46 results
Search Results
2. Perspectives of health service providers in delivering best-practice care for Aboriginal mothers and their babies during the postnatal period.
- Author
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Jones, Jocelyn, Durey, Angela, Strobel, Natalie, McAuley, Kimberley, Edmond, Karen, Coffin, Juli, and McAullay, Daniel
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PUERPERIUM ,MEDICAL care ,MOTHERS ,POSTNATAL care ,PRIMARY health care ,NEONATAL nursing ,NURSE-patient ratio - Abstract
Background: Evidence suggests that Aboriginal babies in Western Australia are not receiving adequate primary health care in their first 3 months of life, leading to questions about enablers and constraints to delivering such care. This paper presents findings from a qualitative research project investigating health providers' perceptions and experiences of best and current practice in discharge planning, postnatal care and health education for Aboriginal mothers and their newborn babies. Methods: Constructivist grounded theory guided this research involving 58 semi-structured interviews conducted with health providers who deliver care to Aboriginal mothers and infants. Participants were recruited from hospital-based and primary health sites in metropolitan Perth, and regional and remote locations in Western Australia. Results: Structural factors enabling best practice in discharge planning, postnatal care, and health education for mothers included health providers following best practice guidelines and adequate staffing levels. Organisational enablers included continuity of care throughout pregnancy, birth and postnatally. In particular, good communication between services around discharge planning, birth notifications, and training in culturally respectful care. Structural and organisational constraints to delivering best practice and compromising continuity of care were identified as beyond individual control. These included poor communication between different health and social services, insufficient hospital staffing levels leading to early discharge, inadequate cultural training, delayed receipt of birth notifications and discharge summaries received by Aboriginal primary health services. Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of examining current policies and practices to promote best practice in postnatal care to improve health outcomes for mothers and their Aboriginal babies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Corporate governance and business performance of hotels in Western Australia: analysis of market orientation as a mediator.
- Author
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Kazemian, Soheil, Djajadikerta, Hadrian Geri, Trireksani, Terri, Mohd-Sanusi, Zuraidah, and Alam, Md. Mahmudul
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MARKET orientation ,CORPORATE governance ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,COMPETITOR orientation ,MARKETING research - Abstract
Purpose: This study examines whether corporate governance enhances the financial and social business performance of three-to five-star hotels in Western Australia (WA) through the three dimensions of market orientation (i.e. customer orientation, competitor orientation and inter-function coordination) as mediators. Design/methodology/approach: Data were collected from managers of hotels in the WA capital city of Perth and its surrounding areas using a questionnaire. Partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM) was used to analyse the data. Findings: The overall result shows interesting findings of market orientation's mediating role. It is found that corporate governance may lead to better financial business performance through competitor orientation but not through customer orientation and inter-function coordination. Complementary, corporate governance may lead to better social business performance through customer orientation and inter-function coordination but not through competitor orientation. Originality/value: This paper offers contributions to both literature and practice on what dimensions of market orientation are important to enhance the performance of hotels when corporate governance is applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Early detection of hearing loss for infants in Western Australia: Comparison to international benchmarks.
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Reid, Allison, Firns, Sarah, Tao, Karina, Maywood, Erin, Herbert, Hayley, Mulders, Wilhemina A M, Kuthubutheen, Jafri, and Brennan‐Jones, Christopher
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HEARING disorders ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,AUDITORY neuropathy ,CONDUCTIVE hearing loss ,INFANTS ,NEWBORN screening - Abstract
Aim: To assess the degree to which timely audiological assessment of congenital hearing loss is achieved at our institution ‐ Perth Children's Hospital, Western Australia, and to review cases which breached this timeframe in order to address barriers to timely assessment. The benchmark used to determine timely assessment is that set out by The Joint Committee on Infant Hearing (JCIH) in which diagnostic audiological testing occurs by three months of age for those who do not pass newborn hearing screening. Methods: A retrospective chart review of infants who underwent diagnostic auditory assessment at Perth Children's Hospital between 2016‐2019. A total of 151 children were identified as meeting the inclusion criteria and their medical files were reviewed. Time to first dABR was the time point for whether testing was achieved within the 3 month timeframe. Results: Of the 151 children who underwent dABR assessments, 1 was identified as having breached the 90 day time limit (tested on day 91) for which no valid reason for delay could be identified. The timely delivery of dABR assessments in 99.3% of cases within this cohort compares favourably with the literature. Conclusions: Conclusion Timely diagnostic audiological assessment is achievable for children with congenital hearing loss. The reasons for patients breaching this timeframe are explored in the paper along with factors which may help avoid delays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. "Unless you overdose or something you're not going to get help": What do adolescent experiences reveal about the mental health system in Perth, Western Australia?
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Platell, Monique, Martin, Karen, Fisher, Colleen, and Cook, Angus
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TEENAGERS ,MEDICAL care use ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL health policy ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH services accessibility - Abstract
Issues Addressed: To explore adolescents' experiences of access to and continued use of mental health services, and identify factors influencing their perceived satisfaction with their care. This paper focusses on the role of organisational and policy-level factors in the mental health system.Method: Qualitative semi-structured face-to-face interviews with 22 adolescents aged 14-18 years living in Perth, Western Australia.Results: Adolescents identified key policy, systemic and service-based factors which influenced their access to and continued use of mental health services. These were strongly related to the processes of service intake, level of orientation towards person-centred care and adequacy of service resourcing and funding. Areas of concern for adolescents included, complex service intake procedures, suboptimal mental health service environments, lack of client-centred care and the quality of mental health support provided in school settings.Conclusions: Our research has identified a wide spectrum of factors influencing mental health service access and use amongst adolescents. The findings further support the growing national consensus for major reform to address the mental health needs of this age group. The current strengths within mental health services and the system identified by adolescents need to be supported and extended. SO WHAT?: Although there have been numerous recommendations on ways to improve mental health service access and ongoing engagement for Australian adolescents, a number of the major challenges faced by this high-risk population have shown little improvement. The findings of this research indicate the importance of now moving towards implementing meaningful plans for action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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6. The S Word, in partnership with the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts of the Edith Cowan University, Perth/Boorloo, Western Australia.
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PERFORMING arts ,PRAXIS (Process) - Abstract
Later theatre makers as varied as David Donnellan and Suzuki Tadashi have suggested that the theatre is a I place of life-and-death struggle i , a site where a battle for survival is conducted by both characters and the actors themselves. For the forthcoming I Stanislavski and Place i symposium, we call for submissions for academic papers, artist presentations, and panels, which consider the I places of theatre arising from or existing alongside Stanislavskian performance and acting praxis i . Presents a symposium B The S Word: Stand in Place/Stanislavski and Place b 4th to 6th April 2024 Stanislavski was clear that the actor must I take their place i in the theatre. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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7. A town without pity? Three stories of public exposure, print media, and family histories of madness in Western Australia.
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Martyr, Philippa
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FAMILY history (Genealogy) ,FAMILY history (Sociology) ,SYMPATHY ,SMALL cities ,MENTAL illness ,TWENTIETH century ,CHARISMATIC authority - Abstract
It is sometimes easier to understand the chimeric experience of mental disorder by accessing individual episodes and incidents. This paper will review the lives of three strong-willed, charismatic individuals who all had influential and very public brushes with mental disorder in the small outpost city of Perth, Western Australia, between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries. This opens up questions of retrospective diagnosis, the challenges of being mad in a small town, how print media has preserved these precarious individual narratives, and how individual histories of mental disorders can help to cast light on other aspects of mainstream Australian histories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Beyond the First Tipping Points of Southern Hemisphere Climate.
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O'Kane, Terence J., Frederiksen, Jorgen S., Frederiksen, Carsten S., and Horenko, Illia
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EL Nino ,GREENHOUSE gases ,EFFECT of human beings on climate change ,ATMOSPHERIC models ,ATMOSPHERIC circulation - Abstract
Analysis of observations, reanalysis, and model simulations, including those using machine learning methods specifically designed for regime identification, has revealed changes in aspects of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) circulation and Australian climate and extremes over the last half-century that indicate transitions to new states. In particular, our analysis shows a dramatic shift in the metastability of the SH climate that occurred in the late 1970s, associated with a large-scale regime transition in the SH atmospheric circulation, with systematic changes in the subtropical jet, blocking, zonal winds, and storm tracks. Analysis via nonstationary clustering reveals a regime shift coincident with a sharp transition to warmer oceanic sea surface temperatures and increased baroclinicity in the large scales of the Antarctic Circumpolar Circulation (ACC), extending across the whole hemisphere. At the same time, the background state of the tropical Pacific thermocline shoaled, leading to an increased likelihood of El Niño events. The SH climate shift in the late 1970s is the first hemispheric regime shift that can be directly attributed to anthropogenic climate change. These changes in dynamics are associated with additional regional tipping points, including reductions in mean and extreme rainfall in south-west Western Australia (SWWA) and streamflow into Perth dams, and also with increases in mean and extreme rainfall over northern Australia since the late 1970s. The drying of south-eastern Australia (SEA) occurred against a background of accelerating increases in average and extreme temperatures across the whole continent since the 1990s, implying further inflection points may have occurred. Analysis of climate model simulations capturing the essence of these observed shifts indicates that these systematic changes will continue into the late 21st century under high greenhouse gas emission scenarios. Here, we review two decades of work, revealing for the first time that tipping points characteristic of regime transitions are inferred to have already occurred in the SH climate system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Australian Aboriginal English: Linguistic and sociolinguistic perspectives.
