York: United Nations; 2010.
8. Ravindran TKS, Maceira D: Health financing reforms. In The right reforms? Health sector reforms and sexual and reproductive health. Johannesburg: Women's Health project, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand;Ravindran TKS and de Pinho H 2005:26-89.
11. Pan American Health Organization: Social protection for health schemes for mother and child population: Lessons learned from the Latin American Region. Washington DC; 2007.
12. Universal Child and Mother Insurance (Bolivia). Social protection for health schemes for mother and child population: Lessons learned from the Latin American Region Washington DC; 2007, 51-61, Chapter 5.1 In: Pan American Health Organization.
13. Wang L, Bales S, Zhang Z: China's social protection schemes and access to health services: A critical review. Washington DC: The World Bank;, Unpublished draft. n.d.
14. Lagarde M, Haines A, Palmer N: Conditional cash transfers for improving uptake of health interventions in low and middle-income countries: A systematic review. JAMA 2007, 298:1900-1910.
15. Balasubramanian P, Ravindran TKS: Utilisation of health services for reproductive health care: A case study from rural Tamil Nadu, India. Maternal mortality and morbidity in Asia Kuala Lumpur: Asia-Pacific Resource& Research Centre for Women; 2011, 67-94.
16. Balasubramanian P, Ravindran TKS: Pro-Poor Maternity Benefit Schemes beyond the reach of rural women - Findings from a cross-sectional survey of five Districts of Tamil Nadu. Chengalpattu (India): Rural Women's Social Women's Centre; 2011, Unpublished paper.
17. Claeson M, Mawji T, Walker C: Investing in the best buys. A review of the health, nutrition and population portfolio, FY 1993-99. Washington DC: The World Bank; 2000.
18. Banthia A, Johnson S, McCord MJ, Mathews B: Microinsurance that works for women: Making gender-sensitive micro-insurance programs. Geneva: International Labour Office; 2009.
19. Millennium Project: Who's got the power? Transforming health systems for women and children. New York: Task Force on Child and Maternal Health; 2005.
20. Nahar S, Costello A: The hidden cost of 'free' maternity care in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Health Policy Plan 1998, 13:417-422.
21. Indian Institute of Health Management Research (IIHMR): Financing reproductive and child health care in Rajasthan. POLICY project Jaipur and Washington: IIHMR and Futures Group; 2000.
23. Gu XY, Tang SL, Cao SH: The financing and organization of health services in poor rural China: A case study of Donglan County. Int J Health Plann Manag 1995, 10:265-282.
26. Schuler SR, Bates LM, Islam MDK: Paying for reproductive health services in Bangladesh: intersections between cost, quality and culture. Health Policy Plan 2002, 17:273-280.
27. Janowitz B, Measham D, West C: Conclusions. Issues in the financing of Family Planning services in sub-Saharan Africa Research Triangle Park NC: Family Health International; 1999.
28. Towards 4 and 5: Encouraging women to use professional care at birth. Briefing Paper 2 London: Support to Safe Motherhood Programme in Nepal (SSMP/Nepal) and Towards 4+5, UK; 2008.
31. Knaul FM, Arreola-Ornelas H, Méndez-Carniado O, Bryson-Cahn C, Barofsky J, Maguire R, Miranda M, Sesma S: Evidence is good for your health system: policy reform to remedy catastrophic and impoverishing health spending in Mexico. Lancet 2006, 368:1828-1841.
32. Ravindran TKS: Thailand. Pathways to universal access to reproductive health care in Asia Kuala Lumpur: Asia-Pacific Resource& Research Centre for Women; 2011, 75-87.
33. Limwattananon S: Household impoverishment by health payment in Thailand: An analysis of national time trend and provincial variation 1996-2008. Bangkok: International Health Policy Program, Ministry of Public Health; 2011 [http://ihppthaigov.net/publication/attachresearch/256/ chapter1.pdf], (Accessed on 31 May 2012).
36. World Health Organization: Women and health in the Western Pacific Region: remaining challenges and new opportunities. Manila: Regional Office for the Western Pacific; 2011.
37. Dolin P: Tuberculosis epidemiology from a gender perspective. In Gender and tuberculosis. Goteborg: Nordic School of Public Health;Diwan VK, Thorson A, Winkvist A 1998:29-40.
38. Begum V, de Colombani P, Das Gupta S, Hamid Salim MA, Hussain H, Pietroni M, Rahman S, Pahan D, Borgdorff MW: Tuberculosis and patient gender in Bangladesh: sex differences in diagnosis and treatment outcome. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2001, 5:604-610.
39. Thorson A, Hua NP, Long NH, Allebeck P, Diwan VK: Do women with tuberculosis have a lower likelihood of getting diagnosed? Prevalence and case detection of sputum smear positive pulmonary TB, a population-based study from Vietnam. J Clin Epidemiol 2004, 57:398-402.
41. Baruwa E, Tzu J, Congdon N, He M, Frick KD: Reversal in gender valuations of cataract surgery after the implementation of free-screening and lowpriced, high-quality surgery in a rural population of Southern China. Ophthalmic Epidemiol 2008, 15:99-104.
43. Govender V, Penn-Kekana L: Challenging gender in patient-provider interactions. In Gender equity in health: The shifting frontiers of evidence and action. New York and London: Routledge;Sen G and Ostlin P 2010:.
45. Grown C: UN Millennium Project: Taking action: Achieving gender equality and empowering women. Task Force on Education and Gender Equality 2005 [http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/documents/Gendercomplete.pdf], (Accessed 31 May 2012). doi:10.1186/1471-2458-12-S1-S4
We now provide space to match 1,000 references per submission
To learn about other services and interfaces see our MetaData Delivery page.
Please contact us if you have any questions.
Tips:
There should be no line breaks within an individual reference.
When submitting multiple references they must be in alphabetical order or presented as a numbered list.
To check the accuracy of a reference, click on the link that is returned with the reference.
You may use any reference style, although it works best if references are formatted in a consistent and standard style. Just cut and paste this example list to try it out:
1. Boucher RC (2004) New concepts of the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung disease. Eur Resp J 23: 146–158.
2. Knowles MR, Boucher RC (2002) Mucus clearance as a primary innate defense mechanism for mammalian airways. J Clin Investig 109: 571–577.
3. Antunes MB, Cohen NA (2007) Mucociliary clearance - a critical upper airway host defense mechanism and methods of assessment. Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol 7: 5–10.
4. Riordan JR, Rommens JM, Kerem BS, Alon N, Rozmahel R, et al. (1989) Identification of the Cystic-Fibrosis Gene - Cloning and Characterization of Complementary-Dna. Science 245: 1066–1072.
5. Rommens JM, Iannuzzi MC, Kerem BS, Drumm ML, Melmer G, et al. (1989) Identification of the Cystic-Fibrosis Gene - Chromosome Walking and Jumping. Science 245: 1059–1065.
6. Bobadilla JL, Macek M, Fine JP, Farrell PM (2002) Cystic fibrosis: A worldwide analysis of CFTR mutations - Correlation with incidence data and application to screening. Human Mutation 19: 575–606.
7. Qu BH, Thomas PJ (1996) Alteration of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator folding pathway - Effects of the Delta F508 mutation on the thermodynamic stability and folding yield of NBD1. J Biol Chem 271: 7261–7264.