Kees Van Gool
Associate Professor
Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation
University of Technology Sydney
Australia
Biography
Kees van Gool is a Deputy Director and Associate Professor at the Centre. He has extensive experience in international, national and regional health policy research. He is part of a leading team working on the financing and economics of primary care. Kees has previously contributed to and managed a variety of projects including work conducted for the Commonwealth Department of Health, MBF and the Australian Senate. He was a lead investigator in two independent reviews of the Extended Medicare Safety Net conducted for the Australian Government. He is currently a chief investigator at the Centre for Research Excellence on the Financing and Economics of Primary Care (REFinE), funded by the Australian Primary Health Care Institute (APHCRI) . He has worked extensively on cancer care, screening, cystic fibrosis and policy evaluation. He has quantitative skills in micro-economic modelling and has established a track record in using linked data. In 2011 he completed his PhD at the University of Technology Sydney, looking at the out-of-pocket costs faced by patients under Australia’s Medicare system. Kees has previously worked at the Department of Health, NSW Health and the OECD where he led a project on international health system performance and policy analysis on cardiovascular disease care and outcomes.
Research Interest
Health financing, primary care, health care costs, comparative health system performance and equity
Publications
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Mu C, De Abreu Lourenco R, van Gool K, Hall J. Is low-priced primary care bad for quality? Evidence from Australian general practice. Applied Economics [Internet]. Informa UK Limited; 2017 May 19;1–17
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McRae I, van Gool K, Hall J, Yen L. Role of Cost on Failure to Access Prescribed Pharmaceuticals: The Case of Statins. Applied Health Economics and Health Policy [Internet]. Springer Nature; 2017 Jun 28;15(5):625–34
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McRae IS, van Gool KC. Variation in the fees of medical specialists: problems, causes, solutions. The Medical Journal of Australia [Internet]. Australasian Medical Publishing Co. Pty Ltd. (AMPCo); 2017 Mar 6;206(4):162–3