Browsing Psychology (Scholarly Publications) by Author "MANNAN, HASHEEM"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
- Sort by:
- title
- issue date
- submit date
- Order:
- ascending
- descending
- Results:
- 5
- 10
- 20
- 40
- 60
- 80
- 100
-
Access to health care of persons with disabilities as an indicator of equity in health systems
MAC LACHLAN, MALCOLM; MANNAN, HASHEEM (2011)The outcomes of certain health services can be used to assess the overall effectiveness of a health care system. For example, maternal mortality is an indicator of the quality of a country?s maternal health services, which ... -
The EquiFrame Manual: A tool for Evaluating and Promoting the Inclusion of Vulnerable Groups and Core Concepts of Human Rights in Health Policy Documents
MANNAN, HASHEEM; MAC LACHLAN, MALCOLM (The Global Health Press, 2011)The purpose of this manual is to outline an analytical framework for assessing the degree to which social inclusion and human rights feature in policy and policy-related documents. The framework was developed with ... -
EquiFrame: A framework for analysis of the inclusion of human rights and vulnerable groups in health policies.
MANNAN, HASHEEM; MAC LACHLAN, MALCOLM (2011)Ensuring that health policies uphold core concepts of human rights and are inclusive of vulnerable groups are imperative aspects of providing equity in health care, and of realizing the United Nations? call for Health for ... -
A framework for analysis of the inclusion of human rights and vulnerable groups in health policies
MANNAN, HASHEEM; MacLachlan, Malcolm; McVeigh, Joanne (2011)Ensuring that health policies uphold core concepts of human rights and are inclusive of vulnerable groups are imperative aspects of providing equity in health care, and of realizing the United Nations? call for Health for ... -
Moving from family care to residential and supported accommodation: a national, longitudinal study of people with intellectual disabilities
MANNAN, HASHEEM (American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD), 2011)A cohort of nearly 11,000 persons was traced over 8 years to determine those who had moved from family care and those who had remained. The majority (85%) continued to live with families, and, for two thirds (67%), no ...