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Anthony Hogan

Researcher at University of Canberra

Publications -  67
Citations -  10911

Anthony Hogan is an academic researcher from University of Canberra. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hearing loss & Cochlear implant. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 67 publications receiving 9698 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony Hogan include University of Sydney & Australian National University.

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Visioning a Future for Rural and Regional Australia

TL;DR: A shift in economic policy from protectionism to market-based approaches, a shift in natural resource management encompassing a recognition of scarcity and degradation and the need to better manage natural resources (such as land and water) and, in the face of rural decline, a shifting in policy moving away from government as provider to a position promoting the economic self-sufficiency of communities as mentioned in this paper.
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The structure of psychological life satisfaction: insights from farmers and a general community sample in Australia.

TL;DR: If satisfaction with connectedness underlies satisfaction with efficacy (and thus psychological satisfaction), a novel insight for health policy emerges: psychological life satisfaction can potentially be enhanced by strengthening individuals’ connectedness to community.
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Higher social distress and lower psycho-social wellbeing: examining the coping capacity and health of people with hearing impairment.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that anxiety is associated with coping with the psycho-social aspects of hearing disability, which supports the explanatory model that stress is higher and wellbeing lower when the fit between the person's coping capacity and environmental demands is poor.

Ruptured Identity of Male Farmers: Subjective Crisis and the Risk of Suicide

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that ontological security is central to identity and social competence, and that loss of the coherency of identity and the potential loss of a continuity of social practice result in a ruptured identity.
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Psychosocial outcomes of children with ear infections and hearing problems: a longitudinal study.

TL;DR: Children were more likely to have abnormal/borderline psychosocial outcomes at 10/11 years of age if they had been reported to have ongoing ear infections or hearing problems when they were 4/5 years old when looking at the younger cohort.