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Louro, Celeste R. and Collard, Glenys
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ABORIGINAL Australians ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,MODAL logic - Abstract
Australian Aboriginal English (AAE) is an enregistered contact-based variety spoken by 80% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. This paper offers an overview of some of the features that characterise AAE as recorded in our corpus of naturally occurring interactions in Nyungar country, Southwest Western Australia. Led by Nyungar researcher Glenys Collard, our fieldwork rests on three pillars: (1) the data originate from group recording sessions, as culturally appropriate in the community; (2) speakers are recruited in venues such as medical centres and Perth city parks; (3) data collection is based on 'yarning': 'a process of [...] communicating and passing on history and knowledge' (Terszak, 2008, p. 90). Our approach is strongly grounded in indigenous knowledge-sharing practices. We discuss how the traditional underpinnings of yarning as a culturally entrenched modality have made it possible to tap into the community's vernacular and to capture the urgent concerns and silenced histories of Aboriginal English speakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. A wellbeing program to promote mental health in paediatric burn patients: Study protocol.
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Wickens, Nicole, McGivern, Lisa, de Gouveia Belinelo, Patricia, Milroy, Helen, Martin, Lisa, Wood, Fiona, Bullman, Indijah, Janse van Rensburg, Elmie, and Woolard, Alix
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CHILDREN'S injuries ,BURN patients ,WELL-being ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH protocols ,CHILDREN'S hospitals - Abstract
Background: One of the most traumatic injuries a child can experience is a severe burn. Despite improvements in medical treatments which have led to better physical outcomes and reduced mortality rates for paediatric burns patients, the psychological impact associated with experiencing such a traumatic injury has mostly been overlooked. This is concerning given the high incidence of psychopathology amongst paediatric burn survivors. Objectives: This project will aim to pilot test and evaluate a co-designed trauma-focused intervention to support resilience and promote positive mental health in children and adolescents who have sustained an acute burn injury. Our first objective is to collect pilot data to evaluate the efficacy of the intervention and to inform the design of future trauma-focussed interventions. Our second objective is to collect pilot data to determine the appropriateness of the developed intervention by investigating the changes in mental health indicators pre- and post-intervention. This will inform the design of future interventions. Methods: This pilot intervention study will recruit 40 children aged between 6–17 years who have sustained an acute burn injury and their respective caregivers. These participants will have attended the Stan Perron Centre of Excellence for Childhood Burns at Perth Children's Hospital. Participants will attend a 45-minute weekly or fortnightly session for six weeks that involves building skills around information gathering, managing reactions (behaviours and thoughts), identifying, and bolstering coping skills, problem solving and preventing setbacks. The potential effects and feasibility of our intervention will be assessed through a range of age-appropriate screening measures which will assess social behaviours, personal qualities, mental health and/or resilience. Assessments will be administered at baseline, immediately post-intervention, at 6- and 12-months post-intervention. Conclusion: The results of this study will lay the foundation for an evidence-based, trauma-informed approach to clinical care for paediatric burn survivors and their families in Western Australia. This will have important implications for the design of future support offered to children with and beyond burn injuries, and other medical trauma populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Identification and genetic characterization of a novel species of Choleoeimeria Schneider, 1875 from a captive‐bred bilby (Thylacomyidae; Macrotis lagotis) (Reid, 1837) in Western Australia.
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Brice, Belinda, Gao, Huimin, Berto, Bruno P., Thomas, Gwyneth, Elloit, Aileen, and Zahedi, Alireza
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OOCYSTS ,WILDLIFE rehabilitation ,SPECIES ,IDENTIFICATION ,REHABILITATION centers ,SPOROZOITES ,EIMERIA - Abstract
A novel Eimeria sp. from a captive‐bred bilby (Macrotis lagotis Reid, 1837) has been identified in Western Australia. The bilby was bred at the Kanyana Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, Perth, as part of the National Bilby Recovery Plan. Oocysts (n = 31) irregular blunt ellipsoidal, 17–18 × 11–12 (17.2 × 11.3); length/width (L/W) ratio 1.4–1.5 (1.5). Wall bi‐layered, 0.8–1.0 (0.9) thick, outer layer smooth, c.2/3 of total thickness. Micropyle barely discernible. Oocyst residuum is absent, but 2–3 small polar granules are present. Sporocysts (n = 31) ovoidal, 7–8 × 5–6 (7.8 × 5.7); L/W ratio 1.3–1.4 (1.4). Stieda, sub‐Stieda and para‐Stieda bodies absent or indiscernible; sporocyst residuum present, usually as an irregular body consisting of numerous granules that appear to be membrane‐bound or sometimes diffuse among sporozoites. Sporozoites vermiform with a robust refractile body. Further molecular characterization was conducted on the sporulated oocysts. At the 18S locus, it sat in a large clade of the phylogenetic tree with two isolates of Eimeria angustus from quendas (Isoodon obesulus Shaw, 1797) and the Choleoeimeria spp. It shared the highest identity with E. angustus (KU248093) at 98.84%; at the COI gene locus, it was unique and most closely related to Choleoeimeria taggarti, which is hosted by another species of marsupial, the yellow‐footed antechinus (Antechinus flavipes flavipes), with 90.58% genetic similarity. Based on morphological and molecular data, this isolate is a new species and named as Choleoeimeria yangi n. sp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Petrophysical log-driven kerogen typing: unveiling the potential of hybrid machine learning.
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Azadivash, Ahmad, Soleymani, Hosseinali, Kadkhodaie, Ali, Yahyaee, Farshid, and Rabbani, Ahmad Reza
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KEROGEN ,MACHINE learning ,STANDARD deviations ,SUPPORT vector machines - Abstract
The importance of characterizing kerogen type in evaluating source rock and the nature of hydrocarbon yield is emphasized. However, traditional laboratory geochemical assessments can be time-intensive and costly. In this study, an innovative approach was taken to bridge this gap by utilizing machine learning techniques to ascertain key parameters—Organic Oxygen Index (OI), Hydrogen Index (HI), and kerogen type—from petrophysical logs of a well in the Perth Basin, Western Australia. This approach assembled geochemical data from 138 cutting samples of the Kockatea and Woodada formations and petrophysical log data. Subsequently, six machine learning algorithms were applied to predict the OI and HI parameters. The efficacy of these methods was assessed using statistical parameters, including Coefficient of Determination (R2), Average Percentage Relative Error, Average Absolute Percentage Relative Error, Root Mean Square Error, and Standard Deviation. The Support Vector Machines method emerged as the standout performer, with an R2 of 0.993 for the OI and 0.989 for the HI, establishing itself as an optimal tool for predicting these indices. Additionally, six classifiers were employed to determine kerogen types, with accuracy tested using precision, recall, F1-Score, and accuracy parameters.The study's findings highlight the superiority of the Gradient Boosting method in kerogen-type classification, achieving an impressive accuracy rate of 93.54%. It is concluded that when utilized with petrophysical logs, machine learning methodologies offer a powerful, efficient, and cost-effective alternative for determining OI, HI, and kerogen type. The novelty of this approach lies in its ability to accurately predict these crucial parameters using readily available well-log data, potentially revolutionizing traditional geochemical analysis practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Projected risks to groundwater-dependent terrestrial vegetation caused by changing climate and groundwater abstraction in the Central Perth Basin, Western Australia.
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Barron, Olga, Froend, Ray, Hodgson, Geoff, Ali, Riasat, Dawes, Warrick, Davies, Phil, and McFarlane, Don
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CLIMATE change ,PLANTS ,ECOSYSTEMS ,GROUNDWATER ,GROUNDWATER remediation - Abstract
The effect of potential climate change on groundwater-dependent vegetation largely depends on the nature of the climate change (drying or wetting) and the level of current ecosystem dependence on groundwater resources. In south-western Australia, climate projections suggest a high likelihood of a warmer and drier climate. The paper examines the potential environmental impacts by 2030 at the regional scale on groundwater-dependent terrestrial vegetation (GDTV) adapted to various watertable depths, on the basis of the combined consideration of groundwater modelling results and the framework for GDTV risk assessment. The methodology was tested for the historical period from 1984 to 2007, allowing validation of the groundwater model results' applicability to such an assessment. Climate change effects on GDTV were evaluated using nine global climate models under three greenhouse gas emission scenarios by applying the climate projections to groundwater models. It was estimated that under dry climate scenarios, GDTV is likely to be under high and severe risk over more than 20% of its current habitat area. The risk is also likely to be higher under an increase in groundwater abstraction above current volumes. The significance of climate change risk varied across the region, depending on both the intensity of the change in water regime and the sensitivity of the GDTV to such change. Greater effects were projected for terrestrial vegetation dependent on deeper groundwater (6-10 m). Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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14. Nutritional quality of children's menus in restaurants: does cuisine type matter?
