Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2.Acr    |       European Rural and Isolated Practitioners Association~FGM~Female Genital
 2    I,     2.  7    |       European Rural and Isolated Practitioners Association, estimates that
 3   II,     5.  5.Acr|       Mental Disorders~GP~General Practitioners~ICT~Information and Communication
 4   II,     5.  5.  1|          contacts were to General Practitioners (GP) only.~ ~Table 5.5.1.
 5   II,     5.  5.  3|       from hospital registers and practitioners. Hospital registers and
 6   II,     5.  5.  3|    registers and information from practitioners, however, consist of data
 7   II,     5.  5.  3|           the practice of general practitioners. ~Poland~ ~X~In Poland there
 8   II,     5.  5.  3|         all or treated by general practitioners) are only included in few
 9   II,     5.  5.  3|       education and commissioning practitioners; awareness-raising work
10   II,     5.  5.  3|           6-14 years GP = General practitioners CM = Community members (*)
11   II,     5.  6.  3|         of patients presenting to practitioners of the major complementary
12   II,     5.  6.  6| complementary medicine. Users and practitioners of complementary medicine.
13   II,     5.  7.  3|  information derived from general practitioners data-bases. Data from other
14   II,     5.  9.  3|      national database of general practitioners. As acknowledged by the
15   II,     5.  9.  5|       with the support of general practitioners and nurses. General practitioners
16   II,     5.  9.  5| practitioners and nurses. General practitioners should encourage a personal
17   II,     5.  9.  5|       care level in which general practitioners, paediatricians and nurses
18   II,     5.  9.  7|      national database of general practitioners. Allergy. May;62(5):569-
19   II,     5. 11.  7|          Royal College of General Practitioners (1986): Morbidity Statistic
20   II,     7.  5    |           makers, researchers and practitioners at all levels, information
21   II,     9.  2.  3|          by individual countriespractitioners, but yet again there are
22   II,     9.  3.  1|      extracting data from general practitioners or hospital records. These
23  III,    10.  2.  1| specialised centres or by general practitioners to a growing number of individuals.
24  III,    10.  2.  1|       inspiring policy-makers and practitioners from the transport, health
25  III,    10.  2.  1|         warrants the attention of practitioners and public health workers
26  III,    10.  2.  1|   catering community, via general practitioners, day centres, pharmacies,
27  III,    10.  2.  4|      prevention but Public Health practitioners so far seem to be reluctant
28  III,    10.  2.  4|      prevention but Public Health practitioners so far seem to be reluctant
29  III,    10.  2.  4|         judgements, Public Health practitioners will need to integrate information
30  III,    10.  4.  2|       make demands on food safety practitioners, new challenges associated
31  III,    10.  5.  2|          the fact that healthcare practitioners in rural areas need to deal
32  III,    10.  5.  2|       European Rural and Isolated Practitioners Association~Eurofound:~European
33  III,    10.  6.  2|           among policy makers and practitioners, so that other policy sectors
34   IV,    11.  2.  1|     physicians, i.e. both general practitioners and specialists). Countries
35   IV,    11.  3.  1|        are separated into general practitioners and specialists, a relatively
36   IV,    11.  6.  5|        What makes British general practitioners take part in a quality improvement
37   IV,    12. 10    |          Act 2007:~htt 20~Medical Practitioners Act 2007: htt 25~Investment
38   IV,    13.  6.  2|         of generic family general practitioners, with whom the whole family
39  Key,   Ap5.  0.  0|       porphyrias~Portugal~poverty~practitioners~prader-willi~predisposition~