S
Shu-Chuen Li
Researcher at University of Newcastle
Publications - 184
Citations - 6155
Shu-Chuen Li is an academic researcher from University of Newcastle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 181 publications receiving 5465 citations. Previous affiliations of Shu-Chuen Li include Health Sciences Authority & Alfred Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of pharmaceutical care in the improvement of medication adherence and quality of life for COPD patients in Vietnam
TL;DR: Medication adherence and quality of life of COPD patients improved considerably after implementation of a pharmaceutical care program, thus supporting a vital role for pharmacists alongside physicians in the management of COPd.
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Effectiveness of a short training program for community pharmacists to improve knowledge and practice of asthma counselling – A simulated patient study
Tu-Son Nguyen,Tu-Son Nguyen,Thi Lien Huong Nguyen,Thi Thuy Van Pham,Thi Bich Thao Cao,Van Khai Nguyen,Susan Hua,Shu-Chuen Li +7 more
TL;DR: Significant knowledge deficiency about asthma among Vietnamese community pharmacists was revealed, however, a short training program was effective in upskilling the pharmacists to effectively counsel asthmatic patients about the management of their condition and medications.
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Meta-analyses of newer antiepileptic drugs as adjunct for treatment of focal epilepsy in children
TL;DR: Overall, newer AEDs as adjunct therapy in children with inadequate control of focal seizure showed a trend of better seizure outcomes, and the relative lack of well-conducted RCTs evaluating their effectiveness against other active AED treatment in children would not facilitate evidence-based practice.
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A Survey on Pharmacovigilance Activities in ASEAN and Selected Non-ASEAN Countries, and the Use of Quantitative Signal Detection Algorithms
TL;DR: Spontaneous ADR reports from healthcare professionals remains the most frequently used source for safety monitoring, and the development of a QSDA would be useful in helping detect safety signals.
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Validation of a Chinese version of the Quality of Well-Being Scale-Self-Administered (QWB-SA) in patients with epilepsy.
TL;DR: This study was conducted to validate a generic preference‐based HRQoL instrument, namely the Quality of Well‐Being Scale–Self‐Administered (QWB‐SA) in Chinese patients with epilepsy.