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Trapp, Gina SA, Reid, Natasha, Hickling, Siobhan, Bivoltsis, Alexia, Mandzufas, Joelie, and Howard, Justine
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RESTAURANT menus ,COOKING ,CHINESE restaurants ,INDIAN restaurants (South Asian) ,JAPANESE cooking ,ETHNIC foods - Abstract
Objective: It is unknown whether the nutritional quality of children's menus varies depending on the cuisine type. This study aimed to investigate differences in the nutritional quality of children's menus by cuisine type in restaurants located in Perth, Western Australia (WA). Design: Cross-sectional study Setting: Perth, WA. Participants: Children's menus (n 139) from the five most prevalent restaurant cuisine types in Perth (i.e. Chinese, Modern Australian, Italian, Indian and Japanese) were assessed using the Children's Menu Assessment Tool (CMAT; range -5–21 with lower scores denoting lower nutritional quality) and the Food Traffic Light system, evaluated against Healthy Options WA Food and Nutrition Policy recommendations. Non-parametric ANOVA was used to test for a significant difference in total CMAT scores among cuisine types. Results: Total CMAT scores were low for all cuisine types (range -2–5), with a significant difference between cuisine types (Kruskal–Wallis H = 58·8, P < 0·001). The highest total CMAT score by cuisine type was Modern Australian (mean = 2·27, sd = 1·41) followed by Italian (mean = 2·02, sd = 1·02), Japanese (mean = 1·80, sd = 2·39), Indian (mean = 0·30, sd = 0·97) and Chinese (mean = 0·07, sd = 0·83). When using the Food Traffic Light for assessment, Japanese cuisine had the highest percentage of green food items (44 %), followed by Italian (42 %), Modern Australian (38 %), Indian (17 %) and Chinese (14 %). Conclusions: Overall, the nutritional quality of children's menus was poor regardless of cuisine type. However, children's menus from Japanese, Italian and Modern Australian restaurants scored better in terms of nutritional quality than children's menus from Chinese and Indian restaurants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Utility of biomarkers and temporal artery biopsy length for investigating giant cell arteritis in Western Australia.
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Atlas, Isabella S., Colley, Stephen M., and Chia, Mark A.
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GIANT cell arteritis ,TEMPORAL arteries ,BLOOD sedimentation ,BIOPSY ,C-reactive protein - Abstract
Aim: To explore demographic characteristics, biopsy length, and blood biomarker performance in an Australian cohort of patients who have undergone temporal artery biopsy (TAB) for giant cell arteritis (GCA). Methods: We extracted data on biopsies performed for GCA between January 2016 and December 2020 at public hospitals in Perth. Sensitivity, specificity, and area under the curve (AUC) were calculated for blood results. We evaluated the proportion of biopsies with post‐fixation length less than 15 mm and explored several length associations. Results: We retrospectively reviewed biopsies of 360 patients (65.8% female, mean age 72.1 years). Biopsy‐positive patients were older (6.0 years, P < 0.01), and had higher C‐reactive protein (CRP) (44.5 mg/L, P < 0.01), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (18.9 mm/h, P < 0.01), and platelets (86.8 × 103/μL, P < 0.01) compared with biopsy‐negative patients. CRP and platelets had the highest AUCs at 0.76 and 0.71, respectively. Sensitivities for CRP and ESR were 96.2% and 91.5%, respectively. Specificities were comparatively low at 41.3% for CRP and 37.4% for ESR. The proportion of biopsies with sub‐optimal length was 55.9% and this varied significantly by site (P < 0.01). Smaller sites performed worse, with a sub‐optimal biopsy rate of 87% amongst the three smallest sites. Conclusion: ESR and CRP are helpful preliminary investigations, especially in identifying low‐risk patients, but their specificity is limited. Smaller centers had a higher proportion of biopsies with sub‐optimal length. Considering the importance of biopsy length for TAB diagnostic value, reviewing biopsy data may assist services in developing improvement strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. The serpulid polychaete Rotulispira from the Late Cretaceous of Western Australia.
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McNamara, Kenneth J.
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PHENOTYPIC plasticity ,MASS extinctions ,HYDROZOA ,POLYCHAETA ,CHALK ,MARL - Abstract
Four species of the serpulid polychaete Rotulispira are described from Late Cretaceous strata in the Perth and Southern Carnarvon basins in Western Australia. New species described are Rotulispira glauerti sp. nov. and Rotulispira apiaria sp. nov., from late Santonian to early Campanian chalks, and Rotulispira protea sp. nov. from a late Maastrichtian marl. Rotulispira glauerti and R. apiaria sometimes formed a commensal relationship with the hydroid Protulophila gestroi Rovereto, 1901. This is the first record of hydroids from the Cretaceous of Australia. Distribution of the hydroids on the serpulid tubes, combined with the location of gastropod predatory incisions on R. protea, allow an assessment to be made of the likely life orientation of these species. Rotulispira protea is remarkable for the extremely high levels of phenotypic plasticity that it displays. Severe environmental stress is known to induce increased levels of phenotypic plasticity in living organisms. This phenomenon in Rotulispira suggests that severe environmental stress might have been a contributory factor in the end- Cretaceous mass extinction event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Understanding employee travel behaviours in response to workplace relocation: a case study comparing commuting patterns between Subiaco and Perth, Western Australia.
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Jonescu, Emil E, Ramanayaka, Chamil, Moorcroft, Stephen, and Symington, Dean
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HUMAN behavior ,COMMUTING ,CENTRAL business districts ,URBAN community development ,PUBLIC transit ,BUILT environment - Abstract
Our built environments offer distinct variables that impact behaviour – throughout the world, and equally within Western Australia. However, an in-depth analysis of extant literature indicates that influencing human behaviour is difficult in the absence of a 'disruption' event. Accordingly, this organization-level study examined the disruptive effects of relocating from a Subiaco office to a new office in Perth's Central Business District on the commute habits of its built-environment professional employees. The relocation occurred during a 'non-lockdown' period between July and August 2021 (southern hemisphere winter). The study sought to determine if an office relocation constituted a sufficient 'disruption' to affect employees' commute behaviours, and in contrast to state and national figures, to quantify how micro-communities revise and develop commuting habits in response to changing circumstances. It was expected that the shift would increase public transportation reliance, lengthen commute times, and increase expenditure. The study applied a two-part purposive survey using frequencies and a one-sample Chi-Square test at the 95% confidence level. The distance between the two locations and projected trip times through various modes was calculated using Google Maps. The findings indicate that both Subiaco and Perth had higher public transportation utilisation when compared to state and national numbers as a multi-modal means of commuting. Furthermore, car reliance decreased and general satisfaction with commuting choices increased for the Perth study. This suggests that multi-modal public transportation commute alternatives provided a cost-effective and efficient, alternative. The study identified social value and preference propositions beyond return-on-investment for improving existing idle city assets. Lastly, the study contributes to evolving contemporary cross-disciplinary discourse and body of knowledge in human geography, urban community development, and transportation, and sought to concomitantly determine the potential to further extend this research through concurrent collection of employee daily step count data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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18. Ambient seismic noise in an urban environment: case study using downhole distributed acoustic sensors at the Curtin University campus in Perth, Western Australia.
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Shulakova, Valeriya, Tertyshnikov, Konstantin, Pevzner, Roman, Kovalyshen, Yevhen, and Gurevich, Boris
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DISTRIBUTED sensors ,OCEAN waves ,MICROSEISMS ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SEISMIC surveys ,SENSOR arrays - Abstract
Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is an emerging technology increasingly employed to monitor changes of formation properties, production noise and micro-seismic activity, and as an array of sensors in active seismic surveys. The data recorded with the DAS systems are very rich; some features observed in DAS records are often not well understood, and thus are underutilised. A systematic analysis of the data recorded passively with a DAS system in a 900-m deep well over a period of 12 weeks in the Perth metropolitan area, Western Australia, reveals the presence of several types of ambient energy in the subsurface, such as earthquakes, ocean swell and urban noise. In particular, over 85 days of the experiment, the analysis detected sixteen earthquakes, with epicentres ranging from 126 km to 900 km (for the local events) and from 2300 km to 6400 km (for the remote events). Signals with frequencies below 0.9 Hz are dominated by the oceanic swell. The recorded urban noise includes mine blasting, machinery and traffic. The experiment shows the ability of DAS to detect these events and as such is potentially useful for subsurface characterisation and monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Optimization algorithms as training approach with hybrid deep learning methods to develop an ultraviolet index forecasting model.
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Ahmed, A. A. Masrur, Ahmed, Mohammad Hafez, Saha, Sanjoy Kanti, Ahmed, Oli, and Sutradhar, Ambica
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DEEP learning ,ANT algorithms ,MATHEMATICAL optimization ,PARTICLE swarm optimization ,HILBERT-Huang transform ,INDEPENDENT variables ,FORECASTING - Abstract
The solar ultraviolet index (UVI) is a key public health indicator to mitigate the ultraviolet-exposure related diseases. This study aimed to develop and compare the performances of different hybridised deep learning approaches with a convolutional neural network and long short-term memory referred to as CLSTM to forecast the daily UVI of Perth station, Western Australia. A complete ensemble empirical mode decomposition with adaptive noise (CEEMDAN) is incorporated coupled with four feature selection algorithms (i.e., genetic algorithm (GA), ant colony optimization (ACO), particle swarm optimization (PSO), and differential evolution (DEV)) to understand the diverse combinations of the predictor variables acquired from three distinct datasets (i.e., satellite data, ground-based SILO data, and synoptic mode climate indices). The CEEMDAN-CLSTM model coupled with GA appeared to be an accurate forecasting system in capturing the UVI. Compared to the counterpart benchmark models, the results demonstrated the excellent forecasting capability (i.e., low error and high efficiency) of the recommended hybrid CEEMDAN-CLSTM model in apprehending the complex and non-linear relationships between predictor variables and the daily UVI. The study inference can considerably enhance real-time exposure advice for the public and help mitigate the potential for solar UV-exposure-related diseases such as melanoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Esculin hydrolysis negative and TcdA‐only producing strains of Clostridium (Clostridioides) difficile from the environment in Western Australia.
