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Jack Hadley

Researcher at Urban Institute

Publications -  137
Citations -  7093

Jack Hadley is an academic researcher from Urban Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicaid. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 134 publications receiving 6880 citations. Previous affiliations of Jack Hadley include University of the Pacific (United States) & University of California, Davis.

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Sicker and poorer--the consequences of being uninsured: a review of the research on the relationship between health insurance, medical care use, health, work, and income.

TL;DR: Although all of the studies reviewed suffer from methodological flaws of varying degrees, there is substantial qualitative consistency across studies of different medical conditions conducted at different times and using different data sets and statistical methods.
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Functional coupling and regional activation of human cortical motor areas during simple, internally paced and externally paced finger movements.

TL;DR: It is suggested that important aspects of information processing in the human motor system could be based on network-like oscillatory cortical activity and might be modulated on at least two levels, which to some extent can operate independently from each other: regional activation (task-related power) and inter-regional functional coupling.
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Measuring hospital efficiency with frontier cost functions.

TL;DR: A stochastic frontier multiproduct cost function is used to derive hospital-specific measures of inefficiency and it is concluded that inefficiency accounts for 13.6 percent of total hospital costs.
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Quantitative assessment of the leukocyte infiltrate in ovarian cancer and its relationship to the expression of C-C chemokines.

TL;DR: It is suggested that MCP-1 may be responsible for the leukocyte infiltrate in ovarian carcinomas, but the expression of other chemokines may determine its exact nature.
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The Contribution of Insurance Coverage and Community Resources to Reducing Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Access to Care

TL;DR: Lack of health insurance was the single most important factor in white-Hispanic differences for all three measures and for two of the white-African American differences.