The name is absent



UNIVERSITY OF
TECHNOLOGY SYDNEY


The Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation (CHERE) was
established in 1991. CHERE is a centre of excellence in health economics and
health services research. It is a joint Centre of the Faculties of Business
and Nursing, Midwifery and Health at the University of Technology, Sydney, in
collaboration with Central Sydney Area Health Service. It was established as a
UTS Centre in February, 2002. The Centre aims to contribute to the development
and application of health economics and health services research through
research, teaching and policy support. CHERE’s research program encompasses
both the theory and application of health economics. The main theoretical
research theme pursues valuing benefits, including understanding what
individuals value from health and health care, how such values should be
measured, and exploring the social values attached to these benefits. The
applied research focuses on economic and the appraisal of new programs or new
ways of delivering and/or funding services. CHERE’s teaching includes
introducing clinicians, health services managers, public health professionals
and others to health economic principles. Training programs aim to develop
practical skills in health economics and health services research. Policy
support is provided at all levels of the health care system by undertaking
commissioned projects, through the provision of formal and informal advice as
well as participation in working parties and committees.

University of Technology, Sydney

City campus, Haymarket

PO Box 123 Broadway NSW 2007

Tel: +61 2 9514 4720

Fax: + 61 2 9514 4730

Email: [email protected]

www.chere.uts.edu.au



More intriguing information

1. The Impact of Minimum Wages on Wage Inequality and Employment in the Formal and Informal Sector in Costa Rica
2. Anti Microbial Resistance Profile of E. coli isolates From Tropical Free Range Chickens
3. Rural-Urban Economic Disparities among China’s Elderly
4. Sex-gender-sexuality: how sex, gender, and sexuality constellations are constituted in secondary schools
5. Regional specialisation in a transition country - Hungary
6. Creating a 2000 IES-LFS Database in Stata
7. Sectoral Energy- and Labour-Productivity Convergence
8. INTERACTION EFFECTS OF PROMOTION, RESEARCH, AND PRICE SUPPORT PROGRAMS FOR U.S. COTTON
9. A Multimodal Framework for Computer Mediated Learning: The Reshaping of Curriculum Knowledge and Learning
10. The name is absent
11. On the Desirability of Taxing Charitable Contributions
12. The name is absent
13. Inhimillinen pääoma ja palkat Suomessa: Paluu perusmalliin
14. The name is absent
15. The Veblen-Gerschenkron Effect of FDI in Mezzogiorno and East Germany
16. Categorial Grammar and Discourse
17. The name is absent
18. A Principal Components Approach to Cross-Section Dependence in Panels
19. Parent child interaction in Nigerian families: conversation analysis, context and culture
20. Consumption Behaviour in Zambia: The Link to Poverty Alleviation?