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Shivaperumal, Nirajmohan, Knight, Daniel R., Imwattana, Korakrit, Androga, Grace O., Chang, Barbara J., and Riley, Thomas V.
- Subjects
CLOSTRIDIUM ,SHOE soles ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,CLOSTRIDIUM perfringens ,CLOSTRIDIOIDES difficile ,HYDROLYSIS ,ENVIRONMENTAL sampling - Abstract
Background and Aims: Clostridium (Clostridiodes) difficile clade 3 ribotype (RT) 023 strains that fail to produce black colonies on bioMérieux ChromID agar have been reported, as well as variant strains of C. difficile that produce only toxin A. We have recently isolated strains of C. difficile from the environment in Western Australia (WA) with similar characteristics. The objective of this study was to characterize these strains. It was hypothesized that a putative β‐glucosidase gene was lacking in these strains of C. difficile, including RT 023, leading to white colonies. Methods and Results: A total of 17 environmental isolates of C. difficile from garden soil and compost, and gardening shoe soles in Perth, WA, failed to produce black colonies on ChromID agar. MALDI‐TOF MS analysis confirmed these strains as C. difficile. Four strains contained only a tcdA gene (A+B−CDT−) by PCR and were a novel RT (QX 597). All isolates were susceptible to all antimicrobials tested except one with low‐level resistance to clindamycin (MIC = 8 mg/L). The four tcdA‐positive strains were motile. All isolates contained neither bgl locus but only bgl K or a putative β‐glucosidase gene by PCR. Whole‐genome sequencing showed the 17 strains belonged to novel multi‐locus sequence types 632, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852 and 853, part of the evolutionarily divergent clade C‐III. Four isolates carried a full‐length tcdA but not tcdB nor binary toxin genes. Conclusions: ChromID C. difficile agar is used for the specific detection of C. difficile in the samples. To date, all strains except RT 023 strains from clinical samples hydrolyse esculin. This is the first report to provide insights into the identification of esculin hydrolysis negative and TcdA‐only producing (A+B−CDT−) strains of C. difficile from environmental samples. Significance and Impact of the Study: White colonies of C. difficile from environmental samples could be overlooked when using ChromID C. difficile agar, leading to false‐negative results, however, whether these strains are truly pathogenic remains to be proven. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. Why does Perth stand alone? Interviews with subject matter experts about the drivers of settlement in Western Australia.
- Author
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Wilkinson III, George S., Haslam McKenzie, Fiona, and Bolleter, Julian
- Subjects
CAPITAL cities ,ECONOMIC geography ,LAND settlement patterns - Abstract
Australian non-capital cities are overshadowed by their state capitals. High state-level urban primacy is especially true of Western Australia. Various theories in economic geography might explain the west Australian settlement pattern. Few are grounded in the experience of those with power over and/or knowledge of development. To study this experience and compare it with theory we conducted 37 in-depth interviews with decision-makers and subject matter experts to understand their explanations of Western Australia's settlement pattern. In addition to well-known determinants of settlement, such as environmental constraint and first-mover advantages, a majority of participants attributed Perth's dominance to centralised political institutions, poor infrastructure provision to non-capital city regions, few bottom-up growth avenues, and an unmet need to devolve power. Most participants believed centralisation in Perth warrants intervention. The most reoccurring ideas are presented and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Tipping Points and Changes in Australian Climate and Extremes.
- Author
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Frederiksen, Jorgen S. and Osbrough, Stacey L.
- Subjects
CLIMATE extremes ,CLIMATE change ,TWENTIETH century ,TWENTY-first century ,STREAMFLOW - Abstract
Systematic changes, since the beginning of the 20th century, in average and extreme Australian rainfall and temperatures indicate that Southern Australian climate has undergone regime transitions into a drier and warmer state. South-west Western Australia (SWWA) experienced the most dramatic drying trend with average streamflow into Perth dams, in the last decade, just 20% of that before the 1960s and extreme, decile 10, rainfall reduced to near zero. In south-eastern Australia (SEA) systematic decreases in average and extreme cool season rainfall became evident in the late 1990s with a halving of the area experiencing average decile 10 rainfall in the early 21st century compared with that for the 20th century. The shift in annual surface temperatures over SWWA and SEA, and indeed for Australia as a whole, has occurred primarily over the last 20 years with the percentage area experiencing extreme maximum temperatures in decile 10 increasing to an average of more than 45% since the start of the 21st century compared with less than 3% for the 20th century mean. Average maximum temperatures have also increased by circa 1 °C for SWWA and SEA over the last 20 years. The climate changes in rainfall an d temperatures are associated with atmospheric circulation shifts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Water resources planning in a drying climate in the south-west of Western Australia.
- Author
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Broderick, Kathleen and McFarlane, Don
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WATER supply ,WATER resources development ,WATER levels ,WATER management ,WATER use - Abstract
The level of water resource development was not at a critically high level when climate change dramatically reduced runoff and recharge in South-west Western Australia. This was because of the state's relatively low population for its size, a small irrigation industry (mainly based on self-supply groundwater) and the low level of secondary industry. Few resources were heavily over allocated despite the need to significantly de-rate water supply systems. The strong uni-directional drying signal in the south-west of WA has been an advantage in that new water supplies have been developed and/or demands reduced as conditions continued to dry, reinforcing the decisions made. Strong government leadership in adapting to a drying climate in the south-west, through accelerated and alternate water source developments has been extremely successful in mitigating dire impacts, especially in the Perth-Peel region. However, as drying and warming trends continue, there is less opportunity to develop new sources and a need to consider a wider array of sources, especially use in water resource planning. More nuanced planning requires stronger governance settings and increased engagement of stakeholders. A step change in the governance and sophistication of water planning and management could be achieved through new legislation in coming years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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24. Street Verge in Transition: A Study of Community Drivers and Local Policy Setting for Urban Greening in Perth, Western Australia.
- Author
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Hunt, Shania, Maher, Jeremy, Swapan, Mohammad Shahidul Hasan, and Zaman, Atiq
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URBAN policy ,SUSTAINABLE urban development ,PUBLIC spaces ,GARDEN cities ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SUBURBS ,METROPOLITAN areas ,URBAN trees - Abstract
The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are regarded as the key policy agenda for national, regional, and local government to combat climate change impacts and promote sustainable development. For example, in Perth and Peel metropolitan area, the capital city of Western Australia, there has been a shift of policy setting from that of a sprawling city to a denser city, while maintaining and promoting its ecosystem services and achieving sustainable city goals. Residential verge gardens have been widely adopted in recent years by communities and local governments in the Perth metropolitan area. This study reviews the motivations and drivers for the uptake of verge gardens in metropolitan suburbs and identifies potential policy responses. The City of Bayswater local government area was surveyed for this research. The study considers a mixed-methods approach, including site auditing and a questionnaire survey for local residents who have transformed their verges. A total of 534 verge gardens were audited on residential lots, and 166 valid questionnaire responses were received from residents. The site-audit of the verge gardens in Bayswater found that native vegetation is the dominant verge garden of choice, followed by the ornamental garden, with food production (plants/vegetables) seeming to be the least popular option. Regarding the motivations and drivers, the study has found that social (e.g., aesthetics, flowers, social interactions, and social mimicry), environmental (e.g., attracting wildlife and birds and environmental practice waterwise garden), and personal (easy maintenance) drivers are the primary motivators for residents to adopt verge gardens. Whilst the on-ground surveys were prior to COVID-19, the article includes how this topic could relate to pandemic-resilient urban spaces. As local governments look towards supporting the sustainable outcome goals, the observations of this study will be helpful for developing local government policy and community programs in the promotion and uptake of verge gardens in Australian cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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25. Exceptional longevity in a lightly exploited, semi-anadromous clupeid (Perth herring Nematalosa vlaminghi) within a degraded estuarine environment.
