18 results on '"Kloot K"'
Search Results
2. Ensuring greater utility of climate-related acute health impact data for health services and municipal public health planning in rural and regional Australia.
- Author
-
Adams J, Kloot K, and Brumby S
- Subjects
- Humans, Australia, Health Services, Health Planning, Health Impact Assessment, Climate Change, Public Health, Rural Population
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Gender differences in female and male Australian football concussion injury: A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations.
- Author
-
Stella J, Gill SD, Lowry N, Reade T, Baker T, Kloot K, Hayden G, Ryan M, Seward H, and Page RS
- Abstract
Objective: To examine gender differences in Australian football (AF)-related concussion presentations to EDs in regional Australia., Methods: A prospective observational study of patients presenting to 1 of the 10 EDs in Western Victoria, Australia, with an AF-related concussion was conducted. Patients were part of a larger study investigating AF injuries over a complete AF season, including pre-season training and practice matches. Information regarding concussion injuries was extracted from patient medical records, including clinical features, concurrent injuries, mechanism and context of injury. Female and male data were compared with chi-squared and Fisher's exact tests. P < 0.05 was considered significant., Results: From the original cohort of 1635 patients with AF-related injuries (242 female and 1393 male), 231 (14.1%) patients were diagnosed with concussion. Thirty-eight (15.7%) females had concussions versus 193 (13.9%) males (P > 0.05). Females over the age of 16 were more likely to be concussed than males in the same age range (females n = 26, 68.4% vs males n = 94, 48.7%; P = 0.026). Neurosurgically significant head injury was rare (one case). Similar rates of concurrent injury were found between females 15 (39.5%) and males 64 (33.2%), with neck injury the single most common in 24 (10.3%) concussions. Sixty-nine patients (29%) were admitted for observation or to await the results of scans. The majority of concussions occurred in match play (87.9%). Females were more likely injured in contested ball situations (63.2% vs 37.3%; P < 0.05)., Conclusion: Concussion rates for community-level AF presentations to regional EDs were similar between genders. Serious head injury was rare, although hospital admission for observation was common. Concurrent injuries were common, with associated neck injury most often identified. Match play accounted for the majority of head injuries., (© 2024 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Paediatric Emergency Asthma Presentations: Temporal Trends and Representations in Rural Australia.
- Author
-
Terry D, Peck B, and Kloot K
- Abstract
Asthma is a key illness driving children to present to emergency departments, and although paediatric emergency asthma presentations have been examined, the temporal trends remain somewhat elusive. The aim is to highlight, describe, and model the temporal trends of emergency paediatric asthma presentations, using comprehensive hospital emergency presentation data. A retrospective cross-sectional study examined de-identified paediatric (0 to 14 years) emergency asthma presentation data over a three-year period. Data were obtained from nine healthcare facilities in Victoria, Australia. Episode-level data were collected through RAHDaR, a comprehensive emergency data register which includes missing data (35.0%) among rural health facilities not currently captured elsewhere. Monthly presentation rates demonstrate a significant difference in presentations between fall/autumn and spring, and males had higher presentation rates in February and June-August. Emergency presentations were more likely to occur Sunday-Tuesday, peaking in the time periods of 8-9 a.m., 11 a.m.-12 p.m., and 8-9 p.m. Significant differences were noted between all age groups. Examining previously unavailable rural data has highlighted patterns among emergency asthma presentations for children 0-14 years of age. Knowledge of these by season, month, and day of the week, in combination with time of day, offers scope for more focused workforce education and planning, and nuanced referral pathways, particularly in resource-limited settings.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Wrist, hand and finger injuries in Australian football: A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations.
