Research
Geography and service supply do not explain socioeconomic gradients in angiography use after acute myocardial infarction
David A. Alter, C. David Naylor, Peter C. Austin, Benjamin T.B. Chan and Jack V. Tu
CMAJ February 04, 2003 168 (3) 261-264;
David A. Alter
C. David Naylor
Peter C. Austin
Benjamin T.B. Chan

Submit a Response to This Article
Jump to comment:
No Responses have been published for this article.
In this issue
Article tools
Geography and service supply do not explain socioeconomic gradients in angiography use after acute myocardial infarction
David A. Alter, C. David Naylor, Peter C. Austin, Benjamin T.B. Chan, Jack V. Tu
CMAJ Feb 2003, 168 (3) 261-264;
Jump to section
Related Articles
Cited By...
- Study protocol for a matter of heart: a qualitative study of patient factors driving overuse of cardiac catheterisation
- The Learning Healthcare System and Cardiovascular Care: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association
- Building a Foundation to Reduce Health Inequities: Routine Collection of Sociodemographic Data in Primary Care
- Area Median Income and Metropolitan Versus Nonmetropolitan Location of Care for Acute Coronary Syndromes: A Complex Interaction of Social Determinants
- Blind to patients income
- Provision of acute stroke care and associated factors in a multiethnic population: prospective study with the South London Stroke Register
- Ecological Studies and Cardiovascular Outcomes Research
- Avoidable mortality by neighbourhood income in Canada: 25 years after the establishment of universal health insurance
- Income and equity of access to physician services
- Associations of area based deprivation status and individual educational attainment with incidence, treatment, and prognosis of first coronary event in Rome, Italy
- Socioeconomic status and the utilization of diagnostic imaging in an urban setting