- Author
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Smith, Kimberley A., Coulson, Peter G., and Hesp, S. Alex
- Subjects
SPAWNING ,LONGEVITY ,LIFE history theory ,FISHERIES ,BYCATCHES ,ATLANTIC herring ,MARINE ecology ,ESTUARIES - Abstract
Many anadromous (and semi-anadromous) fish species, which migrate from marine to freshwater ecosystems to spawn and to complete their life cycle, are currently threatened by habitat degradation in the upper parts of estuaries and rivers, where spawning and juvenile nursery areas occur. This situation pertains to Nematalosa vlaminghi, a semianadromous gizzard shad (Clupeidae: Dorosomatinae) endemic to south-western Australia. More information on the biology of N. vlaminghi is required for its effective management and conservation. This study estimated growth, longevity and natural mortality of N. vlaminghi. Ages were determined by counting validated annual growth increments in thin sections of sagittal otoliths. Fish were sampled in the Swan-Canning Estuary, which historically hosted the main commercial fishery for N. vlaminghi. Since the late 1990s, however, only very minor catches of this species have been taken from this estuary and none since 2007. Given the essentially unexploited state of the current population, the estimate of total mortality (Z, y
-1 ) from the catch curve analysis in this study provides a direct estimate of natural mortality (M, y-1 ) for N. vlaminghi. Somatic growth during this study was substantially slower than that historically reported for N. vlaminghi. Various processes operating in this estuary since the 1970s may have contributed to slower growth, including increased hypoxia, higher primary productivity due to eutrophication and cessation of fishing for N. vlaminghi. The maximum observed age of 19.8 years for N. vlaminghi is the highest reported for any gizzard shad globally and one of the highest reported for any clupeid species. This exceptional longevity is likely part of a life-history strategy that allows N. vlaminghi, which exhibits substantial variation in annual recruitment success, to persist in the intermittently closed estuaries of south-western Australia where environmental factors, including low flow and hypoxia, can create unfavourable conditions for reproduction for extended periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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26. Heavy metal incorporation in foraminiferal calcite under variable environmental and acute level seawater pollution: multi-element culture experiments for Amphisorus hemprichii.
- Author
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Sagar, Netramani, Sadekov, Aleksey, Jenner, Talia, Chapuis, Lorie, Scott, Peter, Choudhary, Mukesh, and McCulloch, Malcolm
- Subjects
LASER ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry ,MARINE pollution ,HEAVY metals ,CALCITE - Abstract
The accelerated release of heavy metals into the coastal environments due to increasing anthropogenic activities poses a severe threat to local marine ecosystems and food chains. Although some heavy metals are essential nutrients for plants and animals, higher concentrations can be toxic and hazardous. To mitigate this threat, developing quantifiable proxies for monitoring heavy metal concentrations in near-shore marine environments is essential. Here, we describe culture experiments to quantify uptake of some heavy metals using live juvenile specimens of the large benthic foraminifera (LBF) Amphisorus hemprichii collected from the subtropical waters of Rottnest Island located ~20 km offshore Perth, South West Australia. The uptake of Mn, Ni, Cd, and Pb in the newly precipitated chambers of Amphisorus hemprichii in the laboratory was characterized using the micro-analytical technique, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. We found no significant increase in Mn, Ni, Cd, and Pb incorporation in the tests of Amphisorus hemprichii with increasing temperature and light intensities. Importantly, we found that changes in the concentrations of Mn, Ni, and Cd in the A. hemprichii tests are directly proportional to those in the culture solution over a wide range of concentrations. The calculated partition coefficients for Mn, Ni, and Cd from our culture experiments are 1.3±0.2, 0.3±0.04, 2.6±0.3, respectively. These multi-element calibration studies now enable A. hemprichii to be utilized as a naturally occurring bio-archive to quantitatively monitor the anthropogenic pollution of Mn, Ni, and Cd in coastal waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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27. Biodiversity offsetting can relocate nature away from people: An empirical case study in Western Australia.
- Author
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Kalliolevo, Hanna, Gordon, Ascelin, Sharma, Roshan, Bull, Joseph W., and Bekessy, Sarah A.
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CENTRAL business districts ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,ECONOMIC development projects ,BIODIVERSITY ,PROPERTY rights ,ZONING ,LAND tenure - Abstract
Regular contact with nature provides multiple health benefits for people, but biodiversity is declining fast in an urbanizing world. Biodiversity offsets are implemented to compensate for the negative residual impacts of economic development projects on biodiversity, but the impacts on people who stand to lose biodiversity from their local environment are rarely considered. Offsetting typically involves creating, restoring or protecting biodiversity values at a specified site that can be located some distance away from the development site. In this article, we explore whether any relocation of nature is occurring due to development and offsets in Western Australia (WA); a jurisdiction with one of the world's few spatially referenced and comprehensive public offset registers. We analyzed data from 158 projects within the WA Environmental Offsets Register. We compared the location of development sites within 50 km (the urban and peri urban zone) and 500 km (~one day's drive) of the central business district (CBD) of Perth with the associated offset sites. The development and offset process together can be considered to contribute to a loss of urban nature as the offset sites tended to be further away from urban areas than the associated development sites. The offset sites were also located in significantly lower population density areas. However, offsets increased the publicly accessible land area by changing land ownership and creating amenity benefit by improving nature values on public land. Nevertheless, it is unclear to what extent relocation of nature further from people is balanced by increased public access to nature. In order to maintain nature connectedness, ecosystem service delivery and environmental justice in cities, we argue offset policies should require spatial proximity between impact and offset sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
28. Tourist attractions and the location of campsites in Western Australia.
- Author
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Gaładyk, Przemysław and Podhorodecka, Katarzyna
- Subjects
CAMP sites ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA distribution ,TOURIST attractions ,TOURISM - Abstract
This article analyses the conditions for the development of caravan tourism in Western Australia. It describes caravan tourism within tourism in general, presents its development in Australia, and investigates the relationship between the distribution of tourism assets and the location of campsites. The article analyses the data on the distribution of natural and anthropogenic values and campsite bases. The point bonitation method was used, the most and least attractive areas of the state were indicated and, using the Pearson correlation ratio, it was shown that there is a significant relationship between the attractiveness of tourist areas and the distribution of camping fields in Western Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. DNA methylation patterns within whole blood of adolescents born from assisted reproductive technology are not different from adolescents born from natural conception.
- Author
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Penova-Veselinovic, B, Melton, P E, Huang, R C, Yovich, J L, Burton, P, Wijs, L A, and Hart, R J
- Subjects
DNA methylation ,TEENAGERS ,REPRODUCTIVE technology ,AGE ,INFERTILITY ,YOUNG adults ,MATERNAL age ,EPIGENOMICS ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HUMAN reproductive technology ,FERTILIZATION in vitro ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Study Question: Do the epigenome-wide DNA methylation profiles of adolescents born from ART differ from the epigenome of naturally conceived counterparts?Summary Answer: No significant differences in the DNA methylation profiles of adolescents born from ART [IVF or ICSI] were observed when compared to their naturally conceived, similar aged counterparts.What Is Known Already: Short-term and longer-term studies have investigated the general health outcomes of children born from IVF treatment, albeit without common agreement as to the cause and underlying mechanisms of these adverse health findings. Growing evidence suggests that the reported adverse health outcomes in IVF-born offspring might have underlying epigenetic mechanisms.Study Design, Size, Duration: The Growing Up Healthy Study (GUHS) is a prospective study that recruited 303 adolescents and young adults, conceived through ART, to compare various long-term health outcomes and DNA methylation profiles with similar aged counterparts from Generation 2 from the Raine Study. GUHS assessments were conducted between 2013 and 2017. The effect of ART on DNA methylation levels of 231 adolescents mean age 15.96 ± 1.59 years (52.8% male) was compared to 1188 naturally conceived counterparts, 17.25 ± 0.58 years (50.9% male) from the Raine Study.Participants/materials, Setting, Methods: DNA methylation profiles from a subset of 231 adolescents (13-19.9 years) from the GUHS, generated using the Infinium Methylation Epic Bead Chip (EPIC) array were compared to 1188 profiles from the Raine Study previously measured using the Illumina 450K array. We conducted epigenome-wide association approach (EWAS) and tested for an association between the cohorts applying Firth's bias reduced logistic regression against the outcome of ART versus naturally conceived offspring. Additionally, within the GUHS cohort, we investigated differences in methylation status in fresh versus frozen embryo transfers, cause of infertility as well as IVF versus ICSI conceived offspring. Following the EWAS analysis we investigated nominally significant probes using Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) to identify enriched biological pathways. Finally, within GUHS we compared four estimates (Horvath, Hanuum, PhenoAge [Levine], and skin Horvath) of epigenetic age and their correlation with chronological age.Main Results and the Role Of Chance: Between the two cohorts, we did not identify any DNA methylation probes that reached a Bonferroni corrected P-value < 1.24E-0.7. When comparing IVF versus ICSI conceived adolescents within the GUHS cohort, after adjustment for participant age, sex, maternal smoking, multiple births, and batch effect, three methylation probes (cg15016734, cg26744878 and cg20233073) reached a Bonferroni correction of 6.31E-08. After correcting for cell count heterogeneity, two of the aforementioned probes remained significant and an additional two probes (cg 0331628 and cg 20235051) were identified. A general trend towards hypomethylation in the ICSI offspring was observed. All four measures of epigenetic age were highly correlated with chronological age and showed no evidence of accelerated epigenetic aging within their whole blood.Limitations, Reasons For Caution: The small sample size coupled with the use of whole blood, where epigenetic differences may occur in other tissue. This was corrected by the utilized statistical method that accounts for imbalanced sample size between groups and adjusting for cell count heterogeneity. Only a small portion of the methylome was analysed and rare individual differences may be missed.Wider Implications Of the Findings: Our findings provide further reassurance that the effects of the ART manipulations occurring during early embryogenesis, existing in the neonatal period are indeed of a transient nature and do not persist into adolescence. However, we have not excluded that alternative epigenetic mechanisms may be at play.Study Funding/competing Interest(s): This project was supported by NHMRC project Grant no. 1042269 and R.J.H. received funding support from Ferring Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd. R.J.H. is the Medical Director of Fertility Specialists of Western Australia and a shareholder in Western IVF. He has received educational sponsorship from Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp.- Australia, Merck-Serono Australia Pty Ltd and Ferring Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd. P.B. is the Scientific Director of Concept Fertility Centre, Subiaco, Western Australia. J.L.Y. is the Medical Director of PIVET Medical Centre, Perth, Western Australia. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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30. Beware of the bicycle! An increase in paediatric bicycle related injuries during the COVID‐19 period in Western Australia.
