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Richard Cookson

University of York (UK) Centre for Health Economics

Professor

York YO10 5DD

United Kingdom

http://www.york.ac.uk/che/staff/research/richard-cookson

SCHOLARLY PAPERS

3

DOWNLOADS

206

TOTAL CITATIONS

0

Scholarly Papers (3)

1.

Are Local Public Expenditure Reductions Associated with Increases in Inequality in Emergency Hospitalisation? Time-Series Analysis of English Local Authorities from 2012 to 2017

Number of pages: 17 Posted: 30 May 2022
University of York - Department of Health Sciences, University of York (UK) Centre for Health Economics, University of York - Department of Health Sciences, NHS England and NHS Improvement, NHS England and NHS Improvement and Newcastle University - Population Health Sciences Institute
Downloads 75 (837,727)

Abstract:

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Healthcare inequalities, Healthcare disparities, Disadvantaged communities, Socioeconomic factors, Public expenditure

2.

Socioeconomic Inequalities in Self-Destructive Causes of Death in England and Wales: Longitudinal Population Study

Number of pages: 16 Posted: 12 Jun 2025
University of York - Department of Health Sciences, University of York (UK) Centre for Health Economics, The University of Manchester and University of York - Department of Health Sciences
Downloads 70 (875,328)

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Self-destructive mortality, socioeconomic inequality, recession

3.

Do the Poor Gain More? The Impact of Secondary Care Expenditure on Health Inequality

Number of pages: 21 Posted: 12 Aug 2025
Lancaster University, University of York - Centre for Health Economics, University of York, The University of Manchester, London School of Economics and Political Science, University of Liverpool - Department of Public Health, Policy and Systems, University of Liverpool - Department of Public Health, Policy and Systems, affiliation not provided to SSRN, Independent and University of York (UK) Centre for Health Economics
Downloads 61 (961,006)

Abstract:

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Equity, health inequality, deprivation, geographical resource allocation, instrumental variables, mortality, secondary care expenditure, socioeconomic factors, small area variation