Search for dissertations about: "GIS Health"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 31 swedish dissertations containing the words GIS Health.
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1. Commuting, Health, and Wellbeing : Mode and duration matters
Abstract : Allt fler personer reser allt längre sträckor för att ta sig till och från jobbet. En starkt bidragande orsak till detta är en strävan att öka den ekonomiska tillväxten genom att göra arbetskraften tillgänglig över allt större geografiska områden. READ MORE
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2. The Use of GIS in Assessing Exposure to Airborne Pollutants
Abstract : GIS (Geographical Information System) has become a valuable tool in air pollution exposure assessment studies due to its abilities to accurately model and estimate exposure for large populations and areas. The general aim of the work presented in this thesis was to investigate the factors that affect the validity and precision in the assessment of human exposure to airborne pollution using GIS. READ MORE
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3. Neighborhood environment and physical activity
Abstract : Introduction Insufficient levels of physical activity are one of the top contributors to global mortality, and it is an important public health priority to increase the proportion of physically active people in the population. The interest in environmental determinants of physical activity has been rapidly increasing over the past few years. READ MORE
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4. Planning for equitable emergency health care : Assessing the geography of ambulance supply and demand in Sweden
Abstract : Providing high-quality health care to everyone who needs it is a central objective for theSwedish health care system. One way in which this goal is broadly pursued is by allocatingresources that maximize the geographical coverage of ambulances, aiming at reducingambulance response times as much as possible, for as many as possible. READ MORE
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5. Public Access to Surgical Care. Studies on Timeliness, Capacity, Safety and Affordability
Abstract : Background. A once commonly held belief was that surgery is too complicated, too expensive, and too ineffectively addressing a too minor proportion of the burden of disease to deserve priority in a setting of scarce healthcare resources in low- and middle-income countries. READ MORE