- Author
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van Oudtshoorn, Sarah, Chiu, Kei Y. C., and Khosa, Japinder
- Subjects
HELMETS ,COVID-19 ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,BICYCLES ,SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
Background: In Western Australia, the media has reported on an increase in the purchasing, repairs and use of bicycles during the COVID‐19 period. The study aimed to investigate for a relationship in bicycle related injuries in the paediatric population during the time of COVID‐19 restrictions. Methods: A retrospective study of the incident of motorized and non‐motorized bicycle related injuries and trauma presentations during the COVID‐19 'shutdown' period from March to June 2020. Data were collected from the Emergency Department Information System, discharge summaries, operation and radiology reports. The data presented is from Perth Children's Hospital, the only tertiary paediatric hospital and the only referral centre for childhood trauma in the state of Western Australia. Participants were children aged 15 years and younger attending the emergency department (ED) at Perth Children's Hospital during the designated time period. The primary outcomes included total ED presentations, bicycle related presentations and bicycle related admissions during the COVID‐19 period. Results: Bicycle related presentations to the ED increased by 42.7% over the COVID‐19 period from 1.4% to 3.0% of all children attending the ED. Children admitted to the hospital with bicycle related injuries or trauma increased by 48.7% from 76 to 113 children in comparison to the same period in 2019. Conclusion: During the period of COVID‐19 restrictions, paediatric ED presentations decreased dramatically, but bicycle related injuries and trauma increased substantially. Safety equipment including helmets and protective gear should be worn for all children riding bicycles, and social distancing should be maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Harold A. Innis, Asian media and dependency theory: remembering the work of Brian Shoesmith.
- Author
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Rossiter, Ned
- Subjects
CULTURAL studies ,COMMUNICATION theory of identity - Abstract
Casting an eye back on the cultural scene in Perth in the late eighties and early nineties, this article reflects on the legacy of the late Brian Shoesmith. I discuss Brian's work on Harold A. Innis and communications theory, his interests in Asian media and Indian cinema, the research agendas he forged at Edith Cowan University and his institution building efforts later in his career. In writing this piece, I am struck now by how rich this period was in Australian communications, media and cultural studies. In this respect, the article contributes to a broader collective account of a period that registers what we have lost in the metric obsessed academy of audit cultures, performance rankings and research excellence: a shared sense of intellectual adventure between academic staff and students, an institutional environment that conditioned disciplinary experimentation (or at least remained sufficiently oblivious to activities on its margins) and a general culture of living theory. Those days seem over. Yet, by reflecting on the many activities of Brian, together with his contemporaries like Tom O'Regan and many of their generation, we might recuperate a sense of the vibrancy of that time as a possible resource in negotiating an increasingly circumscribed institutional and disciplinary horizon of the present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Has the Sun Protection Campaign in Australia Reduced the Need for Pterygium Surgery Nationally?
- Author
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Stevenson, Louis J., Mackey, David A., Lingham, Gareth, Burton, Alex, Brown, Holly, Huynh, Emily, Tan, Irene J., Franchina, Maria, Sanfilippo, Paul G., and Yazar, Seyhan
- Subjects
PTERYGIUM ,BIOFLUORESCENCE ,CROSS-sectional method ,PATIENT readmissions - Abstract
The Slip! Slop! Slap! Sunsmart safety campaign was an Australian initiative implemented in the 1980s. To assess this campaign's effect on pterygium, we examined the rate of pterygium surgery across Australia and described the prevalence and associations of pterygium in Perth, Australia's sunniest capital city. The rate of pterygium surgery was examined using Australian Medicare data. A cross-sectional analysis of the Generation 1 (Gen1) cohort of the Raine Study was performed to investigate the prevalence of pterygium in Perth. We investigated the association between pterygium and conjunctival ultraviolet autofluorescence (CUVAF) area, an objective biomarker of sun exposure, and demographics and health variables derived from a detailed questionnaire. Between 1994 and 2017, the rate of Medicare funded pterygium surgery in Western Australia fell 11%, well below the national average decline of 47%. Of the 1049 Gen1 Raine Study participants, 994 (571 females; mean age 56.7 years, range = 40.9–81.7) were included in the analysis. The lifetime prevalence of pterygium was 8.4% (n = 83). A higher prevalence of pterygium was associated with outdoor occupation (p-trend = 0.007), male sex (p-trend 0.01) and increasing CUVAF area (p-value <0.001). The effect of Australia's Slip! Slop! Slap! Sunsmart safety campaign on pterygium been mixed. Since 1994, the rate of private pterygium surgery has declined significantly in all Australian states except Western Australia. Perth, Western Australia, has the highest pterygium prevalence of any mainland-Australian cohort. Higher CUVAF area, male sex, and outdoor occupation were associated with an increased risk of pterygium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Antipodean Aftershocks: Group Settlement of Hebridean and non-Hebridean Britons in Western Australia following World War One.
- Author
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Jones, Roy and Jones, Tod
- Subjects
WORLD War I ,BRITISH colonies ,BRITISH people ,BRITONS ,EARTHQUAKE aftershocks - Abstract
In the speech in which the phrase 'land fit for heroes' was coined, Lloyd George proclaimed '(l)et us make victory the motive power to link the old land up in such measure that it will be nearer the sunshine than ever before ... it will lift those who have been living in the dark places to a plateau where they will get the rays of the sun'. This speech conflated the issues of the 'debt of honour' and the provision of land to those who had served. These ideals had ramifications throughout the British Empire. Here we proffer two Antipodean examples: the national Soldier Settlement Scheme in New Zealand and the Imperial Group Settlement of British migrants in Western Australia and, specifically, the fate and the legacy of a Group of Gaelic speaking Outer Hebrideans who relocated to a site which is now in the outer fringes of metropolitan Perth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Leaf my neighbourhood alone! predicting the influence of densification on residential tree canopy cover in Perth.
- Author
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Saunders, Alex, Duncan, John, Hurley, Joe, Amati, Marco, Caccetta, Peter, Chia, Joanne, and Boruff, Bryan
- Subjects
FOREST canopies ,TREE care ,FOREST management ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,STANDARD deviations ,URBAN planning ,URBAN growth - Abstract
• Neighbourhood age, SES, density, and building footprints predict urban forest cover. • Residential private land is positively correlated with neighbourhood forest cover. • Higher building footprint ratio reduces urban forest cover. • Random Forests model explained 74.26% in neighbourhood forest cover variation. Trees provide myriad ecosystem services of benefit to urban populations; however, urban development is pressuring existing urban tree coverage. Thus, a pertinent challenge for planners is identifying development scenarios that find synergies between urban growth and the preservation or enhancement of tree canopy coverage. This paper presents the training and validation of a model that predicts changes in neighbourhood-level urban tree canopy cover associated with different socio-economic and physical urban form variables. Neighbourhoods across Perth, the capital city of Western Australia, were used as a case study. A Random Forests model was trained using a suite of socio-economic and urban form variables and neighbourhood percentage tree canopy cover derived from very high resolution multispectral remote sensing images and digital surface models. This model was validated using independent test data with a mean absolute error of 1.78% and a root mean square error of 2.42%. An application of this model was demonstrated using the City of Nedlands, Perth, where a new planning scheme allowing denser urban development has been approved by the State Government. The magnitude and spatial variation in the change of neighbourhood tree canopy cover in the City of Nedlands in 2050 associated with three urban development scenarios was predicted using the model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Ten years of paediatric airway foreign bodies in Western Australia.
- Author
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Reid, Allison, Hinton-Bayre, Anton, Vijayasekaran, Shyan, and Herbert, Hayley
- Subjects
- *
SYMPTOMS , *WATCHFUL waiting , *CHILD nutrition , *MEDICAL records , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *FOREIGN bodies - Abstract
Whenever a paediatric airway foreign body (PAFB) is suspected, decisions may be difficult without a clearly defined or accepted treatment algorithm. History and examination are commonly non-diagnostic and the risks associated with either watchful waiting or proceeding to MLB are significant. This paper reviews a 10 year cohort of suspected PAFBs for the predictive utility of history, examination and investigations and subsequent positive findings at MLB. 1. To review cases of suspected PAFB undergoing MLB in Perth, Western Australia over 10 years 2. To examine the relative strengths of history, examination and imaging for predicting the presence of a foreign body, and their utility in treatment decision making 3. To characterise the epidemiology of our cohort and to Evaluate our complication rate 4. To consider the limitations and benefits of the use of CT imaging in such cases The medical records of 127 children who underwent MLB for suspected PAFB between 2007 and 2016 were examined. The data was retrospectively reviewed for epidemiological details, history, examination, radiological findings and MLB outcomes. Sensitivity for PAFB on MLB with all three; history, examination and imaging (x-ray) positive for PAFB was 87.7%. Of the patients who were both symptom and sign positive (n = 96), chest x-ray findings did not significantly alter the chance of finding a PAFB. Chest x-ray had a low specificity (17%) in symptom and sign positive patients. Conversely, sensitivity of chest x-ray was high (88%), for symptom and sign positive patients. For a child with both signs and symptoms, xray is unlikely to assist in decision making around suspected PAFB. When only sign or symptom is present, positive imaging may significantly increase the chance that PAFB is the cause.For patients with a low suspicion of PAFB, consideration of a CT can be a helpful means of excluding a PAFB and avoiding an unnecessary general anaesthetic in this potentially high-risk group.A greater level of public awareness is needed with regards to appropriate food types for children and the importance of eating seated and supervised in order to reduce the risk of PAFB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Assessment of the pest status of Pratylenchus curvicauda and ultrastructural changes in roots of infected wheat and barley.
