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Emily Lancsar

Showing results (21-30 of 95) with videos related to

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Frontiers in Public Health|July 3, 2023
Participatory systems science for enhancing health and wellbeing in the Indian Ocean territoriesSteven Allender, Syarifah Liza Munira, Siobhan Bourke, et al.
Journal of Health Economics|February 12, 2011
Deriving distributional weights for QALYs through discrete choice experimentsEmily Lancsar, John Wildman, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Health Economics|March 18, 2025
Behavioral Responses to Healthcare Funding Decisions and Their Impact on Value for Money: Evidence From AustraliaPeter Ghijben, Dennis Petrie, Silva Zavarsek, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|August 23, 2023
Views, obstacles, and uncertainties around the inclusion of children and young people's time in economic evaluations: Findings from an international survey of health economistsLazaros Andronis, Cameron Morgan, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|April 3, 2024
Understanding Australian pharmacy degree holders' job preferences through the lens of motivation-hygiene theoryThao Thai, Emily Lancsar, Jean Spinks, et al.
Health Economics|March 11, 2026
Accounting for the Opportunity Cost of Children's Time in Economic Evaluation: Challenges and Frequently Asked QuestionsLazaros Andronis, Cameron Morgan, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Health Economics|September 14, 2022
Two for the price of one: If moving beyond traditional single-best discrete choice experiments, should we use best-worst, best-best or ranking for preference elicitation?Samare P I Huls, Emily Lancsar, Bas Donkers, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|November 20, 2012
Best worst discrete choice experiments in health: methods and an applicationEmily Lancsar, Jordan Louviere, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Pharmacoeconomics|September 3, 2024
A Reporting Checklist for Discrete Choice Experiments in Health: The DIRECT ChecklistJemimah Ride, Ilias Goranitis, Yan Meng, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|October 7, 2019
Mind the (inter-rater) gap. An investigation of self-reported versus proxy-reported assessments in the derivation of childhood utility values for economic evaluation: A systematic reviewJyoti Khadka, Joseph Kwon, Stavros Petrou, et al.
Pageof 10

Showing results (21-30 of 95) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 10
Frontiers in Public Health|July 3, 2023
Participatory systems science for enhancing health and wellbeing in the Indian Ocean territoriesSteven Allender, Syarifah Liza Munira, Siobhan Bourke, et al.
Journal of Health Economics|February 12, 2011
Deriving distributional weights for QALYs through discrete choice experimentsEmily Lancsar, John Wildman, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Health Economics|March 18, 2025
Behavioral Responses to Healthcare Funding Decisions and Their Impact on Value for Money: Evidence From AustraliaPeter Ghijben, Dennis Petrie, Silva Zavarsek, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|August 23, 2023
Views, obstacles, and uncertainties around the inclusion of children and young people's time in economic evaluations: Findings from an international survey of health economistsLazaros Andronis, Cameron Morgan, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|April 3, 2024
Understanding Australian pharmacy degree holders' job preferences through the lens of motivation-hygiene theoryThao Thai, Emily Lancsar, Jean Spinks, et al.
Health Economics|March 11, 2026
Accounting for the Opportunity Cost of Children's Time in Economic Evaluation: Challenges and Frequently Asked QuestionsLazaros Andronis, Cameron Morgan, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Health Economics|September 14, 2022
Two for the price of one: If moving beyond traditional single-best discrete choice experiments, should we use best-worst, best-best or ranking for preference elicitation?Samare P I Huls, Emily Lancsar, Bas Donkers, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|November 20, 2012
Best worst discrete choice experiments in health: methods and an applicationEmily Lancsar, Jordan Louviere, Cam Donaldson, et al.
Pharmacoeconomics|September 3, 2024
A Reporting Checklist for Discrete Choice Experiments in Health: The DIRECT ChecklistJemimah Ride, Ilias Goranitis, Yan Meng, et al.
Social Science & Medicine (1982)|October 7, 2019
Mind the (inter-rater) gap. An investigation of self-reported versus proxy-reported assessments in the derivation of childhood utility values for economic evaluation: A systematic reviewJyoti Khadka, Joseph Kwon, Stavros Petrou, et al.
Pageof 10