Health Without Gaps continues to support our vulnerable population.

Understanding and Minimizing Epidemiologic Bias in Public Health Research

Awareness of possible partialities is important for both public health assessors and policymakers, in a community health assessment: for assessors when crafting and steering studies, and for policymakers when reading study reports and making verdicts.          It is highly important to access risk of bias in all studies review irrespective of preventive unpredictability, in […]

Theories in Qualitative Research

According to the research approach, Bradbury-Jones, et al. (2014) proposed a five-point typology on the levels of theoretical visibility, testing this against a range of published research from five key international health, medicine, and social science journals. The typology captures a range of visibility–from seemingly absent-through to highly visible and applied throughout. There was a […]

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