- Author
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Begum, Farhana, Jones, Michael G. K., and Fosu‐Nyarko, John
- Subjects
PRATYLENCHUS ,WHEAT ,BARLEY ,HOST plants ,PESTS ,CHICKPEA ,COVER crops - Abstract
Pratylenchus curvicauda, which was first described in metropolitan Perth in 1991, was recently identified in grain‐growing areas in Western Australia. The biology of this root‐lesion nematode, and especially its pest status, is unknown. We investigated its life cycle and interaction with host plants, because such information is essential for its management. The life cycle took 45 days to complete in a wheat cultivar maintained at 23°C. Over 10 weeks, the nematode multiplied in 26 of 61 genotypes; these host plants were all cereals and included widely grown cultivars of wheat and barley. Eighteen other cereal genotypes and 13 cultivars including canola, chickpea, ryegrass, lupin, soybean, and tomato, sustained the nematodes to different degrees without multiplication. Four cover crops were not suitable hosts. The patterns of attraction of the nematodes and penetration into roots of the host and tolerant plants were similar. The nonhosts attracted fewer nematodes, none of which penetrated the roots. Browning of infected roots was atypical—it occurred late in some roots, 55 days after inoculation, and in the presence of a fungus. The nematodes were confined to, and fed from, cortical cells. The ultrastructure of infected wheat and barley cells showed typical signs of damage caused by Pratylenchus spp. and included cell disorganization and lack of membrane integrity, disintegration of cytoplasm, hypertrophy of some nuclei, and deposition of tannin‐like granules. This detailed characterization of P. curvicauda–host interaction indicates the nematode is likely to be a pest of major crops, and attention should be given to its management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The influence of the local food environment on diet following residential relocation: longitudinal results from RESIDential Environments (RESIDE).
- Author
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Bivoltsis, Alexia, Trapp, Gina, Knuiman, Matthew, Hooper, Paula, and Ambrosini, Gina Leslie
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR ,LOCAL foods ,PLANNED communities ,DIET ,INGESTION ,CONVENIENCE stores ,RESEARCH ,RESTAURANTS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,FOOD supply ,COMPARATIVE studies ,BUSINESS ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective: To examine the associations of changes in the local food environment, individual behaviours and perceptions with changes in dietary intake, following relocation from an established neighbourhood to a new residential development.Design: Spatial food environment exposure measures were generated relative to each participant's home address using the locations of food outlets at baseline (before moving house) and follow-up (1-2 years after relocation). Self-reported data on socio-demographics, self-selection, usual dietary intake, individual behaviours and perceptions of the local food environment were sourced from the RESIDential Environments (RESIDE) Project. Changes in spatial exposure measures, individual behaviours and perceptions with changes in dietary outcomes were examined using mixed linear models.Setting: Perth, Western Australia, 2003-2007.Participants: Adults (n 1200) from the RESIDE Project.Results: Moving to a new residential development with more convenience stores and café restaurants around the home was significantly associated with an increase in unhealthy food intake (β = 0·049, 95 % CI 0·010, 0·089; β = 0·020, 95 % CI 0·007, 0·033) and was partially mediated by individual behaviours and perceptions. A greater percentage of healthy food outlets around the home following relocation was significantly associated with an increase in healthy food (β = 0·003, 95 % CI 0·001, 0·005) and fruit/vegetable intake (β = 0·002, 95 % CI 0·001, 0·004).Conclusions: Policy and planning may influence dietary intakes by restricting the number of convenience stores and other unhealthy food outlets and increasing the relative percentage of healthy food outlets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Variation in reproductive effort, genetic diversity and mating systems across Posidonia australis seagrass meadows in Western Australia.
- Author
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Sinclair, Elizabeth A, Edgeloe, Jane M, Anthony, Janet M, Statton, John, Breed, Martin F, and Kendrick, Gary A
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POSIDONIA ,SEAGRASSES ,SEAGRASS restoration ,WORLD Heritage Sites ,NUCLEAR DNA ,FRUIT seeds - Abstract
Populations at the edges of their geographical range tend to have lower genetic diversity, smaller effective population sizes and limited connectivity relative to centre of range populations. Range edge populations are also likely to be better adapted to more extreme conditions for future survival and resilience in warming environments. However, they may also be most at risk of extinction from changing climate. We compare reproductive and genetic data of the temperate seagrass, Posidonia australis on the west coast of Australia. Measures of reproductive effort (flowering and fruit production and seed to ovule ratios) and estimates of genetic diversity and mating patterns (nuclear microsatellite DNA loci) were used to assess sexual reproduction in northern range edge (low latitude, elevated salinities, Shark Bay World Heritage Site) and centre of range (mid-latitude, oceanic salinity, Perth metropolitan waters) meadows in Western Australia. Flower and fruit production were highly variable among meadows and there was no significant relationship between seed to ovule ratio and clonal diversity. However, Shark Bay meadows were two orders of magnitude less fecund than those in Perth metropolitan waters. Shark Bay meadows were characterized by significantly lower levels of genetic diversity and a mixed mating system relative to meadows in Perth metropolitan waters, which had high genetic diversity and a completely outcrossed mating system. The combination of reproductive and genetic data showed overall lower sexual productivity in Shark Bay meadows relative to Perth metropolitan waters. The mixed mating system is likely driven by a combination of local environmental conditions and pollen limitation. These results indicate that seagrass restoration in Shark Bay may benefit from sourcing plant material from multiple reproductive meadows to increase outcrossed pollen availability and seed production for natural recruitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Composition and ecological drivers of the kwongan scrub and woodlands in the northern Swan Coastal Plain, Western Australia.
- Author
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Tsakalos, James L., Renton, Michael, Dobrowolski, Mark P., Veneklaas, Erik J., Macintyre, Paul D., Broomfield, Sarah J., and Mucina, Ladislav
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COASTAL plains ,SHRUBLANDS ,FORESTS & forestry ,HEATHLANDS ,VEGETATION patterns ,VEGETATION classification - Abstract
The nature of community patterns and environmental drivers in kwongan mediterranean‐type shrubland on nutrient‐poor soils occurring in Western Australia remain poorly examined. We aimed to determine whether (i) classification of the kwongan vegetation of the northern Swan Coastal Plain would be ecologically informative and (ii) which environmental drivers underpin the plant community patterns. The study area was positioned on the northern Swan Coastal Plain, locality of Cooljarloo (30°39′ S, 115°22′ E), situated 170 km north of Perth, Western Australia. Compositional (518 species × 337 relevés) and environmental data set (29 variables × 87 relevés) describing time since last fire, soil chemical and physical properties, and terrain characteristics were analysed using classification and ordination techniques. OptimClass assisted in the selection of a robust data transformation, resemblance function and clustering algorithm to identify the vegetation patterns. Major ecological drivers of the vegetation patterns were detected using distance‐based redundancy analysis (db‐RDA). Classification revealed major groupings of Wet Heath and Banksia Woodland distinguishable by the high prevalence of myrtyoid and proteoid taxa, respectively. On floristic‐sociological grounds, we recognised four Wet Heath and two Banksia Woodland communities. The Wet Heath was constrained to areas of higher litter depth (db‐RDA axis 1: 9%). Soil chemical and physical properties explained the highest proportion (17%) of the compositional variance, while the terrain‐ and fire‐related variables explained 2% and <0.001%, respectively. While fire explained little compositional variance overall, a separate db‐RDA analysis found that it may play an important pattern‐structuring role within Banksia Woodlands. Fine‐scale compositional patterns correspond only to a small extent to environmental data; the substantial unexplained variance may be due to slow‐acting neutral and stochastic processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Space, Place, and Agency in the Roe 8 Highway Protest, Western Australia.
- Author
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Brady, Danielle
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTALISM ,ROADS ,WETLANDS ,SPACE - Abstract
The struggle to save the Beeliar Wetlands, an urban remnant bushland in Perth, Western Australia, demonstrates elements of both urban social and urban environmental movements. At the end of 2016, 30 years of objection to the continuation of the Roe Highway development (Roe 8) culminated in months of intense protest leading up to a state election and a cessation of work in 2017. During the long-running campaign, protestors fought to preserve high- conservation-value bushland that was contained in the planned road reserve. At the heart of this dispute were competing spatial uses. This article will analyze four protest actions from the dispute using Henri Lefebvre's concept of the production of space, and will demonstrate that the practices of protest gave those fighting to preserve Roe 8 the agency to reinscribe meaning to the natural uses of the Beeliar Wetlands over and against the uses privileged by the state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Identifying Perceptions and Preferences of the General Public Concerning Universal Screening of Children for Familial Hypercholesterolaemia.
