Showing 321 - 340 results of 1,615 for search '"British ', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
  1. 321
  2. 322
  3. 323
  4. 324
  5. 325
  6. 326

    Capacity Enhancement of Hepatitis C Virus Treatment through Integrated, Community-Based Care by Warren D Hill, Gail Butt, Maria Alvarez, Mel Krajden

    Published 2008-01-01
    “…The present study describes a cohort of individuals with HCV referred to community-based, integrated prevention and care projects developed in British Columbia. Treatment outcomes are reported for a subset of individuals undergoing antiviral therapy at four project sites.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 327
  8. 328
  9. 329
  10. 330
  11. 331
  12. 332
  13. 333
  14. 334
  15. 335
  16. 336
  17. 337
  18. 338
  19. 339

    Health-related adverse work outcomes associated with post COVID-19 condition: a cross-sectional study by Peter M Smith, Hind Sbihi, Wei Zhang, Adeera Levin, Naveed Z Janjua, Hiten Naik, Bingyue Zhu, Lee Er, Karen Tran

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…This study aimed to assess health-related adverse work outcomes in individuals with a PCC history compared with others who had COVID-19.Methods This was a cross-sectional study in which participants in British Columbia (BC) completed an online questionnaire. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 340

    Practice patterns among early-career primary care (ECPC) physicians and workforce planning implications: protocol for a mixed methods study by Richard J Gibson, Tara Sampalli, Tara Kiran, Richard H Glazier, Agnes Grudniewicz, Kimberlyn McGrail, David Snadden, Ian Scott, M Ruth Lavergne, Laurie J Goldsmith, David Rudoler, Emily Gard Marshall, Megan Ahuja, Doug Blackie, Fred Burge, Steve Hawrylyshyn, Lindsay Hedden, Jacalynne Hernandez-Lee, Kathleen Horrey, Mike Joyce, Adrian MacKenzie, Maria Mathews, Rita McCracken, Madeleine McKay, Charmaine McPherson, Goldis Mitra, Gail Tomblin Murphy, Sabrina T Wong

    Published 2019-09-01
    “…The goal of this study is to inform primary care planning by: (1) identifying values and preferences shaping the practice intentions and choices of family medicine residents and early career PCPs, (2) comparing practice patterns of early-career and established PCPs to determine if changes over time reflect cohort effects (attributes unique to the most recent cohort of PCPs) or period effects (changes over time across all PCPs) and (3) integrating findings to understand the dynamics among practice intentions, practice choices and practice patterns and to identify policy implications.Methods and analysis We plan a mixed-methods study in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Ontario and Nova Scotia. We will conduct semi-structured in-depth interviews with family medicine residents and early-career PCPs and analyse survey data collected by the College of Family Physicians of Canada. …”
    Get full text
    Article