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| Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, Vol. 18 No. 8, 2012 |
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| Trilingual edition English/French/Arabic |
| WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean |
| WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean |
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N° de commande
04501808
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Format
Broché
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Prix
CHF
20.00
/
US$
24.00
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Pays en développement
CHF
14.00
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2012
104
pages
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| Sommaire |
The EMHJ was launched in 1995 as a peer-reviewed medical journal. Starting January 2010, the Journal has been given a new format and is now published monthly. The EMHJ serves as a forum for the dissemination of biomedical information through the publication of scientific research papers on a range of topics related to public health, with particular relevance to the Eastern Mediterranean Region.
In this month's issue: Using geographical information systems to analyse accessibility to health services in the West Bank,
Occupied Palestinian Territory; Comparison of tobacco control policies in the Eastern Mediterranean countries based on tobacco control scale scores; Controlling medicine prices in Sudan: the challenge of the recently established Medicines Regulatory Authority; Pharmaceutical representatives beliefs and practices about their professional practice: a study in Sudan; Problems and perceived needs for medical ethics education of resident physicians in Alexandria teaching hospitals, Egypt; Epidemiology of suicide and attempted suicide derived from the health system database in the Islamic Republic of Iran:2001-2007; Obesity and psychological traits associated with eating disorders among Cypriot adolescents: comparison of 2003 and 2010 cohorts; An inventory for assessment of the health needs of Iranian female adolescents; Exploring dysmenorrhoea and menstrual experiences among Lebanese female adolescents; Lessons learnt from malaria epidemics in the Islamic Republic of Iran; Test de Mantoux : quel seuil ? Pour quel but ?; Assessment of physicians knowledge and awareness about the hazards of radiological examinations on the health of their patients; Root causes for late presentation of severe neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia in Egypt; Association of ABO blood group in Iraqis with hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension and diabetes mellitus; Flexibility and pragmatism in promoting health: an experience of synergy between health and religion in the Islamic Republic of Iran; |
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