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2. Using Participatory Workshops to Assess Alignment or Tension in the Community for Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling Prior to Start of Child Mortality Surveillance: Lessons from 5 Sites across the CHAMPS Network

3. Impact of malaria at the end of pregnancy on infant mortality and morbidity.

4. Health care-seeking behavior for childhood illnesses in western Kenya: Qualitative findings from the Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance (CHAMPS) Study.

5. Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance (CHAMPS): Manhiça site description, Mozambique.

6. Factors affecting antenatal care attendance in Soweto, Johannesburg: The three-delay model.

7. User requirements for non-invasive and minimally invasive glucose self-monitoring devices in low-income and middle-income countries: a qualitative study in Kyrgyzstan, Mali, Peru and Tanzania.

8. Acceptability of minimally invasive autopsy by community members and healthcare workers in Siaya and Kisumu counties, western Kenya, 2017-2018.

9. Experiences of parents and caretakers going through the consent process to perform minimally invasive tissue sampling (MITS) on their deceased children in Quelimane, Mozambique: A qualitative study.

10. A Qualitative Assessment of Community Acceptability and Its Determinants in the Implementation of Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling in Children in Quelimane City, Mozambique.

11. Using traditional healers to treat child malnutrition: a qualitative study of health-seeking behaviour in eastern Ethiopia.

12. "One feels anger to know there is no one to help us!". Perceptions of mothers of children with Zika virus-associated microcephaly in Caribbean Colombia: A qualitative study.

13. Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling as an Alternative to Complete Diagnostic Autopsies in the Context of Epidemic Outbreaks and Pandemics: The Example of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).

14. Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling Findings in 12 Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019.

15. Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling: A Tool to Guide Efforts to Reduce AIDS-Related Mortality in Resource-Limited Settings.

16. Consent to minimally invasive tissue sampling procedures in children in Mozambique: A mixed-methods study.

17. Accuracy of verbal autopsy, clinical data and minimally invasive autopsy in the evaluation of malaria-specific mortality: an observational study.

18. Limitations to current methods to estimate cause of death: a validation study of a verbal autopsy model.

19. Minimally Invasive Autopsy Practice in COVID-19 Cases: Biosafety and Findings.

20. Rumor surveillance in support of minimally invasive tissue sampling for diagnosing the cause of child death in low-income countries: A qualitative study.

21. Conceptual frameworks for understanding the acceptability and feasibility of the minimally invasive autopsy to determine cause of death: Findings from the CADMIA Study in western Kenya.

22. Acceptability of a Hypothetical Zika Vaccine among Women from Colombia and Spain Exposed to ZIKV: A Qualitative Study.

23. Uncertainties, Fear and Stigma: Perceptions of Zika Virus among Pregnant Women in Spain.

24. Quality of care and maternal mortality in a tertiary-level hospital in Mozambique: a retrospective study of clinicopathological discrepancies.

25. Limitations to current methods to estimate cause of death: a validation study of a verbal autopsy model.

26. Investigating the Feasibility of Child Mortality Surveillance With Postmortem Tissue Sampling: Generating Constructs and Variables to Strengthen Validity and Reliability in Qualitative Research.

27. Using Participatory Workshops to Assess Alignment or Tension in the Community for Minimally Invasive Tissue Sampling Prior to Start of Child Mortality Surveillance: Lessons From 5 Sites Across the CHAMPS Network.

28. Tipping the balance towards long-term retention in the HIV care cascade: A mixed methods study in southern Mozambique.

29. Clinico-pathological discrepancies in the diagnosis of causes of death in adults in Mozambique: A retrospective observational study.

30. Contribution of the clinical information to the accuracy of the minimally invasive and the complete diagnostic autopsy.

31. Socio-anthropological methods to study the feasibility and acceptability of the minimally invasive autopsy from the perspective of local communities: lessons learnt from a large multi-centre study.

32. Postmortem Interval and Diagnostic Performance of the Autopsy Methods.

33. Community-informed research on malaria in pregnancy in Monrovia, Liberia: a grounded theory study.

34. Healthcare providers' views and perceptions on post-mortem procedures for cause of death determination in Southern Mozambique.

35. 'Researchers have love for life': opportunities and barriers to engage pregnant women in malaria research in post-Ebola Liberia.

36. Validity of a minimally invasive autopsy for cause of death determination in maternal deaths in Mozambique: An observational study.

37. Validity of a minimally invasive autopsy tool for cause of death determination in pediatric deaths in Mozambique: An observational study.

38. Validity of a minimally invasive autopsy for cause of death determination in stillborn babies and neonates in Mozambique: An observational study.

39. Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding tuberculosis care among health workers in Southern Mozambique.

40. Validity of a Minimally Invasive Autopsy for Cause of Death Determination in Adults in Mozambique: An Observational Study.

41. Willingness to Know the Cause of Death and Hypothetical Acceptability of the Minimally Invasive Autopsy in Six Diverse African and Asian Settings: A Mixed Methods Socio-Behavioural Study.

42. Post-ART Symptoms Were Not the Problem: A Qualitative Study on Adherence to ART in HIV-Infected Patients in a Mozambican Rural Hospital.

43. Costs associated with low birth weight in a rural area of Southern Mozambique.

44. Cost-effectiveness of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy in southern Mozambique.

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