Example sentences of "[conj] [prep] health [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Certainly those working with the mentally ill or the handicapped or the senile or in health education may properly think it is .
2 ( Such specialists will have a greater degree of experience , and have completed additional education and training ; their qualifications may be disease linked , i.e. diabetic liaison , stoma care , or may represent specialist knowledge in nursing intervention or in health promotion .
3 But it should not be taken for granted that these types of programmes are the ideal and only way to approach health education , whether in schools or by health professionals .
4 Nevertheless , it 's our belief that through health promotion programmes which involve cooperation with communities themselves , that we can in fact do as much as we possibly can do to actually alleviate some of the erm differences in health status .
5 New guidance from the Department of Health says that with health authorities becoming purchasers of care from self-governing , directly managed and private hospitals , there has to be a risk of hospitals gaining a local monopoly of a particular service , or joining others in cartels .
6 However , the fact remains that under Health Service regulations he can claim £45 for every call-out between 10pm and 8am .
7 In summary , the decline and concentration of rural services has hit the most deprived sections of rural society hardest , and nowhere is this more so than in health care , where the closure of rural health facilities has meant that those in greatest need , women , the old , and the poor , now have least access to the services they need ( Haynes and Bentham , 1979 ) .
8 Alt ( 1971 , p. 60 ) has likewise shown that before Health Service reorganization in 1974 there was a ‘ consistent , positive and generally significant correlation between Labour representation and spending on local health services ’ .
9 Themselves accountable to an electorate , councillors are sceptical about the accountability of health authorities — and about health authorities knowledge of the community : to them it 's simply what happens outside hospital .
10 This is true for any social variables including social class which are not necessarily geographically robust proxies for exposure to risk factors and for health care needs .
11 fragmentation of communities and of health services .
12 In Wandsworth the attitude of the Area Health Authority and of Health Visitors was described to me by Geeta Amin , a social worker with Wandsworth Community Relations Council .
13 The next section traces the traditional arguments for and against health care markets to set against the peculiar hybrid that was introduced into the NHS .
14 For the mother who finds breast feeding terribly difficult and there are so many of these — the solemn pronouncements she will hear from her own parents and from health visitors , obstetricians and other professional people can lead to real emotional and mental suffering .
15 The informatics graduate can expect to be at the forefront of the development of new software products and tools or to follow a career in developing technology applications for a range of areas — from industry to the public sector and from health care to agriculture .
16 Family planning services are available from most GPs and from health authority family planning clinics , which also makes services available to men .
17 ‘ She is an unmarried middle-aged lady who , after having worked for some while as a district nurse and in health care nursing , in 1968 began fostering children .
18 One external institutional support that is likely to prove increasingly influential is the European Community , which is seeking to promote a ‘ social charter ’ covering rights to proper conditions of work and to health care , social security , training .
19 The other local authority welfare services , or personal social services , were organized by welfare departments and by health departments ( or by departments that combined these two functions ) .
20 Recently the government has started to implement policies which extend this principle to many of the services carried out by local authorities and by health authorities .
21 Peter Brachaki designed all the sets for the pilot episodes , but for health reasons was unavailable for the remount , and subsequently for the year-round production schedule .
22 Taking these ageist attitudes one stage further , Price and Andrews ( 1982 ) state that ‘ diagnosed alcoholism frequently is not referred for alcoholic treatment because of health professionals ’ beliefs that the alcoholic is too old to benefit from treatment' .
23 A National League for Democracy representative was " allowed to resign " from the People 's Assembly on March 4 " because of health reasons " .
24 7.2.1 At present , general practitioners are free to refer to the hospital and consultant of their choice , although in practice this freedom has been restricted in recent years , partly because of health authorities ' reluctance to accept cross-boundary patients .
25 There were n't many weighing machines in Baldersdale , but then a friend had to get one because of health problems and I turned out to be something around ten stones .
26 MIDDLESBROUGH Jazz Society was upset when Harry Edison 's European tour was cancelled because of health problems .
27 Where these conditions do not prevail — as in health care — writing , setting , and enforcing comprehensive contracts which try to predict all contingencies and deal with all possible risks becomes very difficult and costly ( Bartlett 1991 ) .
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