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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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Patient matching in treatment for alcohol dependence: is the null hypothesis still alive and well?

TL;DR: The Project MATCH investigators considered the null hypothesis but preferred the alternative hypothesis that further analysis may reveal combinations of patient and therapist characteristics that show more substantial matching effects than any of the variables that they have examined to date.
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Public attitudes towards the acceptability of using drugs to treat depression and ADHD

TL;DR: Attitudes towards the acceptability of the use of prescription drugs are more positive for depression than for ADHD, which may broadly reflect ongoing controversies in the public sphere about the potential over-diagnosis of ADHD or overmedication of children with ADHD.
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Is the "alcopops" tax working? Probably yes but there is a bigger picture

TL;DR: Sales and ASSADS data suggest that the alcopops tax has resulted in reduced consumption of RTDs and total alcohol, and public health advocates have consistently argued for a comprehensive package of reform that covers pricing, availability and promotion of alcohol, as well as education and treatment services.
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The Issue of Consent in Research that Administers Drugs of Addiction to Addicted Persons

TL;DR: It is argued for a more nuanced view that acknowledges that while in some situations addiction impairs decision-making capacity, it does not eliminate such capacity.
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Consolidation process boundaries of the degradation of mechanical properties in compression moulding of natural-fibre bio-polymer composites

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of thermal penetration, melt infusion, thermal degradation and chemical degradation of natural polymers is used to construct an ideal processing window for a bio-composite.