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Audrey Laporte

Global rank #9325 89%

Institution: Canadian Centre for Health Economics

Primary Field: Health (weighted toward more recent publications)

First Publication: 2004

Most Recent: 2023

RePEc ID: pla364 ↗

Publication Scores

Scores use coauthorship adjustment: α/n credit per paper, where n = number of authors. α = 2.01: calibrated so average adjusted count equals average raw count (a zero-sum adjustment).

Period S (4x) A (2x) B (1x) C (½x) Total
Last 5 Years 0.00 0.00 1.17 0.00 1.17
Last 10 Years 0.00 0.00 1.84 0.00 1.84
All Time 0.00 0.00 8.38 0.00 8.88

Publication Statistics

Raw Publications 12
Coauthorship-Adjusted Count 9.42

Publications (12)

Year Article Journal Tier Authors
2023 Public drug insurance, moral hazard and children's use of mental health medication: Latent mental health risk‐specific responses to lower out‐of‐pocket treatment costs Health Economics B 4
2022 ADHD misdiagnosis: Causes and mitigators Health Economics B 3
2017 Is the Rational Addiction model inherently impossible to estimate? Journal of Health Economics B 3
2015 Do Public Smoking Bans have an Impact on Active Smoking? Evidence from the UK Health Economics B 4
2015 Paying for Primary Care: The Factors Associated with Physician Self‐selection into Payment Models Health Economics B 6
2010 Quantile regression analysis of the rational addiction model: investigating heterogeneity in forward‐looking behavior Health Economics B 3
2010 Do they care too much to work? The influence of caregiving intensity on the labour force participation of unpaid caregivers in Canada Journal of Health Economics B 3
2008 The quantile regression approach to efficiency measurement: insights from Monte Carlo simulations Health Economics B 3
2007 Investment in health when health is stochastic Journal of Population Economics B 2
2006 Household responses to public home care programs Journal of Health Economics B 3
2005 Estimation of panel data models with binary indicators when treatment effects are not constant over time Economics Letters C 2
2004 Do economic cycles have a permanent effect on population health? Revisiting the Brenner hypothesis Health Economics B 1