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Dr. Sophie Brice
Director of Studies (Course Management), IHM
BIO
Dr. Brice is global expert in Telehealth speciality and health service innovation. With many textbooks and pioneering research publications, and providing expert advisory guidance in Australian Digital Health communities, Dr. Brice has a track record of applying and promoting practice based evidence for high quality and innovative health service models.
Dr. Brice holds a PhD in Medical Science from University of Nottingham in partnership with Karolinska Institutet (Stockholm, Sweden). Their academic career has incorporated excellence in online service delivery both in Telehealth as well as Higher Education as part of award winning teaching teams for online post graduate programs supported by Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education specialised in online delivery.
Research and health service expertise in telehealth, health service design and quality management, behavior change in chronic health and digital health make Dr. Brice a leading expert in the modern health care of chronic conditions with an interdisciplinary approach to defining and refining high quality service and health outcomes.
RESEARCH OUTPUT
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Health professional digital capabilities frameworks: a scoping review
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hypoglycemia with enhanced hepatic glycogen synthesis in recombinant mice lacking hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Is teleaudiology achieving person-centered care: a review
JOURNAL ARTICLE
The modern hearing care landscape: Toward the provision of personalized, dynamic, and adaptive care
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Goldstein and Stephens revisited and extended to a telehealth model of hearing aid optimization
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scoping review for a global hearing care framework: matching theory with practice
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Comparing Teleaudiology and traditional audiology client journeys: What counts and what to consider
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Behavior change in chronic health: Reviewing what we know, what is happening, and what is next for Hearing Loss
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Centering on People: How Hearing Care Professionals Can Adapt to Consumers’ Need and Outcomes
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Changing Knowledge, Principles, and Technology in Contemporary Clinical Audiological Practice: A Narrative Review
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Remote Support for Hearing Health Care: Thoughts from the Trenches
JOURNAL ARTICLE
What’s Tech Got to Do With It? Supporting the User in the Age of Self-Management