Items where Research Area is "Research Areas > Primary care and other community based clinical subjects"
Jump to: 1997 Number of items: 9. 1997Bowling, A and Windsor, J (1997) Discriminative power of the health status questionnaire 12 in relation to age, sex, and longstanding illness: findings from a survey of households in Great Britain. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 51(5), pp. 564-573. ISSN (print) 0143-005X Bowling, Ann and Grundy, Emily (1997) Activities of daily living: changes in functional ability in three samples of elderly and very elderly people. Age and Ageing, 26(2), pp. 107-114. ISSN (print) 0002-0729 Bowling, Ann, Stramer, Katia, Dickinson, Edward, Windsor, Joy and Bond, Matthew (1997) Evaluation of specialists' outreach clinics in general practice in England: process and acceptability to patients, specialists, and general practitioners. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 51(1), pp. 52-61. ISSN (print) 0143-005X Bowling, Ann, Grundy, Emily and Farquhar, Morag (1997) Living well into old age: three studies of health and well-being among older people in East London and Essex. (Project Report) York, U.K. : Age Concern. 64 p. ISBN 9780862422431 Bowling, Ann (1997) Rationing health care. Access to treatment should be equal, regardless of age. British Medical Journal (BMJ), 314(7098), p. 1901. ISSN (print) 0959-8138 Crawley, H. (1997) Dietary and lifestyle differences between Scottish teenagers and those living in England and Wales. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 51(2), pp. 87-91. ISSN (print) 0954-3007 Crawley, H. and Summerbell, C. (1997) Feeding frequency and BMI among teenagers aged 16-17 years. International Journal of Obesity, 21(2), pp. 159-161. ISSN (print) 0307-0565 Frischer, Martin, Goldberg, David, Rahman, Mohammed and Berney, Lee (1997) Mortality and survival among a cohort of drug injectors in Glasgow, 1982-1994. Addiction, 92(4), pp. 419-427. ISSN (print) 0965-2140 Ross, Fiona and Tissier, Josephine (1997) The care management interface with general practice: a case study. Health & Social Care in the Community, 5(3), pp. 153-161. ISSN (print) 0966-0410 |