Where are the patients in decision-making about their own care? / by Angela Coulter, Suzanne Parsons and Janet Askham

Citation
Coulter, Angela, Parsons, Suzanne, Askham, Janet, World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe, European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. et al. (2008). Where are the patients in decision-making about their own care? / by Angela Coulter, Suzanne Parsons and Janet Askham. Copenhagen : WHO Regional Office for Europe. http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/107980
Relation
Health Systems and Policy Analysis , policy brief
Description
EUR/07/506581018 p.
Gov't Doc #
EUR/07/5065810Identifiers
1997-8073Collections
Language
Englishрусский
français
Deutsch
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title and MeSH subject.
-
Ou sont les patients dans la prise de décisions concernant leurs propres soins de santé ? / Angela Coulter, Suzanne Parsons et Janet Askham
Coulter, Angela; Parsons, Suzanne; Askham, Janet; Organisation mondiale de la Santé. Bureau régional de l'Europe; European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies; Health Evidence Network (HEN) (EUR/07/5065810, 2008) -
Technical brief: HIV patient monitoring and case surveillance: using unique patient identifiers for person-centred HIV patient monitoring and case surveillance
World Health Organization (WHO/HIV/2017.14, 2017) -
Gender differences in factors associated with patients' decisions to seek treatment for urinary incontinence in Alexandria, Egypt
Mohamed, A.M.; Hassouna, M.S.; Kassem, M.S. (2010)The objective of this descriptive, hospital-based comparative cross-sectional survey was to determine gender differences in factors associated with patients' decisions to seek treatment for urinary incontinence [Ul]. Using an interview questionnaire, data were collected from 353 patients attending clinics at hospitals in Alexandria, Egypt. There were differences between males and females regarding specific psychosocial factors motivating health care seeking behaviour. Women had fewer hospital admissions and hospital days and less use of diagnostic ...