Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Paul F.A. Van Look
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and overview
- 2 Defining reproductive tract infections and other gynaecological morbidities
- 3 The social context of gynaecological morbidity: correlates, consequences and health seeking behaviour
- 4 Reproductive health: men's roles and men's rights
- 5 Study design for the measurement of gynaecological morbidity
- 6 Alternatives to community-based study designs for research on women's gynaecological morbidity
- 7 Community interaction in studies of gynaecological morbidity: experiences in Egypt, India and Uganda
- 8 Definitions of clinically diagnosed gynaecological morbidity resulting from reproductive tract infection
- 9 Laboratory tests for the detection of reproductive tract infections
- 10 Laboratory methods for the diagnosis of reproductive tract infections and selected conditions in population-based studies
- 11 The value of the imperfect: the contribution of interview surveys to the study of gynaecological ill health
- 12 Qualitative methods in gynaecological morbidity research
- 13 Integrating qualitative and quantitative methods in research on reproductive health
- 14 Interpreting results from different sources of data
- 15 Turning research into action
- Appendix A Notes on contributors
- Index
Contents
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Paul F.A. Van Look
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and overview
- 2 Defining reproductive tract infections and other gynaecological morbidities
- 3 The social context of gynaecological morbidity: correlates, consequences and health seeking behaviour
- 4 Reproductive health: men's roles and men's rights
- 5 Study design for the measurement of gynaecological morbidity
- 6 Alternatives to community-based study designs for research on women's gynaecological morbidity
- 7 Community interaction in studies of gynaecological morbidity: experiences in Egypt, India and Uganda
- 8 Definitions of clinically diagnosed gynaecological morbidity resulting from reproductive tract infection
- 9 Laboratory tests for the detection of reproductive tract infections
- 10 Laboratory methods for the diagnosis of reproductive tract infections and selected conditions in population-based studies
- 11 The value of the imperfect: the contribution of interview surveys to the study of gynaecological ill health
- 12 Qualitative methods in gynaecological morbidity research
- 13 Integrating qualitative and quantitative methods in research on reproductive health
- 14 Interpreting results from different sources of data
- 15 Turning research into action
- Appendix A Notes on contributors
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Investigating Reproductive Tract Infections and Other Gynaecological DisordersA Multidisciplinary Research Approach, pp. v - viPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003