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Pilat, Dirk – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2016
Increasing workload due to reduced numbers of general practitioners, a population boom and an aging population has increased the need for accessible distance learning for the UK's primary care doctors. The Royal College of General Practitioners is now in its eighth year of delivering high quality e-learning to 72,000 registered users via its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Primary Health Care, Case Studies, Physicians
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Pawluch, Dorothy. – Social Problems, 1983
Examines how, as medical advances drastically reduced infant and child mortality rates, the field of pediatrics expanded from singular concern with treating children's diseases to include involvement in managing troublesome behavior. Considers the continued involvement of pediatricians in ministering to the psychosocial and behavioral needs of…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Children, Infant Mortality, Medical Services
Haber, Julian S. – 1989
This paper describes a model for the involvement of primary health care personnel in the identification and treatment of developmental disabilities as a part of early childhood intervention programs. The integrated multidisciplinary model is divided into four stages. During the first stage an assignment of prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal risk…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Early Intervention, Handicap Identification, High Risk Persons
Byrne, Michelle M. – 1987
The experiences of baccalaureate student nurses, from layperson to novice nurse, was studied. Paradigm cases of five senior and five sophomore baccalaureate students were transcribed and analyzed for common meanings and themes. The paradigms concern touching patients, giving shots/creating pain, caring for and being intimate with young patients,…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Clinical Experience, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rudd, Peter; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1981
Medication noncompliance is seen as an obstacle to successful clinical outcomes of many diseases. An exercise for preclinical medical students at Stanford University is described. Objectives include sensitizing students to the consequences of medication noncompliance, illustrating problems, and evaluating a number of compliance-related issues.…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Diseases, Drug Therapy, Drug Use
McLearn, Kathryn T.; Hughart, Nancy; Minkovitz, Cynthia; Strobino, Donna; Scharfstein, Daniel; Genevro, Janice; Benedict, Mary; Guyer, Bernard – 2000
The Healthy Steps for Young Children program is a national initiative developed by pediatricians from Boston University in collaboration with professionals from the Commonwealth Fund. This program for families with young children (birth to 3 years of age) provides developmentally--oriented services within pediatric primary care through addition of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Development Specialists, Child Health, Family Programs
Leighton, Jeannette; Sprague, Patricia – 1983
This paper describes a systematic, coordinated approach to the delivery of health and social services to the rural elderly of Maine provided by the Kennebec Valley Regional Health Agency. Four points of the model are described which distinguish it from other models of coordination: (1) a strong medical orientation in the assessment process; (2)…
Descriptors: Consumer Education, Deinstitutionalization (of Disabled), Delivery Systems, Health Services
Dresslar, Fletcher B. – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1913
The Fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography, held in Washington City in the autumn of 1912, was a notable event in the history of sanitation and in the discussion of the conditions of the physical and mental health of the people. The exhibition held in connection with the congress was instructive in many ways, and contained much…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Child Health, Public Health