- Author
-
Gill SD, Anagnostelos L, Stella J, Lowry N, Kloot K, Reade T, Baker T, Hayden G, Ryan M, Seward H, and Page RS
- Subjects
- Male, Adult, Child, Humans, Female, Wrist, Victoria epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital, Team Sports, Finger Injuries epidemiology, Finger Injuries etiology, Athletic Injuries epidemiology, Athletic Injuries etiology, Sprains and Strains, Fractures, Bone epidemiology, Fractures, Bone etiology, Hand Injuries epidemiology, Hand Injuries etiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Investigate the characteristics of wrist, hand and finger (WHF) injuries in Australian footballers presenting to EDs and determine if injury profiles differed between females and males, and between children and adults., Methods: In this prospective observational study that took place during an entire football season, patients attended 1 of 10 EDs in Victoria, Australia with a WHF injury sustained while playing Australian football. Data were extracted from patient medical records by trained researchers. Data included injury type (e.g. fracture), body part (e.g. metacarpal) and mechanism of injury. Males versus females, and children versus adults were compared using chi-squared tests or Fisher's exact tests., Results: In total, 528 patients had a WHF injury, of which 105 (19.9%) were female and 308 (59.2%) were children. Fractures and sprains were the most common injury types (45.3% and 38.6%, respectively). Fingers were more often injured than wrists or hands (62.5%, 23.5% and 15.0%, respectively). Ball contact was the most common mechanism of injury (38.1% of injuries). Females were more likely than males to (i) have a sprain/strain injury, (ii) injure a finger (rather than wrist or hand) and (iii) injure themselves through ball contact. Children were more likely to injure their wrists, have a sprain/strain injury, or be injured falling to the ground. Adults were more likely to dislocate a joint or injure their hands., Conclusions: Differences in injury type, location and mechanism between females and males, and children and adults, suggest an opportunity for customised injury prevention and management strategies by sex and age., (© 2023 The Authors. Emergency Medicine Australasia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Economic consequences of injury in female Australian footballers: A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations.
- Author
-
Gill SD, Stella J, Chatterton ML, Lowry N, Kloot K, Reade T, Baker T, Hayden G, Ryan M, Seward H, and Page RS
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Emergency Service, Hospital, Victoria epidemiology, Athletic Injuries, Hospitalization, Team Sports
- Abstract
Objective: Investigate the economic consequences of injuries to female Australian footballers from a health sector and societal perspective., Methods: This prospective observational study invited 242 females to complete an online questionnaire 3-6 months following an Australian football injury which involved presentation to an ED in Victoria, Australia. The questionnaire inquired regarding healthcare use, time off work, return to playing football and extent of recovery following injury. Relevant information was also extracted from respondents' medical records regarding injury-type, body part injured, investigations and treatments. Healthcare costs were determined for each respondent's ED presentation, hospital admission/s (when relevant), and subsequent healthcare use. Societal costs were determined as lost income to the respondent and/or carer., Results: A total of 108 people responded to the questionnaire. Sprains/strains and fractures accounted for 84.2% of respondents' injuries. Sixteen respondents (14.8%) required admission to hospital at the time of injury and 81 (75.0%) required subsequent healthcare appointments following discharge from the ED or hospital. Time off work or school following the injury was common (64.8% of respondents) and 27.8% of respondents had a carer take time off work. More than 80% of respondents missed training and matches following the injury. The median healthcare cost per respondent was AUD$753 and the median cost due to work absence was AUD$1393. One-quarter of respondents reported a full recovery., Conclusions: Injuries to female Australian footballers can produce substantial healthcare and societal costs, which has important implications for healthcare provision and prioritising and implementing injury prevention programmes and post-injury rehabilitation., (© 2023 The Authors. Emergency Medicine Australasia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Using the Cardiff model to reduce late-night alcohol-related presentations in regional Australia.
- Author
-
Baker T, Taylor N, Kloot K, Miller P, Egerton-Warburton D, and Shepherd J
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Middle Aged, Australia, Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Violence prevention & control, Emergency Service, Hospital, Alcohol-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Introduction: The Cardiff model is a data sharing approach that aims to reduce the volume of intoxicated patients in emergency departments (EDs). This approach has not been tested in a rural setting., Objective: This study assessed whether this approach would reduce the number of alcohol-associated presentations during high-alcohol hours (HAH) in a regional ED., Design: From July 2017, people over the age of 18 attending the ED were asked by the triage nurse (1) whether they had consumed alcohol in the past 12 h, (2) their typical alcohol consumption level, (3) the location where most alcohol was purchased and (4) the location of the last drink. From April 2018, quarterly letters were sent to the top five venues reported within the ED. Deidentified, aggregated data were shared with local police, licensing authorities and local government, identifying the top five venues reported in the ED and providing a summary of alcohol-related attendances to the ED. Interrupted time series analyses were used to estimate the influence of the intervention on monthly injury and alcohol-related ED presentations., Findings: ITS models found that there was a significant gradual decrease in the monthly rate of injury attendances during HAH (Coefficient = -0.004, p = 0.044). No other significant results were found., Discussion: Our study found that sharing last drinks data collected in the ED with a local violence prevention committee was associated with a small, but significant reduction in the rate of injury presentations compared with all ED presentations., Conclusion: This intervention continues to have promise for reducing alcohol-related harm., (© 2023 The Authors. Australian Journal of Rural Health published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of National Rural Health Alliance Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Most common principal diagnoses assigned to Australian emergency department presentations involving alcohol use: a multi-centre study.
