Knowledge, attitudes and practices of West Africans on genetic studies of stroke: Evidence from the SIREN Study.
Rufus Olusola AkinyemiFred Stephen SarfoJoshua AkinyemiArti SinghMatthew Onoja AkpaAlbert AkpaluLukman OwolabiAbiodun M AdeoyeReginald ObiakoKolawole WahabEmmanuel SanyaMorenikeji KomolafeGodwin OgboleMichael FawalePhilip AdebayoGodwin OsaigbovoTaofiki SunmonuPaul OlowoyoInnocent ChukwuonyeYahaya ObiaboOlaleye AdenijiGregory FakunleEzinne MelikamRaelle SaulsonJoseph YariaKelechi UwanruochiPhillip IbinaiyeGaniyu Adeniyi AmusaIsah Suleiman YahayaAbdullahi Hamisu DambattaMercy FaniyanPeter OlowoniyiAndrew Bock-OrumaOdo Chidi JosephAyodipupo Sikiru OguntadePhilip KoloRuth LaryeaSulaiman LakohEzinne UvereTemitope FarombiJosephine AkpaluOlalekan OyinloyeLambert AppiahBenedict Calys-TagoeVincent ShidaliNasir Abdulkadir TabariOladimeji AdebayoRichard EfidiOsi AdeleyeDorcas OwusuLuqman OgunjimiOlumayowa AridegbeChidiebere Lucius ImohTaofeeq SanniMulugeta GebreziabherTiwari HemantOyedunni ArulogunAdesola OgunniyiCarolyn JenkinsMayowa OwolabiBruce OvbiagelePublished in: International journal of stroke : official journal of the International Stroke Society (2018)
To further improve knowledge of stroke heritability and willingness to embrace genetic testing for stroke, individuals with less formal education, history of high blood pressure and no family history of stroke require targeted interventions.
Keyphrases