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Wayne Hall
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 1333
Citations - 84978
Wayne Hall is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cannabis & Population. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 1260 publications receiving 75606 citations. Previous affiliations of Wayne Hall include University of New South Wales & National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre.
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The Opiate Treatment Index (OTI) researchers' manual
TL;DR: One of the major problems of opiate treatment evaluation research has been the lack of comparability of research findings.
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Why it is probably too soon to assess the public health effects of legalisation of recreational cannabis use in the USA
TL;DR: It is argued that it is too early to see the full effects of legalised cannabis policies on use and harm because several factors could delay the full commercialisation of a legal cannabis industry.
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Drug use, injecting practices and sexual behaviour of opioid users in Sydney, Australia.
TL;DR: While opiate treatment was associated with lower levels of risky injecting practices, there was no association between treatment and safer sexual practices and more attention needs to be given to the sexual risk-taking behaviour of intravenous drug users.
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User characteristics and effect profile of Butane Hash Oil: an extremely high-potency cannabis concentrate
TL;DR: Mental health problems and other illicit drug use were associated with use of BHO, and BHO was reported to have stronger negative and weaker positive effects than high potency herbal cannabis.
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From "our world" to the "real world": Exploring the views and behaviour of policy-influential Australian public health researchers.
TL;DR: Survey and interviews with peer-nominated "highly influential" Australian public health researchers found they engaged in a breadth of strategies that included rigorous but targeted research design, multilateral collaboration, multiple methods of research dissemination and promotion, and purposeful development of bridging relationships.