Malta Survey of Family Planning 1993
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Milne RG, Wright RE, University of Glasgow, University of Stirling. Malta Survey of Family Planning 1993.
Milne RG, Wright RE, University of Glasgow, University of Stirling. Malta Survey of Family Planning 1993.
The Scottish Government utilizes the Scottish Health Survey (SHeS) to evaluate and monitor the health of its citizens. First conducted in 1995, the SHeS has been carried out continuously since 2008. In the first stage of each survey, data are collected through face-to-face interviews with adults ages 16+ and children ages 0-15 in private households. A set of core questions is used every year in the adult questionnaire, though rotating modules of additional questions are used for different sub-samples of this population. The same questions are used each year for the child interview. Biological samples (saliva, urine) and physical measurements are collected in the survey's second stage.
For the 2012 SHeS, 9,358 households and 6,602 individuals were sampled. The survey covered general health, respiratory symptoms and asthma, physical activity, eating habits, tobacco and alcohol use, prescription drug use, and anxiety and depression.
This is the third national oral health survey in Oman, and the coverage focused on 15-year-olds.
The Scottish Government utilizes the Scottish Health Survey (SHeS) to evaluate and monitor the health of its citizens. First conducted in 1995, the SHeS has been carried out continuously since 2008. In the first stage of each survey, data are collected through face-to-face interviews with adults ages 16+ and children ages 0-15 in private households. A set of core questions is used every year in the adult questionnaire, though rotating modules of additional questions are used for different sub-samples of this population. The same questions are used each year for the child interview. Biological samples (saliva, urine) and physical measurements are collected in the survey's second stage.
For the 2012 SHeS, 9,358 households and 6,602 individuals were sampled. The survey covered general health, respiratory symptoms and asthma, physical activity, eating habits, tobacco and alcohol use, prescription drug use, and anxiety and depression.
ScotCen Social Research, University College London. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health and University of Glasgow. MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, Scottish Health Survey, 2012 [computer file]. 2nd Edition. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive [distributor], January 2014. SN: 7417, http://dx.doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-7417-2