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An analysis of utilization of health services by the elderly in Canada /Newman, Edward, 1957- January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Determinants of health care seeking behaviour in the Pahou PHC project in the People's Republic of Benin : an exploratory studyBelanger, Marc Andrew January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Beyond Access to Health Care: Institutional and Cultural Barriers Experienced by Mexican Americans in a Southwestern CommunityEstrada, Antonio L. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Household participation in health development : some determining factorsPappoe, Matilda Ethel January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Household participation in health development : some determining factorsPappoe, Matilda Ethel January 1993 (has links)
This dissertation has explored the problem of a yawning gap between policy and the implementation of lay participation in health development activities in Ghana, using data from 577 households in 22 rural communities. / A Health Systems model has been applied to data, to explain relationships and four sets of variables--household need for health services, predisposing attributes, participatory patterns, enabling factors--on household use of available health facilities and services. / Overall, results indicate a complex interdependence of factors which influence modern health services use. A multiple regression procedure identifies the presence of children under 5 years, the household's perception of its influence in the community, household participation in community health-related activities, household socio-economic and educational levels, to be significantly related to services use. Results suggest that Need for services is Not a sufficient condition for the Use of available health services.
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Age and presence of chronic conditions, education and the health system reform : impact on utilization of health care services by the Canadian elderlyRochon, Sophie January 2003 (has links)
This study examines the importance of age, education, and the health system reforms in the mid 1990's on the utilization of five health services: specialists' visits, family doctor visits, non-physician health professional visits, hospital use, and home care services. The analysis focuses on the Canadians 45 and over, and uses data from the National Population Health Survey. / Results. Age per se has only a minor effect on utilization; the relative high utilization rates observed among the aged relate to the use of services by people with chronic conditions, whose prevalence is higher among the aged. Education has little impact on use of services among the aged. The reforms had only significant effect for four services. They increased utilization of non-medical health professional consults, and increased probability of consulting a specialist. They reduced length of stay, and decreased the number of visits made to family doctors.
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The effect of the Prepaid Health Care Act on the demand for health insurance, demand for medical services and labor force utilization in HawaiʻiJabbar, Abdul, 1962 January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references. / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / vii, 188 leaves, bound ill. (some col.) 29 cm
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Locus of Control of Reinforcement Applied to the Prediction of Use of Medical ServicesFlynn, Michael Howard 05 1900 (has links)
Increases in the number of users of the medical delivery system, along with an ever-increasing variety of available services, makes it desirable to identify those individuals who will benefit most from its services. With the growing reliance on third party payment, economic limitations no longer effectively restrict the use of the system's resources to those individuals who are truly ill. A framework is needed whereby individuals who are medically ill can be separated from those whose needs might be more effectively addressed by other services. A variety of means, including locus of control, has been used in the attempt to make such discriminations. In conclusion, it was observed that the low magnitude of obtained relationships presents opportunities for future research, but disallows meaningful prediction at the present time.
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Social work intervention and patients' utilization of the Kaiser health care systemSten, Pegi, Young, Liz Swint 01 January 1977 (has links)
This study was an analysis of social work practice in a medical setting: analyzing the work of a medical social worker in an outpatient clinic located in a metropolitan area. The primary purpose of this descriptive study was to evaluate the performance of a medical social worker in a Kaiser-Permanente outpatient clinic and to determine if there were possible associations between social work intervention and patient utilization of existing services offered by the Kaiser Health Care system, also referred to herein as Kaiser. Specifically, the study attempted to determine if there were quantitative changes in patient contacts, and utilization of certain services such as clinic visits, telephone contacts, prescriptions, emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and physicians seen before and after social worker intervention. If there were changes, what were the direction and quantity? Did changes vary according to type of service? Did patient utilization of medical care vary according to the number of social work contacts?
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Age and presence of chronic conditions, education and the health system reform : impact on utilization of health care services by the Canadian elderlyRochon, Sophie January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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