Web Images Videos Maps News Shopping Gmail more »
Sign in
Scholar Home  
  Advanced Scholar Search
Scholar Preferences
Scholar Results 1 - 10 of 10 citing Bloor: Gender and variation in activity rates of hospital consultants. (0.08 sec) 

Are there too many female medical graduates? Yes


B McKinstry - British Medical Journal, 2008 - bmj.com
Over the past 30 years the proportion of women attending medical schools has
steadily risen in many countries including the UK, US, Canada, and Australia. 1
2 In 2002-3, all UK medical schools had more female students than male, ...
Cited by 14 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions

Doctors with difficulties: why so few women?


J Firth-Cozens - British Medical Journal, 2008 - pmj.bmj.com
The National Clinical Assessment Service (NCAS), an NHS organisation that
assesses doctors and dentists referred to them because of perceived
difficulties, has produced a report describing data arising from its first ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 5 versions

[PDF] Women and medicine: the future


MA Elston - London: Royal College of Physicians, 2009 - rcpsg.ac.uk
The Royal College of Physicians plays a leading role in the delivery of high
quality patient care by setting standards of medical practice and promoting
clinical excellence. We provide physicians in the United Kingdom and ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions

Does it matter that medical graduates don't get jobs as doctors? No


A Maynard - British Medical Journal, 2008 - bmj.com
Senseless waste This situation is impossible to defend on any front. It is
completely incoherent in policy terms; we carefully planned and invested to
achieve greater medical self reli- ance and thereby protect other ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 4 versions

Widening Participation in Medical Education: Challenging Elitism and Exclusion


K Boursicot, T Roberts - Higher Education Policy, 2009 - ingentaconnect.com
In this paper, we examine issues relating to the enduring nature of elitism and
exclusion in medical education by exploring the changes in social and policy
influences on the admission and inclusion of women and disabled people to ...
Related articles - All 4 versions

Measuring productivity


S Gray - JRSM, 2008 - jrsm.rsmjournals.com
Bloor et al. 1 report that men have significantly higher activity rates than
women after accounting for age, specialty and Trust (JRSM 2008;101:27–33). No
account is taken of the varying number of sessions (or programmed activity ...
Related articles - All 6 versions

mini-PAT (Peer Assessment Tool): a well kept secret?


J Archer - training, 2005 - jrsm.rsmjournals.com
Measuring productivity Bloor et al.1 report that men have significantly higher
activity rates than women after accounting for age, specialty and Trust (JRSM
2008;101:27–33). No account is taken of the varying number of sessions ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 6 versions

Women in medicine


S Ward - Obstetrics, Gynaecology & Reproductive Medicine, 2008 - Elsevier
Career progression and opportunities for women in medicine have been under
discussion in the media recently since the publication of a chapter called
“Opportunity Blocks” in the Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer ...
Related articles - All 3 versions

[PDF] Vårdval Stockholm= 08-Protos


MIN DOKTOR - lakartidningen.se
F örändringar sker nu i svensk primärvård i ett sällan skådat tempo. Olika
typer av vårdval, listsystem, nya ersättnings- system etc införs i olika
lands- ting. Vi som har arbetat i flera decennier i svensk primär- vård ...
Related articles - View as HTML

[PDF] Moderniseringen av NHS är av intresse


L Werkö - lakartidningen.se
■ Jag tackar för ordförandens utförliga svar [1] om vad som har gjorts och
vilka Läkarför- bundets ambitioner är när det gäller både kvinnliga
läkare och allmänläkare. Vad jag sak- nar är i vad mån dessa ambi- ...
Related articles - View as HTML


 


Go to Google Home - About Google - About Google Scholar

©2009 Google