- Author
-
Miller P, Vakidis T, Taylor N, Baker T, Stella J, Egerton-Warburton D, Hyder S, Staiger P, Bowe SJ, Shepherd J, Zordan R, Walby A, Jones ML, Caldicott D, Barker D, Hall M, Doran CM, Ezard N, Preisz P, Havard A, Shakeshaft A, Akhlaghi H, Kloot K, Lowry N, and Bumpstead S
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Victoria epidemiology, Australian Capital Territory, Emergency Service, Hospital, Suicide, Attempted
- Abstract
Objectives: Alcohol is the most widely consumed psychoactive substance in Australia and the consequences of alcohol consumption have enormous personal and social impacts. This study aimed to describe the principal diagnoses of emergency department (ED) presentations involving alcohol use in the previous 12 hours at eight hospitals in Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory, Australia., Methods: Twelve months' data (1 July 2018 - 30 June 2019) were collected from eight EDs, including demographics, ICD-10 codes, hospital location and self-reported drinking in the preceding 12 hours. The ten most common ICD-10 discharge codes were analysed based on age, sex and hospital geographic area., Results: ICD codes pertaining to mental and behavioural disorders due to alcohol use accounted for the highest proportion in most EDs. Suicide ideation/attempt was in the five highest ICD codes for all but one hospital. It was the second most common alcohol-related presentation for both males and females., Conclusions: Alcohol plays a major role in a range of presentations, especially in relation to mental health and suicide., Implications for Public Health: The collection of alcohol involvement in ED presentations represents a major step forward in informing the community about the burden of alcohol on their health resources., (© 2022 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. High-Heat Days and Presentations to Emergency Departments in Regional Victoria, Australia.
- Author
-
Adams J, Brumby S, Kloot K, Baker T, and Mohebbi M
- Subjects
- Hospitals, Rural, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Victoria epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hot Temperature
- Abstract
Heat kills more Australians than any other natural disaster. Previous Australian research has identified increases in Emergency Department presentations in capital cities; however, little research has examined the effects of heat in rural/regional locations. This retrospective cohort study aimed to determine if Emergency Department (ED) presentations across the south-west region of Victoria, Australia, increased on high-heat days (1 February 2017 to 31 January 2020) using the Rural Acute Hospital Data Register (RAHDaR). The study also explored differences in presentations between farming towns and non-farming towns. High-heat days were defined as days over the 95th temperature percentile. International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Australian Modification (ICD-10-AM) codes associated with heat-related illness were identified from previous studies. As the region has a large agricultural sector, a framework was developed to identify towns estimated to have 70% or more of the population involved in farming. Overall, there were 61,631 presentations from individuals residing in the nine Local Government Areas. Of these presentations, 3064 (5.0%) were on days of high-heat, and 58,567 (95.0%) were of days of non-high-heat. Unlike previous metropolitan studies, ED presentations in rural south-west Victoria decrease on high-heat days. This decrease was more prominent in the farming cohort; a potential explanation for this may be behavioural adaption.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Pediatric emergency asthma presentations in Southwest Victoria: a retrospective cross-sectional study 2017 to 2020.
