- Economic and Environmental Valuation
- Ear Surgery and Otitis Media
- Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics
- Hearing Impairment and Communication
- Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
- Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
- Agriculture and Farm Safety
- Infant Development and Preterm Care
- Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
- Child Nutrition and Water Access
- Breastfeeding Practices and Influences
- Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing
- Asthma and respiratory diseases
- Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation
- Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
- Forest Management and Policy
- Statistical Methods in Clinical Trials
- Child and Adolescent Health
- Trauma and Emergency Care Studies
- Birth, Development, and Health
- Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
- Behavioral Health and Interventions
- Retinal Imaging and Analysis
- Injury Epidemiology and Prevention
- Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
Sax Institute
2017-2024
Australian National University
2017-2021
University of Technology Sydney
1999-2012
Journal Article Designing Discrete Choice Experiments: Do Optimal Designs Come at a Price? Get access Jordan J. Louviere, Louviere Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Towhidul Islam, Islam Nada Wasi, Wasi Deborah Street, Street Leonie Burgess of Consumer Research, Volume 35, Issue 2, August 2008, Pages 360–375, https://doi.org/10.1086/586913 Published: 13 March 2008
Evaluate ear health and hearing among urban Aboriginal children quantify relationships with child, family social factors.Baseline questionnaire examinations from 1430 diagnoses (0.5-18 years) attending Health Services enrolled in SEARCH. Ear outcomes were Otitis Media (OM), loss (three-frequency average >20dB) diagnosed using pneumatic otoscopy, tympanometry, audiometry.Half the 0.5-3 years had OM (51.5%, 136/264). One third 0.5-18 (30.4%; 435/1430) OM, including 1.8% (26/1430) perforation...
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Abstract Background Most Australian Aboriginal children are on track with their development, however, the prevalence of at risk or a developmental behavioural problem is higher than in other children. child development data mostly comes from remote communities, whereas most live urban settings. We quantified proportion participating moderate and high as identified by caregivers’ concerns, determined factors associated among communities. Methods Study methods were co-designed implemented four...
Objective: The objective was to describe mental health service and psychotropic medicine use among a cohort of Aboriginal young people quantify their relation sociodemographic, family factors. Methods: In prospective study with data linkage, 892 children aged 0–17 years living in urban regional areas New South Wales, Australia, were included. We assessed health–related use, paediatric dispensing claims covered by the Australian Government Medicare Benefits Schedule Pharmaceutical Scheme from...
To validate a preference-based Diabetic Retinopathy Utility Index (DRU-I) using discrete choice experiment (DCE) methods and assess disutilities associated with vision-threatening DR (VTDR: severe non-proliferative DR, proliferative clinically significant macular oedema) vision impairment.The DRU-I comprises five quality-of-life dimensions, including Visual symptoms, Activity limitation/mobility, Lighting glare, Socio-emotional well-being Inconvenience, each rated as no, some, or lot of...
Abstract The obesity epidemic is a significant public policy issue facing the international community, resulting in substantial costs to individuals and society. Various policies have been suggested reduce prevent obesity, including those informed by standard economics (a key feature of which assumption that are rational) behavioral (which identifies harness deviations from rationality). It not known interventions taxpayers find acceptable would prefer fund via taxation. We provide evidence...
Aim To describe socio‐demographic patterns of asthma prevalence in urban Aboriginal children and quantify associations between pre‐natal maternal current carer smoking. Methods Analyses used carer‐reported survey data for 1290 aged 2–17 years from the Study Environment on Resilience Child Health. Multilevel log‐binomial regression was to estimate ratios (PRs) child‐ family‐level factors, smoking Smoking‐related PRs were compared with general‐population estimates derived meta‐analyses...
Despite being disproportionately affected by injury, little is known about factors associated with injury in Aboriginal children. We investigated among urban children attending four Community Controlled Health Services New South Wales, Australia.We examined characteristics of caregiver-reported child and calculated prevalence ratios 'ever-injury' child, family, environmental factors.Among the cohort, 29% (n=373/1,303) had ever broken a bone, been knocked out, required stitches or...
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