Liz Stokes
Colleges
Publications in Press
Liz Stokes
BSc MSc DPhil
Senior Researcher
Liz’s research interests lie in economic evaluation and particularly in costing within economic evaluations.
She has worked on many cost-effectiveness analyses alongside randomised controlled trials in areas such as blood transfusion, and cardiac and thoracic surgery, and has used decision modelling to assess the cost-effectiveness of additional tests to guide treatment decisions for several cardiac populations.
Liz completed a doctoral thesis at the University of Oxford in 2016 on the costs and cost-effectiveness of transfusion management strategies in cardiac surgery. She is a Research Advisor for the Research Design Service - South Central.
Liz joined the Health Economics Research Centre (HERC) in November 2009, having worked at Keele University (2001-2007) and Liverpool John Moores University (2008-2009) and in this time completed an MSc in Medical Statistics at the University of Leicester.
Recent publications
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Multimodality local consolidative treatment versus conventional care of advanced lung cancer after first-line systemic anti-cancer treatment: study protocol for the RAMON multicentre randomised controlled trial with an internal pilot.
Journal article
Beard C. et al, (2023), BMJ Open, 13
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Predicting the future risk of lung cancer: development, and internal and external validation of the CanPredict (lung) model in 19·67 million people and evaluation of model performance against seven other risk prediction models.
Journal article
Liao W. et al, (2023), Lancet Respir Med, 11, 685 - 697
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Patient satisfaction and patient costs associated with telephone clinic appointments in Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) following the pandemic
Conference paper
Matini L. et al, (2023), JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS, 17, 559 - 560
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Impact of video-assisted thoracoscopic lobectomy versus open lobectomy for lung cancer on recovery assessed using self-reported physical function: VIOLET RCT.
Journal article
Lim E. et al, (2022), Health Technol Assess, 26, 1 - 162
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Digital cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (Sleepio) is associated with gains in quality-adjusted life years.
Journal article
Stokes EA. et al, (2022), BJGP Open