P
Peggy Pei-Chia Chiang
Researcher at University of Melbourne
Publications - 48
Citations - 49861
Peggy Pei-Chia Chiang is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Years of potential life lost. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 48 publications receiving 38326 citations. Previous affiliations of Peggy Pei-Chia Chiang include Cooperative Research Centre.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Identifying the Critical Success Factors in the Coverage of Low Vision Services Using the Classification Analysis and Regression Tree Methodology
TL;DR: This study identified the most important predictors for countries with better low vision coverage and the CART is a useful and suitable methodology in survey research and is a novel way to simplify a complex global public health issue in eye care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acceptance, attitudes, and beliefs of Singaporean Chinese toward an ocular implant for glaucoma drug delivery.
Reuben Chao Ming Foo,Ecosse L. Lamoureux,Ryan C K Wong,Sue-Wei Ho,Peggy Pei-Chia Chiang,Gwyneth Rees,Tin Aung,Tina T. Wong +7 more
TL;DR: An ocular drug implant would be an acceptable alternative to topical eye drops for subgroups of glaucoma patients and believed that the implant was more helpful than eye drops, which did not have a significant impact on the patients' decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Marital status and its relationship with the risk and pattern of visual impairment in a multi-ethnic Asian population
TL;DR: Being single (never married) or widowed were significantly associated with best-corrected VI and presenting VI compared with married people even after adjustment for age, sex and socioeconomic status, and the influence did not vary with gender, educational level and diabetic status.
Book ChapterDOI
Public Health Impact of Pathologic Myopia
TL;DR: How pathologic myopia is shaped by the social determinants of health is described, which produces comprehensive understanding of the disease pattern and concurrently identify who in the population are most affected or at high risk.
Journal ArticleDOI
Determinants of informed consent in a cataract surgery clinical trial: why patients participate
Marios Constantinou,Vishal Jhanji,Vishal Jhanji,Peggy Pei-Chia Chiang,Ecosse L. Lamoureux,Gwyneth Rees,Rasik B Vajpayee +6 more
TL;DR: The major reasons for participation in a cataract surgery trial were expected positive implications resulting from involvement; and satisfaction with the attitudes of medical experiments.