All Stories

  1. PT306 Does use of ‘gul’ (smokeless tobacco) increase the risk of coronary heart disease in Bangladesh?
  2. PT163 Gender differences of coronary intervention for patients with acute coronary syndrome admitted at a major metropolitan hospital in Melbourne, Australia
  3. PM138 A systematic review investigating whether gender differences in risk stratification profile explain lower rates of angiography among women compared to men with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome
  4. PM139 A systematic review investigating whether the presence of severe co-morbidities explains lower rates of angiography among women compared to men with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrome
  5. Smoking behaviour among patients and staff
  6. Rose Angina Questionnaire: Validation with cardiologists' diagnoses to detect coronary heart disease in Bangladesh
  7. Profiling bone and joint problems and health service use in an Australian regional population: The Port Lincoln Health Study
  8. Why Do Bangladeshi People Use Smokeless Tobacco Products?
  9. Choice of Controls for a Case-control Study in Bangladesh: Hospital Controls versus Community Controls
  10. Is There Any Association between Use of Smokeless Tobacco Products and Coronary Heart Disease in Bangladesh?
  11. Date Palm Sap Linked to Nipah Virus Outbreak in Bangladesh, 2008
  12. A systematic review of epidemiological studies on the association between smokeless tobacco use and coronary heart disease
  13. A Novel Low-Cost Approach to Estimate the Incidence of Japanese Encephalitis in the Catchment Area of Three Hospitals in Bangladesh
  14. Smoking and smokeless tobacco consumption: Possible risk factors for coronary heart disease among young patients attending a tertiary care cardiac hospital in Bangladesh