Research Topics
| D HaileySummaryCountry: Canada Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
International collaboration in health technology assessment: a study of technologies used in management of osteoporosisD Hailey
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, Edmonton, Canada
Health Policy 43:233-41. 1998..The project demonstrated the feasibility of international collaborative health technology assessment...
Posteroventral pallidotomy for Parkinson's disease: assessment and policy on a technology in transitionD Hailey
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, Edmonton, Canada
Health Policy 43:55-64. 1998..This case study provides an example of the dilemmas facing policy areas in dealing with evolving technology, with limited available evidence and with the prospect of further management options becoming available...
An assessment framework for telemedicine applicationsD Hailey
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, Edmonton, Canada
J Telemed Telecare 5:162-70. 1999..At higher volumes, telepsychiatry would be cheaper than outreach...
An assessment of gait analysis in the rehabilitation of children with walking difficultiesD Hailey
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, Edmonton, Canada
Disabil Rehabil 22:275-80. 2000..To assess the current status of computerized gait analysis techniques in the management of children with cerebral palsy or spina bifida who have significant walking disorders...
Providing information on emerging health technologies to provincial decision makers: a pilot projectD Hailey
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, 3125 Manulife Place, Edmonton, Alberta, T5J 3S4, Canada
Health Policy 58:15-26. 2001..Necessary machinery within policy areas and communication with the HTA process appear to be in need of development...
Some successes and limitations with telehealth in CanadaD Hailey
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
J Telemed Telecare 7:73-5. 2001..However, overall, the number of patients seen by telehealth is still very small in comparison with the number of face-to-face visits. 'People-related' factors seem dominant in determining the degree of success of telehealth applications...
