Search

Showing total 17 results
17 results

Search Results

1. Supplier-induced demand: re-examining identification and misspecification in cross-sectional analysis.

2. Show Me the Money! Trends in Funding for Health Services Research.

3. Exploring the role of physician associates in Aotearoa New Zealand primary health care.

4. Health care availability, quality, and unmet need: a comparison of transgender and cisgender residents of Ontario, Canada.

5. How should health service organizations respond to diversity? A content analysis of six approaches.

6. Team Size and Composition in Home Healthcare: Quantitative Insights and Six Model-Based Principles.

7. Toward a VA Women's Health Research Agenda: setting evidence-based priorities to improve the health and health care of women veterans.

8. Sustainability in Health care by Allocating Resources Effectively (SHARE) 8: developing, implementing and evaluating an evidence dissemination service in a local healthcare setting.

9. Barriers and facilitators to health care access for people experiencing homelessness in four European countries: an exploratory qualitative study.

10. Remotely Supervised Exercise Programmes to Improve Balance, Mobility, and Activity Among People with Moderate to Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: Description and Feasibility.

11. Willingness-to-pay and demand curves: a comparison of results obtained using different elicitation formats.

12. Differences between Proxy and Patient Assessments of Cancer Care Experiences and Quality Ratings.

13. Primary care for refugees and newly arrived migrants in Europe: a qualitative study on health needs, barriers and wishes.

14. Distribution of health care resources in Mongolia using the Gini coefficient.

15. Central intake to improve access to physiotherapy for children with complex needs: a mixed methods case report.

16. Evaluation of moral case deliberation at the Dutch Health Care Inspectorate: a pilot study.

17. Impact on and use of health services by international migrants: questionnaire survey of inner city London A&E attenders.