Stuart Peacock
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
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Citations | 4,825 |
H index | 36 |
Music groups | Duncan Mortimer |
J. R. J. Richardson | |
Interests | Health Economics |
Cancer Control | |
Cancer Survivorship | |
Priority Setting | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2548421 |
Efficiency Measurement in Health and Health Care
Equity and the Funding of Australian Health Services: Prospects for Weighted Capitation
Will More Doctors Increase Or Decrease the Death Rates: An Econometric Analysis of Australian Mortality Statistics
Hospital Efficiency Measurement: Simple Ratios Vs Frontier Methods
Reconsidering Theories and Evidence of Supplier Induced Demand
An Evaluation of Program Budgeting and Marginal Analysis Applied in South Australian Hospitals
The cost effectiveness of prenatal ultrasound screening for trisomy 21
Setting Priorities in South Australian Community Health 1: The Mental Health Program Budget
Supplier Induced Demand Reconsidered
Conceptualising the assessment of quality of life instrument mark 2 (AQoL 2): methodological innovations and the development of the AQoL descriptive system
Experiences with the UK National Health Services Reforms: A Case of the Infernal Market?
Equity and the Funding of Australian Health Services: Prospects for Weighted Capitation
Will More Doctors Increase Or Decrease the Death Rates: An Econometric Analysis of Australian Mortality Statistics
Hospital Efficiency Measurement: Simple Ratios Vs Frontier Methods
Reconsidering Theories and Evidence of Supplier Induced Demand
An Evaluation of Program Budgeting and Marginal Analysis Applied in South Australian Hospitals
The cost effectiveness of prenatal ultrasound screening for trisomy 21
Setting Priorities in South Australian Community Health 1: The Mental Health Program Budget
Supplier Induced Demand Reconsidered
Conceptualising the assessment of quality of life instrument mark 2 (AQoL 2): methodological innovations and the development of the AQoL descriptive system
Experiences with the UK National Health Services Reforms: A Case of the Infernal Market?