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Julie Ratcliffe

Researcher at Flinders University

Publications -  350
Citations -  10594

Julie Ratcliffe is an academic researcher from Flinders University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Quality of life (healthcare). The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 316 publications receiving 8720 citations. Previous affiliations of Julie Ratcliffe include St George's, University of London & University of Sheffield.

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Measuring and Valuing Health Benefits for Economic Evaluation

TL;DR: Comparisons with KIDSCREEN-10 provide further support for the practicality and validity of the application of the CHU9D in the economic evaluation of adolescent health care and public health programs.
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Health-related quality of life measured using the EQ-5D-5L: South Australian population norms

TL;DR: Findings are consistent with EQ-5D-5L utility and VAS scores reported for other countries and indicate that the majority of South Australian adults report themselves in full health, indicating fundamental differences between these measures of health status.
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Randomised clinical trial, observational study and assessment of cost-effectiveness of the treatment of varicose veins (REACTIV trial).

TL;DR: Surgical treatment for varicose veins showed that surgical treatment produced better results than conservative treatment in terms of HRQoL, symptomatic relief, anatomical extent and patient satisfaction, and economic modelling suggested that surgery produced a still greater benefit when considered with a 10-year time horizon.
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Time Trade-Off Derived EQ-5D Weights for Australia

TL;DR: The Australia-specific EQ-5D values generated were similar to those produced for a range of other countries, but the number of directly valued states allowed inclusion of more interaction effects, which increased the divergence between Australia's algorithm and other algorithms in the literature.
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Longer term clinical and economic benefits of offering acupuncture care to patients with chronic low back pain.

TL;DR: The acupuncture service was found to be cost-effective at 24 months and patients receiving acupuncture care reported a significantly greater reduction in worry about their back pain at 12 and 24 months compared with the usual care group, suggesting some usual care resource use was offset.