- Author
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Bowman, Faye L., Molster, Caron M., Lister, Karla J., Bauskis, Alicia T., Garton-Smith, Jacquie, Vickery, Alistair W., Watts, Gerald F., and Martin, Andrew C.
- Subjects
CHILDREN ,THEMATIC analysis ,CORONARY disease ,GENETIC disorders ,SENSORY perception ,INTERNET forums ,FORUMS - Abstract
Background/Aims: Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) is a common genetic disorder that, if untreated, predisposes individuals to premature coronary heart disease. As most individuals with FH remain undiagnosed, new approaches to detection are needed and should be considered a priority in public health genomics. Universal screening of children for FH has been proposed, and this study explores public perspectives on the acceptability of this approach. Methods: A one-day deliberative public forum was held in Perth, WA, Australia. Thirty randomly selected individuals were recruited, with self-reported sociodemographic characteristics used to obtain discursive representation. Participants were presented with information from a variety of perspectives and asked to discuss the information provided to identify points of consensus and disagreement. The data collected were analysed using thematic analysis. Results: Of the 17 participants at the forum, 16 deemed universal screening of children for FH to be acceptable. Fifteen of these 16 believed this was best performed at the time of an immunisation. Participants proposed a number of conditions that should be met to reduce the likelihood of unintended harm resulting from the screening process. Discussion/Conclusion: The outcomes of the forum suggest that establishing a universal screening programme for FH in childhood is acceptable to the general public in WA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Annual plankton community metabolism in estuarine and coastal waters in Perth (Western Australia).
- Author
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Agusti, Susana, Vigoya, Lorena, and Duarte, Carlos Manuel
- Subjects
TERRITORIAL waters ,RESPIRATION ,CHLOROPHYLL in water ,METABOLISM ,COMMUNITIES ,STREAM salinity - Abstract
The planktonic metabolic balance that is the balance between gross primary production (GPP) and community respiration (CR) was determined in Matilda Bay (estuarine) and Woodman Point (coastal) in Perth, Western Australia. The rates of net community production (NCP = GPP - CR) and the ratio between GPP and CR (P/R) were assessed to evaluate whether the metabolic balance in the two coastal locations tends to be net autotrophic (production exceeding community respiration) or net heterotrophic (respiration exceeding production). We also analyzed environmental variability by measuring temperature, salinity, and nutrients and chlorophyll a concentration. Samples were collected biweekly from March 2014 to March 2015. During the study period the metabolic rates were three times higher in Matilda Bay than in Woodman Point. The predominant metabolism was net autotrophic at both sites with P/R ratios >1 in the majority of the sampling dates. In Matilda Bay, the metabolic rates were negatively correlated with salinity denoting river dynamics influence, and positively with chlorophyll a. In Woodman Point only the GPP was positively correlated with chlorophyll a. The positive correlation between P/R ratio and GPP in Matilda Bay and the positive correlations between the metabolic rates and chlorophyll a suggest that factors controlling autotrophic processes are modulating the planktonic metabolic balance in the coastal marine ecosystem in Perth. Significant correlations were found between CR and GPP-standardized to chlorophyll a and water temperature. The net autotrophic metabolic balance indicates that in both ecosystems planktonic communities are acting as a sink of CO
2 and as a source of organic matter and oxygen to the system and are able to export organic matter to other ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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43. Parasitic infections of brushtail possums Trichosurus vulpecula in urbanised environments and bushland in the greater Perth region, Western Australia.
- Author
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Hillman, Alison E., Lymbery, Alan J., Elliot, Aileen D., Ash, Amanda L., and Thompson, R. C. Andrew
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PARASITIC diseases ,ANIMAL populations ,AMBLYOMMA ,IXODIDAE ,SEROPREVALENCE ,ECTOPARASITES - Abstract
Brushtail possums Trichosurus vulpecula remain in many areas of Perth, Western Australia, despite urbanisation. However, there are no data available regarding parasitic infections in this species in this locale, despite the relevance to wildlife health, and to public health when considering anthropozoonoses (infections that can spread from humans to animals, and vice versa). Further, though urbanisation is speculated to entail changes to wildlife infection epidemiology, there are few data investigating this hypothesis in marsupial populations in urbanised environments in Australia. This study aimed to measure T. gondii seroprevalence, gastrointestinal parasite prevalences, and macroscopic ectoparasite prevalences and intensities, in brushtail possums in the greater Perth region. It also aimed to compare infection prevalences between brushtail possum trapped in urbanised environments and bushland. As part of a cross‐sectional study, 18 brushtail possums were trapped and sampled in bushland, 15 possums were trapped and sampled in urbanised environments, and 23 possum carcasses were obtained from a wildlife hospital, in the greater Perth region. This study provides parasite prevalence data, new host records for the ectoparasites Pygiopsylla tunneyi and Liponyssoides sp., and a new location record for the ectoparasite Haemaphysalis bremneri. Urbanised environments were inversely associated with prevalence of tick (Family Ixodidae) infections, and more specifically Amblyomma spp. infections. This study found no evidence that the Perth brushtail possum population is a substantial reservoir of anthropozoonotic parasites, though larger studies are required to confirm these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) carers' perceptions of oral care in residential aged care settings in Perth, Western Australia.
- Author
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Adebayo, Bola, Durey, Angela, Slack‐Smith, Linda M., and Slack-Smith, Linda M
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,INSTITUTIONAL care of older people ,GERIATRIC dentistry ,DENTAL care ,ORAL hygiene ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CULTURE ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants ,INTERVIEWING ,LANGUAGE & languages ,MEDICAL personnel ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESIDENTIAL care ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: The aims of the study were twofold: to explore African migrant carers' perceptions of oral health who worked in residential aged care and to investigate their perspectives of oral care for aged care residents.Background: Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) carers are strongly represented in Australian residential aged care facilities.Methods: Exploratory qualitative research targeted carers from African backgrounds working in residential aged care facilities in Perth, Western Australia. Fifteen African carers were recruited through community networks and participated in semistructured interviews. Data were analysed for key themes related to the study's aims noting similarities and differences between participants.Results: All participants considered oral health important to individual well-being and quality of life. Most had limited knowledge of prevention and early detection of oral disease resulting from regular dental check-ups with the majority visiting dental professionals only for dental pain. Yet participants considered oral health care for residents needed improvement. Suggestions included dental professionals on staff and training and professional development for all staff not just in oral health care but also in working respectfully and sensitively with residents and staff from CALD backgrounds.Conclusion: Our findings suggest that, to ensure residents receive high quality oral health care, ongoing professional development is required, not only for CALD carers in oral health but also for non-CALD staff in care that is respectful of cultural differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
45. Place-makers of the mind.
- Author
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THOMSON, CHRIS and MASON, BONITA
- Subjects
JOURNALISM students ,JOURNALISM education (Higher) ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,SOCIETIES ,SOCIAL history ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
In 2016, a specialist unit that teaches university journalism students how to report in partnership with Indigenous community organisations extended its story range to a news feature produced with members of the wider Nyoongar community of Perth, Western Australia. The story asked the question of what happened to a stalled proposal to co-badge a major inner city park with a Nyoongar name. In conceiving the story and producing it with assistance from our students, we achieved clarity on a local government decision where due process had not been followed. With the help of Nyoongar sources, our team sought to explain the cultural importance of the park and raise awareness of the decolonising potential of Indigenous place names. We and our students advanced discussion of the park's name, mediating between the broader public, Nyoongar people and a council administration to produce journalism that influenced a political process by privileging Indigenous voices. The following exegesis melds sense of place theory with the field theory of Pierre Bourdieu to situate the story and its producers in social space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Anthropogenic trauma is the most prevalent cause of mortality in Little Penguins, Eudyptula minor, in Perth, Western Australia.
- Author
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Cannell, B. L., Campbell, K., Fitzgerald, L., Lewis, J. A., Baran, I. J., and Stephens, N. S.
- Subjects
PENGUINS ,MORTALITY ,CITIES & towns ,BOATS & boating ,RISK-taking behavior - Abstract
Penguins both forage and travel in the marine environment and so spend a much greater proportion of their lives in this environment than other seabirds. This maximises their exposure to an increasing range of threats compared with other seabirds. From late 2003 to 2012, necropsies were performed on 159 Little Penguins found in the Perth region, Western Australia. Given the close proximity of the colonies to increasingly populated urban areas, the aims of this study were to: (1) determine the causes of mortality; (2) determine the proportion of deaths attributable to anthropogenic causes; (3) use this information to help guide management strategies; and (4) identify potential threats to coastal seabirds in general. In most cases, cause of mortality could be assigned to one of 11 categories. Trauma, most likely from watercraft, was the main cause of mortality. The next most common cause, starvation, was more likely to occur in spring and summer. Management strategies for colonies of Little Penguins near high levels of watercraft activity should take into account the risk of injury or death from watercraft strikes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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