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Claire Jackson

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  153
Citations -  3152

Claire Jackson is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Ambulatory care. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 145 publications receiving 2610 citations. Previous affiliations of Claire Jackson include Royal Australian College of General Practitioners & Mater Misericordiae Hospital.

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Achieving research impact through co-creation in community-based health services: Literature review and case study

TL;DR: Co-creation models have high potential for societal impact but depend critically on key success principles, and impact metrics must reflect the dynamic nature and complex interdependencies of health research systems and address processes as well as outcomes.
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Co-design and implementation research: challenges and solutions for ethics committees

TL;DR: Some guiding principles are proposed to help square this circle: ethics committees should acknowledge and celebrate the diversity of research approaches, both formally and informally; without active support, their members may not understand or value participatory designs.
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Systematic Review of Interventions to Improve Prescribing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors updated two comprehensive reviews of systematic reviews on prescribing interventions and identified the latest evidence about the effectiveness of the interventions, using formal assessment and data extraction tools.
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Systematic review of integrated models of health care delivered at the primary-secondary interface: how effective is it and what determines effectiveness?

TL;DR: Compared with usual care, integrated primary-secondary care can improve elements of disease control and service delivery at a modestly increased cost, although the impact on clinical outcomes is limited.
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A governance model for integrated primary/secondary care for the health-reforming first world – results of a systematic review

TL;DR: All examples of successful primary/secondary care integration reported in the literature have focused on a combination of some, if not all, of the ten elements described in this paper, and there appears to be agreement that multiple elements are required to ensure successful and sustained integration efforts.