Research Topics
| Inger B ScheelSummaryAffiliation: Norwegian Directorate for Health and Social Welfare Country: Norway Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
Blind faith? The effects of promoting active sick leave for back pain patients: a cluster-randomized controlled trialInger B Scheel
Department of Social Services Research, Norwegian Directorate for Health and Social Welfare, Oslo, Norway
Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 27:2734-40. 2002..A cluster-randomized controlled trial...
The unbearable lightness of healthcare policy making: a description of a process aimed at giving it some weightI B Scheel
Department of Social Services Research, Norwegian Directorate for Health and Social Affairs, Oslo, Norway
J Epidemiol Community Health 57:483-7. 2003..To investigate whether a structured process to involve policy makers in designing a research project on a return to work insurance policy would yield evidence that was relevant, useful, and used in policy decisions...
Active sick leave for patients with back pain: all the players onside, but still no actionInger B Scheel
Health Services Research Unit, National Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway
Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 27:654-9. 2002..Semistructured interviews, group discussions, and a mailed survey...
A randomized controlled trial of two strategies to implement active sick leave for patients with low back painInger B Scheel
Health Services Research Unit, National Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway
Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 27:561-6. 2002..Cluster randomized controlled trial...
Back pain and health policy research: the what, why, how, who, and whenMary Wyatt
Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 29:E468-75. 2004..A background literature, supported by discussion and outcomes on the subject of Health Policy and Back Pain, from the Fifth International Forum on Low Back Pain Research in Primary Care, in Montreal in May 2002...
