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Pregnant women's hepatitis B vaccination coverage in Nigeria: a national pilot cross-sectional study.

George Uchenna ElejeGodwin Otuodichinma AkabaIkechukwu Innocent MbachuAyyuba RabiuOlabisi Morebise LotoHadiza Abdullahi UsmanPreye Owen FiebaiRebecca Chinyelu ChukwuanukwuNgozi Nneka Joe-IkechebeluChike Henry NwankwoStephen Okoroafor KaluChinyere Ukamaka OnuboguChukwuanugo Nkemakonam OgbuaguShirley Nneka ChukwurahChinwe Elizabeth UzochukwuSamuel Oluwagbenga InuyomiBukola Abimbola AdesojiUchenna Chukwunonso OgwaluonyeSussan Ifeyinwa NwejeRichard Obinwanne EgeonuOdion Emmanuel IgueChiamaka Henrietta JibuakuPrince Ogbonnia AjaChiamaka Perpetua ChidozieHadiza Sani IbrahimFatima Ele AliyuAisha Ismaila NumanOgbonna Dennis OkoroSolace Amechi OmoruyiIjeoma Chioma OppahUbong Inyang AnyangAishat AhmedOsita Samuel UmeononihuEric Okechukwu UmehEkene Agatha EmekaArinze Anthony OnwuegbunaEmeka Philip IgbodikeIfeoma Clara AjubaIbrahim Adamu YakasaiOliver Chukwujekwu EzechiJoseph Ifeanyichukwu Ikechebelunull null
Published in: Therapeutic advances in vaccines and immunotherapy (2021)
TETFund National Research Fund 2019 (grant number TETFund/DR&D/CE/NRF/STI/33).
Keyphrases
  • pregnant women
  • quality improvement
  • oxidative stress
  • men who have sex with men
  • health insurance
  • randomized controlled trial
  • study protocol
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • quantum dots
  • double blind