Health Improvement and Innovation Resource Centre
The Health Improvement and Innovation Resource Centre (HIIRC) is your source of knowledge to improve New Zealand's health care system. Sponsored by the Ministry of Health, HIIRC has been developed to support performance and quality improvement efforts.
The Health Improvement and Innovation Resource Centre (HIIRC) is your source of knowledge to improve New Zealand's health care system. Sponsored by the Ministry of Health, HIIRC has been developed to support performance and quality improvement efforts.
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$35.5m extra for diabetes and heart disease (Budget 2013)
posted by Research Admin on 16 May 2013
Tony Ryall media release, 16 May 2013 New Zealanders with or at risk of developing diabetes and heart disease will…
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News
- $35.5m extra for diabetes and heart disease (Budget 2013)
- Mobile phone programme encourages exercise to help hearts
- Friends and family say doctors in England should give lifestyle advice to cancer patients
- Government helping more patients with high health needs
- Social media puts the public in public health information dissemination
NZ Literature Abstracts
- Effects of early exercise engagement on vascular risk in patients with transient ischemic attack and nondisabling stroke
- Regional results from the 2011/12 New Zealand Health Survey
- A randomized controlled trial to determine the effect of a model of restorative home care on physical function and social support among older people
- A qualitative study exploring patients’ experiences of standard care or cardiac rehabilitation post minor stroke and transient ischaemic attack
- The health of Pacific adults and children
International Literature
- Training practitioners to deliver opportunistic multiple behaviour change counselling in primary care: A cluster randomised trial (Wales)
- Effectiveness of an Australian designed generic self-management program for people with a chronic illness
- Chronic disease and sitting time in middle-aged Australian males: Findings from the 45 and Up Study
- A meta-analysis of health status, health behaviors, and health care utilization outcomes of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program
- Can diabetes prevention programmes be translated effectively into real-world settings and still deliver improved outcomes? A synthesis of evidence
