Fundamentals
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.
Important note: This site is no longer being actively maintained and is presented here as an online archive. While it still contains a wealth of useful information, visitors who want to receive the latest health information should register to receive the fortnightly email Digest. This will link you directly to articles of interest in the key areas covered by this site. You can register for the Digest here.
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.
Important note: This site is no longer being actively maintained and is presented here as an online archive. While it still contains a wealth of useful information, visitors who want to receive the latest health information should register to receive the fortnightly email Digest. This will link you directly to articles of interest in the key areas covered by this site. You can register for the Digest here.
What's on top
Latest
International Literature
School-based promotion of cessation support: Reach of proactive mailings and acceptability of treatment in smoking parents recruited into cessation support through primary schools (Netherlands)
posted by Research Admin on 2013-05-09 13:35:29.738
This study evaluated the efficiency of using study invitation letters distributed through primary schools in recruiting smoking parents into cessation…
NZ Literature Abstract
Healthy relationships? An examination of Health and Physical Education school-provider relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand
posted by Research Admin on 2014-09-17 15:44:42.206
This study sought to develop a greater understanding of the relationships involved in the use of programmes created by external…
