This publication is the 23rd in the General Practice Series produced by the Australian General Practice Statistics and Classification Centre, a collaborating unit of the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the University of Sydney. It presents results from each of the ten years of the BEACH program, April 1998 to March 2008. There have been 9,875 participating GPs who have provided details of almost 1 million GP-patient encounters, made up of ten annual samples of about 100,000 encounters records from around 1,000 randomly selected general practitioners. Results are provided for the more frequent events occurring in general practice in any of the ten years of the study. Readers can review changes that have occurred over the decad...
This study aimed to describe patient-reported management of behavioural risk factors in Australian g...
evaluate changes in Australian general practice, and to determine the effects of these changes on th...
Background: Detection of lifestyle risk factors by GPs is the first step required for intervention. ...
Data reported by 1,017 general practitioners on 101,700 GP-patient encounters are used to describe a...
This publication is the 22nd in the General practice series produced by the Australian General Pract...
This report presents results from the eleventh year of the BEACH program, a national study of genera...
This report highlights changes in general practice activity in Australia over the most recent decade...
This book presents ten years of data from the BEACH (Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health) pr...
This report provides the first picture of the activities of general practice in each state and terri...
Drawing on April 2004 to March 2005 data from 953 general practitioners on 95,300 GP-patient encount...
This report will be made available in full on TUESDAY 30 AUGUST 2016. This report is the 41st and la...
To estimate prevalence of chronic conditions among patients seeing a general practitioner (GP), pati...
a continuous national study of general practice activity General practice is recognised as the first...
<strong>Background</strong> We analysed Australian general practice (GP) publications in PubMed from...
The number of data-based research articles focusing on patient sociodemographic profiling and experi...
This study aimed to describe patient-reported management of behavioural risk factors in Australian g...
evaluate changes in Australian general practice, and to determine the effects of these changes on th...
Background: Detection of lifestyle risk factors by GPs is the first step required for intervention. ...
Data reported by 1,017 general practitioners on 101,700 GP-patient encounters are used to describe a...
This publication is the 22nd in the General practice series produced by the Australian General Pract...
This report presents results from the eleventh year of the BEACH program, a national study of genera...
This report highlights changes in general practice activity in Australia over the most recent decade...
This book presents ten years of data from the BEACH (Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health) pr...
This report provides the first picture of the activities of general practice in each state and terri...
Drawing on April 2004 to March 2005 data from 953 general practitioners on 95,300 GP-patient encount...
This report will be made available in full on TUESDAY 30 AUGUST 2016. This report is the 41st and la...
To estimate prevalence of chronic conditions among patients seeing a general practitioner (GP), pati...
a continuous national study of general practice activity General practice is recognised as the first...
<strong>Background</strong> We analysed Australian general practice (GP) publications in PubMed from...
The number of data-based research articles focusing on patient sociodemographic profiling and experi...
This study aimed to describe patient-reported management of behavioural risk factors in Australian g...
evaluate changes in Australian general practice, and to determine the effects of these changes on th...
Background: Detection of lifestyle risk factors by GPs is the first step required for intervention. ...