Patient agendas in primary care

scientific article published on May 2006

Patient agendas in primary care is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1136/BMJ.332.7552.1225
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_aabaijqtejdc7ffm7cmmaharp4
P932PMC publication ID1471983
P698PubMed publication ID16735307
P5875ResearchGate publication ID7048156

P50authorWilliam HamiltonQ42426836
P2093author name stringNicky Britten
P2860cites workThe ecology of medical care revisitedQ44160909
Patient-practitioner agreement: does it matter?Q73091271
Closing medical encounters: two physician practices and their implications for the expression of patients' unstated concernsQ74290921
Effect of patient completed agenda forms and doctors' education about the agenda on the outcome of consultations: randomised controlled trialQ34647105
Diagnosis of colorectal cancer in primary care: the evidence base for guidelines.Q35647676
Randomised controlled trial of effect of leaflets to empower patients in consultations in primary careQ36235041
Importance of patient pressure and perceived pressure and perceived medical need for investigations, referral, and prescribing in primary care: nested observational study.Q36235045
Rectal bleeding: prevalence and consultation behaviourQ36904716
Patients' unvoiced agendas in general practice consultations: qualitative studyQ37330631
P433issue7552
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)1225-1226
P577publication date2006-05-01
P1433published inThe BMJQ546003
P1476titlePatient agendas in primary care
P478volume332

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q34517274'I didn't want her to panic': unvoiced patient agendas in primary care consultations when consulting about antidepressants
Q30493776Delivering the WISE (Whole Systems Informing Self-Management Engagement) training package in primary care: learning from formative evaluation
Q33339037Effectiveness of mobile-phone short message service (SMS) reminders for ophthalmology outpatient appointments: observational study
Q52372587Factors influencing recording of drug misuse in primary care: a qualitative study of GPs in England.
Q36163358Symptom appraisal and healthcare-seeking for symptoms suggestive of colorectal cancer: a qualitative study

Search more.