Author: Kagee, Ashraf
- Predicting dietary and fluid adherence in hemodialysis : an application and extension of the theory of planned behaviour
- Willingness to participate in an HIV vaccine trial : construction and initial validation of the Willingness to Participate Scale (WTPS), and an application and extension of the Theory of Planned Behavior
Similar Items: Predicting dietary and fluid adherence in hemodialysis : an application and extension of the theory of planned behaviour
- Willingness to participate in an HIV vaccine trial : construction and initial validation of the Willingness to Participate Scale (WTPS), and an application and extension of the Theory of Planned Behavior
- Predicting academic dishonesty using the theory of planned behaviour
- The applicability of the theory of planned behaviour in predicting adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) among a South African sample
- The Theory of Planned Behaviour and the Entrepreneurial Event Model as predictive models of entrepreneurial intention
- Emotionality and intelligence in the hooded rat as a function of different periods of post-weaning rearing in a "meaningful" environment
- Testing the theory of planned behaviour in predicting condom use in eastern Ghana : a three-wave longitudinal study
Similar Items: Willingness to participate in an HIV vaccine trial : construction and initial validation of the Willingness to Participate Scale (WTPS), and an application and extension of the Theory of Planned Behavior
- Willingness to participate (WTP) in a future HIV vaccine trial in a high risk sample : perceived barriers and facilitators to participation
- Predicting hypothetical willingness to participate (WTP) in a future phase III HIV vaccine trial among high risk adolescents
- Predicting adolescent willingness to participate in HIV vaccine trials: the role of sensation seeking
- Predicting dietary and fluid adherence in hemodialysis : an application and extension of the theory of planned behaviour
- The prospective COVID-19 vaccine: willingness to pay and perception of community members in Ibadan, Nigeria
- The relation between emotional needs satisfaction and willingness for reconciliation in previously advantaged and previously disadvantaged groups in South Africa