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Steven Michael Macey

Researcher at Swansea University

Publications -  20
Citations -  961

Steven Michael Macey is an academic researcher from Swansea University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Injury prevention. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications receiving 827 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven Michael Macey include Welsh Government & Action on Smoking and Health.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The costs of traumatic brain injury: a literature review.

TL;DR: Very little research has been published on the economic burden that mild and moderate traumatic brain injury patients pose to their families, careers, and society as a whole, and further research is needed to estimate the economicurden of these patients on healthcare providers and social services.
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Estimating the costs associated with the management of patients with chronic wounds using linked routine data

TL;DR: The extent of resource utilisation by patients classed as having chronic wounds within Wales using linked routine data – available through the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) database – to estimate the costs associated with the management of these patients by the NHS in Wales is determined.
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Measuring the Population Burden of Injuries--Implications for Global and National Estimates: A Multi-Centre Prospective UK Longitudinal Study

TL;DR: It is found that the absolute UK burden of injury is higher than previously estimated and the population burden of injuries using different approaches from the UK Burden of Injury and Global B burden of Disease studies is higher.
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The injury List Of All Deficits (LOAD) Framework – conceptualising the full range of deficits and adverse outcomes following injury and violence

TL;DR: Understanding the extent of the negative implications (or deficits) of injury, through application of the LOAD Framework, is needed to put existing burden of injury studies into context and to highlight the inter-relationship between the direct and indirecturden of injury relative to other conditions.
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Obesity in pregnancy: a retrospective prevalence-based study on health service utilisation and costs on the NHS

TL;DR: Increased health service usage and healthcare costs during pregnancy are associated with increasing maternal BMI; this was apparent across all health services considered within this study.