
Janet K. Sluggett
Articles
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Oct 11, 2023 |
agedcareinsite.com.au | Emily Reeve |Jacinta L Johnson |Janet K. Sluggett |Kate O'Hara
Emily Reeve, Monash University; Jacinta L Johnson, University of South Australia; Janet Sluggett, University of South Australia, and Kate O'Hara, University of NewcastlePeople are living longer and with more chronic health conditions – including heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and dementia – than ever before. As societies continue to grow older, one pressing concern is the use of multiple medications, a phenomenon known as polypharmacy.
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Aug 25, 2023 |
knowridge.com | Emily Reeve |Jacinta L Johnson |Janet K. Sluggett
People are living longer and with more chronic health conditions – including heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and dementia – than ever before. As societies continue to grow older, one pressing concern is the use of multiple medications, a phenomenon known as polypharmacy. About 1 million older Australians experience polypharmacy and this group is increasing.
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Aug 24, 2023 |
medicalxpress.com | Emily Reeve |Jacinta L Johnson |Janet K. Sluggett |Kate O'Hara
People are living longer and with more chronic health conditions—including heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and dementia—than ever before. As societies continue to grow older, one pressing concern is the use of multiple medications, a phenomenon known as polypharmacy. About 1 million older Australians experience polypharmacy and this group is increasing.
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Aug 23, 2023 |
theconversation.com | Emily Reeve |Jacinta L Johnson |Janet K. Sluggett |Kate O'Hara
In the past five years, Emily Reeve has received funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Australian Association of Gerontology, Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation, Canadian Frailty Network, United States NIH, Australian Commission On Safety And Quality In Health Care, and US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
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Aug 23, 2023 |
au.news.yahoo.com | Janet K. Sluggett |Jacinta L Johnson |Emily Reeve |Kate O'Hara
People are living longer and with more chronic health conditions – including heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and dementia – than ever before. As societies continue to grow older, one pressing concern is the use of multiple medications, a phenomenon known as polypharmacy. About 1 million older Australians experience polypharmacy and this group is increasing.
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