Skip to main content

 -
  • About
    • Advertising Policy
    • Aim and Scope
    • Author Fees and Disclosure of Funding
    • Contact Us
    • Editorial Board
    • Editorial Independence
    • Editorial Policies
      • Artificial Intelligence (AI)-Assisted Technology
      • Authorship and Contributorship
      • Complaints and Appeals
      • Corrections and Retractions
      • Data Sharing and Reproducibility
      • Ethical Practices and Expectations
      • Intellectual Property and Copyright
      • Peer Review
    • Editorial Process
    • History
    • Media
    • Mission
    • Open Access
    • Permissions
    • Post-publication Discussions
    • Writing Prizes for Medical Students
  • The Journal
    • By Author
    • Past Issues
    • BC Doctors
      • Obituaries
      • Interviews
      • Proust for Physicians
      • Physician Spotlight
    • Opinions
      • Back Page
      • BC Stories
      • Blog
      • Editorials
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Premise
      • President's Comment
    • Columns
      • BC Centre for Disease Control
      • Billing Tips
      • Council on Health Promotion
      • College Library
      • Family Practice Services Committee
      • Joint Collaborative Committees
      • News
      • Shared Care Committee
      • Specialist Services Committee
      • WorkSafeBC
    • Articles
      • Clinical Articles
        • Clinical Case Reports
        • Clinical Images
        • Original Research
        • Review Articles
      • MDs To Be
      • Beyond Medicine
      • COVID-19
      • Early Online
  • Classifieds
  • Submit Content
    • Instructions for Authors: Clinical Article
    • Instructions for Authors: Nonclinical Content
    • Theme Issue
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Advertise
    • Place Display Ad
    • Place Classified Ad
    • Shopping cart
  • none
 -

Author profile

Richard Mathias, MD,

hide first letter

Council on Health Promotion / July/August 2006

Physician perceptions of health information from practitioners of complementary and alternative medicine: A survey of BC doctors

Patients are exposed to many sources of health information. While not all sources are of the same quality, patients will make important decisions based on information they feel to be credible. In the last 100 years, the... Read More

BCMJ

The BCMJ is a general medical journal that shares knowledge while building connections among BC physicians.

DOBC

 

ISSN 0007‍-‍0556 (Print)
ISSN 2293‍-‍6106 (Online)
Established 1959