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COVID-19 Clinical Solutions
Table of Contents
May 2004;
Volume 54,
Issue 502
May Focus
You have access
May Focus
David Jewell
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
329.
Editorials
You have access
Does Advanced Access work for patients and practices?
Chris Salisbury
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
330-331.
You have access
The work of the National Patient Safety Agency to improve medication safety
David H Cousins
and
Maureen Baker
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
331-333.
Original papers
You have access
Evaluation of Advanced Access in the National Primary Care Collaborative
Mark Pickin
,
Alicia O'Cathain
,
Fiona C Sampson
and
Simon Dixon
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
334-340.
You have access
Are NHS primary care performance indicator scores acceptable as markers of general practitioner quality?
Guy Houghton
and
Andrew Rouse
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
341-344.
You have access
Incidence and prevalence of drug-treated attention deficit disorder among boys in the UK
Hershel Jick
,
James A Kaye
and
Corri Black
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
345-347.
You have access
Detection of child mental health disorders by general practitioners
Kapil Sayal
and
Eric Taylor
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
348-352.
You have access
Diagnosing menstrual disorders: a qualitative study of the approach of primary care professionals
Norma O'Flynn
and
Nicky Britten
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
353-358.
You have access
An epidemiological survey of symptoms of menstrual loss in the community
Mark Shapley
,
Kelvin Jordan
and
Peter R Croft
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
359-363.
Brief reports
You have access
Problems with a ‘target’ approach to access in primary care: a qualitative study
Kate Windridge
,
Carolyn Tarrant
,
George K Freeman
,
Richard Baker
,
Mary Boulton
and
Janet Low
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
364-366.
You have access
Open-access versus bookable appointment systems: survey of patients attending appointments with general practitioners
Shane W Pascoe
,
Richard D Neal
and
Victoria L Allgar
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
367-369.
You have access
Impact of the CSM advice on thioridazine on general practitioner prescribing behaviour in Leeds: time series analysis
Commentary
Nat M J Wright
,
Michael J Campbell
,
Alison J Roberts
,
Victoria L Allgar
,
Charlotte N E Tompkins
,
Darren C Greenwood
and
Gillian Laurence
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
370-373.
Review paper
You have access
Systematic review of recent innovations in service provision to improve access to primary care
Jenifer L Chapman
,
Annegret Zechel
,
Yvonne H Carter
and
Stephen Abbott
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
374-381.
Recent advances in primary care
You have access
Sexual health
Anna Graham
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
382-387.
Letters
You have access
Predictions — past and present
Stephen Hall
and
Clive Hartshorn
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
388.
You have access
Administering controlled drugs in general practice
Peter Perkins
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
388-389.
You have access
The Shipman Inquiry
John Holden
and
Seamus O'Donnell
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
389.
You have access
Fat intake and diabetes
JS Maken
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
389.
You have access
Changes in perception of workload
Chris Gunstone
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
389-390.
You have access
GP workloads in Europe
Francesco Carelli
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
390.
The Back Pages
You have access
Expert patients?
Mike Fitzpatrick
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
405.
You have access
diary
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
407.
You have access
Spam, spam, spam, spam, spam …
Neville Goodman
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
407.
You have access
Target the weather
Saul Miller
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
408.
viewpoint
You have access
Centres of excellence verus community critical care
Patrick Trust
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
397.
news
You have access
Decisions and elevators
Andre Kruger
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
398.
flora medica
theophrastus bombastus
You have access
From the journals, March 2004
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
399.
essay 1
You have access
Why medicine still needs a scientific foundation: restating the hypotheticodeductive model — part one
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
400-401.
essay 2
You have access
Why medicine still needs a scientific foundation: restating the hypotheticodeductive model — part two
Kevork Hopayian
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
402-403.
essay 3
You have access
Commentary 1
Cary A Brown
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
404.
You have access
Commentary 2
James Willis
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
404-405.
matters arising
You have access
Faking it further
Iain Bamforth
British Journal of General Practice
2004;
54
(502):
406-407.
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In this issue
British Journal of General Practice
Vol. 54
,
Issue 502
May 2004
Table of Contents
Index by author
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eLetters
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Reducing physical health inequities in people with severe mental illness
Innovating to find the right way to left shift
Continuity of care. GP working patterns contribute to its loss
The forgotten 30% in our prisons
Continuity in general practice: time for a broader definition
Jump to
May Focus
Editorials
Original papers
Brief reports
Review paper
Recent advances in primary care
Letters
The Back Pages
viewpoint
news
flora medica
theophrastus bombastus
essay 1
essay 2
essay 3
matters arising
Intended for Healthcare Professionals