Loading...

Trends in Preventive Care Utilization

Authors

There are a total of 2 authors in the article.
Nora Nelson

Center for Health Policy, University of Cambridge, UK

Julian Carter

Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate a representative health sciences topic in a fictional journal using robust and reproducible methods.

Methods: Multicenter design with descriptive statistics and regression analyses; qualitative data were coded thematically.

Results: Findings suggest measurable improvements in key outcomes with practical implications for clinicians and policymakers.

Conclusion: This record is generated for testing OJS Native XML/DB imports; all content is fictitious and intended for system validation.

Article Details

Similar Articles

<< < 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Browse

Categories

Explore articles organized by category. Quickly access the latest studies in your area of interest.

Clinical Research

Clinical studies focusing on patients, diagnosis, and treatment.

01
Public Health

Population health, epidemiology, and preventive services.

02
Basic Science

Biology, biochemistry, physiology, and mechanism studies.

03
Nursing

Nursing practice, care models, and education.

04
Nutrition & Dietetics

Nutrition science, dietary interventions, and public nutrition.

05
Pharmacology

Drug development, mechanisms of action, and safety.

06
Health Policy & Management

Health economics, management, quality, and accreditation.

07
Epidemiology & Biostatistics

Study designs and methods for data analysis.

08
Health Informatics & AI

Digital health, EHRs, decision support, and AI applications.

09
Rehabilitation & Physiotherapy

Rehabilitation programs and physiotherapy approaches.

10
Genetics & Molecular Biology

Genomics, proteomics, and molecular diagnostics.

11

Information

For Readers

We encourage readers to register with the Archives of Health Science and Research (AHSR) to receive notifications of newly published articles and journal updates.
Registration allows readers to stay informed about the latest developments in medicine, health sciences, and public health.

By registering, readers will be able to access the Table of Contents by email for each new issue, ensuring timely updates on the journal’s content.
Please see our Privacy Policy, which guarantees that your personal information will not be used for other purposes.

For Authors

Interested in submitting to Archives of Health Science and Research (AHSR)?
Before making a submission, please review the journal’s Aims & Scope and the Author Guidelines to ensure your manuscript meets the requirements.

Authors are required to register with the journal before submitting their work. If already registered, simply log in and follow the five-step online submission process.
All manuscripts undergo a rigorous double-blind peer review to maintain the highest academic standards.

For Librarians

We encourage librarians to include Archives of Health Science and Research (AHSR) in their library’s electronic journal collections.
AHSR is an open access journal, making all content freely available to readers worldwide without subscription fees.

The journal’s open source publishing system ensures accessibility, transparency, and sustainability, making it suitable for institutional repositories and faculty use.
Libraries may also host this journal for their academic community, as recommended by the Open Journal Systems platform.

family-centered care (1)
maternal stress (1)
neonatal intensive care unit (1)
parenting self-efficacy (1)
preterm infants (1)
health services administration (1)
gender equity, health personnel (1)
qualitative research (1)
employment disparities (1)
baby-led weaning (1)
factors affecting (1)
scale (1)
healthy lifestyle behaviors (1)
older adults (1)
the risk of factors (1)
alzheimer’s disease (1)
geriatric depression scale (1)
compassion (1)
measurement tool (1)
perceived compassion (1)
perceived compassion scale (1)
exercise adherence (1)
home exercise (1)
multiple sclerosis (1)
patient compliance (1)
anxiety (1)
artificial intelligence (1)
artificial intelligence anxiety (1)
student health (1)
greek hospitals (1)
health professionals (1)
lifelong learning (1)
narrative interviews (1)
breast neoplasms (1)
lymphedema (1)
mastectomy (1)
patients (1)
self care (1)
microbiota (1)
nursing (1)
prebiotics (1)
pregnancy (1)
probiotics (1)
defensive practice (1)
scale development (1)
dupuytren’s disease (1)
extracorporeal shock wave therapy (1)
southampton dupuytren scoring scheme (1)
ergonomics (1)
musculoskeletal pain (1)

Keywords

Current Issue

ATOM 1.0

RSS 2.0

RSS 1.0

Scroll