Schofield's research includes assessments of the
productivity impacts of illness. She currently leads a research program at Macquarie University on the relationship between health and
social policy. The applications of
microsimulation Schofield and colleagues pioneered helps to ensure health care funding is sustainable and
labour force participation is maximised. This assists governments providing the information needed by policymakers who impact health, the labour market, income and taxation policy. The purpose of Schofield's research is to ensure that the health and aged care systems meet the demands of an ageing population. It uses data drawn from her own work, other studies and publicly available datasets in areas as diverse as IQ deficits caused by anaemia in pregnancy, poverty and
mental illness,
genetic testing for highly disabling childhood genetic disorders,
chronic pain and
whole genome sequencing. ==References==