Sally Lindsay

Summary

Affiliation: University of Salford
Country: UK

Publications

  1. ncbi The feminization of the physician assistant profession
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social, Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, The Crescent, England, UK
    Women Health 41:37-61. 2005
  2. ncbi Gender differences in rural and urban practice location among mid-level health care providers
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social, Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, United Kingdom
    J Rural Health 23:72-6. 2007
  3. ncbi Enabling healthy choices: is ICT the highway to health improvement?
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, UK
    Health (London) 12:313-31. 2008

Detail Information

Publications3

  1. ncbi The feminization of the physician assistant profession
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social, Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, The Crescent, England, UK
    Women Health 41:37-61. 2005
    ..Although women tend to concentrate in practice areas of women and children's health, evidence suggests that they are moving beyond these traditional roles into areas such as internal medicine and surgery...
  2. ncbi Gender differences in rural and urban practice location among mid-level health care providers
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social, Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, United Kingdom
    J Rural Health 23:72-6. 2007
    ..Although women comprise the majority of mid-level providers, they are less likely to work in a rural area than men. Maldistribution of health providers between urban and rural practices is an important issue influencing health care...
  3. ncbi Enabling healthy choices: is ICT the highway to health improvement?
    Sally Lindsay
    Institute for Social Cultural and Policy Research, University of Salford, UK
    Health (London) 12:313-31. 2008
    ..Specifically, they reported eating ;bad foods' (such as chips, sweets, crisps, fried foods, ready meals and cakes/biscuits) significantly less often compared to the controls...