Health
Research explores the cost-effectiveness of Sweden’s national vaccination programs – News-Medical.Net
Immunizing children against chickenpox would save money, but offering shingles vaccinations to all 65-year-olds would not. These are examples of findings in a University…
Immunizing children against chickenpox would save money, but offering shingles vaccinations to all 65-year-olds would not. These are examples of findings in a University of Gothenburg thesis exploring the cost-effectiveness of Sweden’s national vaccination programs.
The vaccination issue is obviously topical now that a pandemic is under way. The thesis now presented at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, does not cover immunization against COVID-19. Author Ellen Wolff, a health economist…
-
General16 hours agoFour escape injury after jumping from three-storey unit on fire in Newcastle
-
Noosa News15 hours agoGippsland vegetable farm accused of underpaying migrant workers
-
Noosa News16 hours agoThe Best Things to Do in Brisbane This New Year’s Eve
-
Noosa News20 hours agoMary River cod thriving in Brisbane River catchment, century after relative went extinct
