Adding aging and gender to the women's health agenda

scientific article

Adding aging and gender to the women's health agenda is …
instance of (P31):
review articleQ7318358
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1300/J074V13N02_02
P698PubMed publication ID11569592

P2093author name stringWeitz T
Estes CL
P2860cites workThe economic value of informal caregivingQ28139578
Socioeconomic status and health. The challenge of the gradientQ34336790
Demographic issues in Medicare reformQ40826363
Managed care and Medicare reformQ40898768
Sleep complaints in older women who are family caregiversQ41671153
Caregivers of the frail elderly: a national profileQ44828059
Older women's health and access to careQ46910288
Health care for the elderly: how much? Who will pay for it?Q50536649
Differences between and within genders in caregiving strain: a comparison between caregivers of demented and non-caregivers of non-demented elderly people.Q50855823
Health effects of caregiving: the caregiver health effects study: an ancillary study of the Cardiovascular Health Study.Q52002065
US Socioeconomic and Racial Differences in Health: Patterns and ExplanationsQ57483559
P433issue2
P304page(s)3-20
P577publication date2001-01-01
P1433published inJournal of Women and AgingQ15763605
P1476titleAdding aging and gender to the women's health agenda
P478volume13

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q36217753Engendering health disparities.
Q38128847Long-term care for older lesbian and bisexual women: an analysis of current research and policy
Q28196765Quality of health care for older women: what do we know?
Q41549491Social integration and health insurance status among African American men and women
Q47927076Toward a gender politics of aging

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