J
Jane Hall
Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney
Publications - 236
Citations - 12349
Jane Hall is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 224 publications receiving 11442 citations. Previous affiliations of Jane Hall include Cardiff University & Yale University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Using discrete choice experiments to investigate subject preferences for preventive asthma medication.
Emily Lancsar,Jane Hall,Jane Hall,Madeleine King,Madeleine King,Patricia Kenny,Patricia Kenny,Jordan J. Louviere,Jordan J. Louviere,Jordan J. Louviere,Denzil G. Fiebig,Denzil G. Fiebig,Denzil G. Fiebig,Ishrat Hossain,Ishrat Hossain,Francis Thien,Francis Thien,Helen K. Reddel,Helen K. Reddel,Christine Jenkins,Christine Jenkins +20 more
TL;DR: Long‐term adherence to inhaled corticosteroids is poor despite the crucial role of preventer medications in achieving good asthma outcomes, according to a study undertaken to explore patient preferences in relation to their current inhaled steroid medication.
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Australian Health Care — The Challenge of Reform in a Fragmented System
TL;DR: Australia has tried numerous approaches to health care financing in recent decades, and its health care system now relies on a complex set of overlapping and fragmented responsibilities.
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The measurement of utility in multiphase health states.
TL;DR: Data from a pilot study of mammography were used to determine whether the values assigned to a multiphase postmastectomy health state could be estimated from a combination of the independently rated constituent health state values, and the results suggest that they cannot.
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The physical functioning and mental health of informal carers: evidence of care-giving impacts from an Australian population-based cohort.
TL;DR: The study found that not all carers suffer adverse health impacts; however, the combination of high levels of care-giving with workforce participation can increase the risk of negative physical and mental health effects (particularly in female carers).
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Trends in end-of-life cancer care in the Medicare program.
Shi-Yi Wang,Jane Hall,Craig Evan Pollack,Kerin B. Adelson,Elizabeth H. Bradley,Jessica B. Long,Cary P. Gross +6 more
TL;DR: Despite growing focus on providing appropriate end-of-life care, there has not been an improvement in aggressive end- of-life cancer care in the Medicare program, as measured by chemotherapy received within 14 days of death, or hospice enrollment ≤3 days before death.