Stephen Jan

About Professor Stephen Jan

Head of Health Economics and Process Evaluation Program

  • Co-Director, Health System Science
  • Professor of Health Economics, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney

Stephen Jan is Head of the Health Economics and Process Evaluation Program and Co-Director, Health System Science at the George Institute for Global Health and Conjoint Professor at the University of New South Wales.

He is an Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney, a Director of the Sax Institute and an Associate at both the Menzies Centre for Health Policy and the Poche Centre for Indigenous Health. He is a current NHMRC Principal Research Fellow and has previously held posts at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation (CHERE) in Sydney. Stephen has over 20 years of experience in health economics, has published over 200 scientific articles and authored two textbooks in health economics.

He has worked closely with various governments of different levels, both in Australia (Commonwealth and State) and overseas, with international agencies such as the WHO and industry. His areas of expertise are economic evaluation, health financing, health sector priority setting, Indigenous and global health issues and the economics of chronic disease. 

Pricing and Impact: Understanding Sales Trends and Price-Volume Distributions of Antihypertensive Drugs in Europe, USA, and India

Pharmaceutical Medicine Date published:

Implementation of a data-driven quality improvement program in primary care for patients with coronary heart disease: a mixed methods evaluation of acceptability, satisfaction, barriers and enablers

Australian Journal of Primary Health Date published:

Determinants of healthcare utilization under the Indonesian national health insurance system - a cross-sectional study

BMC Health Services Research Date published:

Modelling the health, financial protection and equity impacts of upscaling the ACT NOW early intervention breast cancer pilot program in the Philippines: an extended cost-effectiveness analysis

BMJ Global Health Date published:

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