Health Systems and Human Resources
Implementing Newborn Care Services in Humanitarian Settings: Barriers and Facilitators to Implementation at the Community and Facility Level in Displaced Person Camps in South Sudan
Authors:
S. Sami ,
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
S. Kenyi,
International Medical Corps, Juba, South Sudan
R. Amsalu,
Save the Children US, San Francisco, USA
B. Tomczyk,
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA
J. Meyers,
Save the Children US, Washington, USA
M. Greeley,
International Medical Corps, Baltimore, USA
A. Dimiti,
Ministry of Health, Juba, South Sudan
E. Scudder,
Save the Children US, Washington, USA
K. Kerber
Save the Children US, Edmonton, Canada
How to Cite:
Sami, S., Kenyi, S., Amsalu, R., Tomczyk, B., Jackson, D., Meyers, J., Greeley, M., Dimiti, A., Scudder, E. and Kerber, K., 2017. Implementing Newborn Care Services in Humanitarian Settings: Barriers and Facilitators to Implementation at the Community and Facility Level in Displaced Person Camps in South Sudan. Annals of Global Health, 83(1), p.137. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.aogh.2017.03.305
Published on
07 Apr 2017.
Peer Reviewed
Downloads