Journal of Health Organization and Management: Volume 35 Issue 6

Subject:

Table of contents - Special Issue: 11th HSRAANZ conference addressing Health services inequities

Guest Editors: Victoria McCreanor, Hannah Carter, Robin Blythe, Suzanne Robinson

Equity-informative methods of health services research

Richard Cookson, Matthew Robson, Ieva Skarda, Tim Doran

We review quantitative methods for analysing the equity impacts of health care and public health interventions: who benefits most and who bears the largest burdens (opportunity…

The impact of interprofessional practice models on health service inequity: an integrative systematic review

Melissa Jane Carey, Melissa Taylor

The purpose of this review was to explore the literature for evidence of the impact of interprofessional practice models on health service inequity, particularly within community…

1318

“Slow science” for 21st century healthcare: reinventing health service research that serves fast-paced, high-complexity care organisations

Christine Jorm, Rick Iedema, Donella Piper, Nicholas Goodwin, Andrew Searles

The purpose of this paper is to argue for an improved conceptualisation of health service research, using Stengers' (2018) metaphor of “slow science” as a critical yardstick.

1867

Mergers may enhance the legitimacy of community health organisations in neoliberal environments

Veronique Roussy, Grant Russell, Charles Livingstone, Therese Riley

Comprehensive primary health care (PHC) models are seldom implemented in high income countries, in part due to their contested legitimacy in neoliberal policy environments. This…

Development and validation of an algorithm using health administrative data to define patient attachment to primary care providers

Liisa Jaakkimainen, Imaan Bayoumi, Richard H. Glazier, Kamila Premji, Tara Kiran, Shahriar Khan, Eliot Frymire, Michael E. Green

The authors developed and validated an algorithm using health administrative data to identify patients who are attached or uncertainly attached to a primary care provider (PCP…

1867

Why are we still waiting? Views of future-focused policy and the direction of the profession from dissatisfied recent pharmacy graduates

Trudi Aspden, Munyaradzi Marowa, Rhys Ponton, Shane Scahill

The New Zealand Pharmacy Action Plan 2016–20 acknowledges the young, highly qualified pharmacist workforce, and seeks to address pharmacist underutilisation in the wider health…

Why telehealth does not always save money for the health system

Centaine L. Snoswell, Monica L. Taylor, Liam J. Caffery

This study aims to determine elements of telehealth that have the potential to increase costs for the health system in the short to medium term.

Cover of Journal of Health Organization and Management

ISSN:

1477-7266

Online date, start – end:

2003

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Open Access:

hybrid