L
Lisa Parker
Researcher at University of Sydney
Publications - 56
Citations - 1178
Lisa Parker is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 55 publications receiving 870 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa Parker include University of Wollongong & Hobart Corporation.
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A comparison of HIV stigma and discrimination in five international sites: the influence of care and treatment resources in high prevalence settings.
Suzanne Maman,Laurie Abler,Lisa Parker,Tim Lane,Admire Chirowodza,Jacob Ntogwisangu,Namtip Srirak,Precious Modiba,Oliver Murima,Katherine Fritz +9 more
TL;DR: Variation in the availability of health and socioeconomic resources designed to mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS helps explain differences in HIV stigma and discrimination across the settings.
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Digital contact tracing technologies in epidemics: a rapid review
Andrew Anglemyer,Theresa Hm Moore,Lisa Parker,Tim Chambers,Alice Grady,Kellia Chiu,Matthew Parry,Magdalena Wilczynska,Ella Flemyng,Lisa Bero +9 more
TL;DR: A rapid review on the effectiveness of digital solutions to contact tracing during infectious disease outbreaks to assess the benefits, harms, and acceptability of personal digital contact tracing solutions for identifying contacts of an identified positive case of an infectious disease.
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Anatomical dissection: why are we cutting it out? Dissection in undergraduate teaching.
TL;DR: Anatomy teaching and, more specifically, the use of dissection in undergraduate anatomy teaching is undergoing a sea change in Australian medical schools, with dissection being compulsory in only a minority of anatomy departments.
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How private is your mental health app data? An empirical study of mental health app privacy policies and practices.
TL;DR: It is considered that the app industry pays insufficient attention to protecting the privacy of mental health app users, and advocate for increased monitoring and enforcement of privacy principles and practices in mental health apps and the mobile ecosystem, more broadly.
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What's wrong with the dead body?
TL;DR: Exposure to the dissected human body may have benefits beyond this teaching, including inculcating the trait of “detached concern”, teaching about medical fallibility and uncertainty, and raising issues of death and dying.