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Marion Haas

Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney

Publications -  194
Citations -  4752

Marion Haas is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Cost effectiveness. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 189 publications receiving 4176 citations. Previous affiliations of Marion Haas include Westmead Hospital & University of Sydney.

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Caring for Aged Dementia Care Resident Study (CADRES) of Person-Centred Care, Dementia-Care Mapping, and Usual Care in dementia: a cluster-randomised trial

TL;DR: In this article, a cluster randomised controlled trial, urban residential sites were randomly assigned to person-centred care, dementia-care mapping, or usual care, and the primary outcome was agitation measured with the Cohen-Mansfield agitation inventory (CMAI).
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Incidence and severity of self-reported chemotherapy side effects in routine care: A prospective cohort study

TL;DR: The first Australian estimates of self-reported incidence of chemotherapy side effects in routine clinical care are produced, with age the only demographic factor associated with the incidence of side effects, with older people less likely to report side effects.
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Cost-effectiveness of guideline-endorsed treatments for low back pain: a systematic review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the cost-effectiveness of guideline-endorsed treatments for low back pain (LBP) and found that interdisciplinary rehabilitation, exercise, acupuncture, spinal manipulation or cognitive-behavioural therapy were cost-effective in people with sub-acute or chronic LBP.
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Retrospective studies of end-of-life resource utilization and costs in cancer care using health administrative data: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Observational studies using health administrative data have the potential to drive evidence-based palliative care practice and policy and development of quality care markers will enhance benchmarking activities across health care jurisdictions, providers, and patient populations.