- Author
-
Terry D, Peck B, Kloot K, and Hutchins T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Retrospective Studies, Victoria epidemiology, Asthma epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Australia has one of the highest prevalence of asthma globally, and accessible emergency asthma presentation data remains vital, however, is currently underreported in regional and rural areas. Utilizing the Rural Acute Hospital Data Register (RAHDaR) which includes previously non-reported data, the aim of the study is to provide a more accurate understanding of asthma emergency presentation events, while investigating the factors associated with these presentations., Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional study collected de-identified emergency asthma presentation data from nine health services in regional Victoria for children aged 0 to 14 years between 2017 and 2020. Demographic and presentation data were collated along with government datasets. Asthma emergency presentations incidence rates and predictor variables were analyzed using hierarchical multiple regression after adjusting for smoking and sex. Significance was determined at p < 0.05., Results: Of the 1090 emergency asthma presentations, n = 369 occurred at health services who did not previously report data. This represents a 33.86% increase in our understanding of emergency asthma presentations and demonstrating a rate of 16.06 presentations per 1000 children per year. Key factors such as age, population density, and private health insurance were associated with asthma emergency presentation events among both sexes, while socioeconomic status and rurality were not predictive., Conclusions: Although some findings are consistent with current research, the study highlights previously unrecognized specific factors that are predictive of asthma among 0-14-year-old children. These findings provide more accurate insights for healthcare workers and policymakers as they seek to support people with asthma and accurately address health inequities.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Gender differences in female and male Australian Football injuries - A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations.
- Author
-
Gill SD, Stella J, Lowry N, Kloot K, Reade T, Baker T, Hayden G, Ryan M, Seward H, and Page RS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hand Injuries epidemiology, Joint Dislocations epidemiology, Lacerations epidemiology, Neck Injuries epidemiology, Patella injuries, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sex Distribution, Shoulder Injuries epidemiology, Victoria epidemiology, Athletic Injuries epidemiology, Athletic Injuries prevention & control, Team Sports
- Abstract
Objectives: To compare injury-profiles of females and males presenting to Emergency Departments (EDs) with an Australian Football injury., Design: Prospective observational study., Methods: All patients presenting to one of 10 EDs in Victoria, Australia, with an Australian Football injury were included in the study. Data were prospectively collected over a 10 month period, coinciding with a complete Australian Football season, including pre-season training and practice matches. Relevant information was extracted from patient medical records regarding injury-type, body part injured, investigations and treatments required. Female and male data were compared with chi-squared and Fisher's exact tests., Results: 1635 patients were included, of whom 242 (14.8%) were female. Females had a higher proportion of hand/finger injuries (34.3% v 23.4%), neck injuries (6.6% v 2.5%) and patella dislocations (2.9% v 0.6%). Males had a higher proportion of shoulder injuries (11.5% v 5.8%), skin lacerations (8.0% v 1.7%), and thorax/abdominal/pelvic injuries (5.7% v 2.1%). Concussion rates were similar between the genders, occurring in 14.1% of all patients. Anterior cruciate ligament injuries were infrequent (1.0%) and not significantly different between genders. Females received more imaging investigations (83.1% v 74.7%) and analgesia (62.4% v 48.5%). A higher proportion of males required admission to hospital (5.0% v 2.1%), usually for surgery., Conclusion: Australian Football injury profiles differed between females and males. Gender-specific injury prevention and management programs would be indicated based on the study findings., (Copyright © 2021 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Socioeconomic Characteristics of Childhood Injuries in Regional Victoria, Australia: What the Missing Data Tells Us.
- Author
-
Peck B, Terry D, and Kloot K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Social Class, Victoria epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitals, Rural
- Abstract
Background: Injury is the leading cause of death among those between 1-16 years of age in Australia. Studies have found that injury rates increase with socioeconomic disadvantage. Rural Urgent Care Centres (UCC) represent a key point of entry into the Victorian healthcare system for people living in smaller rural communities, often categorised as lower socio-economic groups. Emergency presentation data from UCCs is not routinely collated in government datasets. This study seeks to compare socioeconomic characteristics of children aged 0-14 attending a UCC to those who attend a 24-h Emergency Departments with an injury-related emergency presentation. This will inform gaps in our current understanding of the links between socioeconomic status and childhood injury in regional Victoria., Methods: A network of rural hospitals in South West Victoria, Australia provide ongoing detailed de-identified emergency presentation data as part of the Rural Acute Hospital Data Register (RAHDaR). Data from nine of these facilities was extracted and analysed for children (aged 0-14 years) with any principal injury-related diagnosis presenting between 1 February 2017 and 31 January 2020., Results: There were 10,137 injury-related emergency presentations of children aged between 0-14 years to a participating hospital. The relationship between socioeconomic status and injury was confirmed, with overall higher rates of child injury presentations from those residing in areas of Disadvantage. A large proportion (74.3%) of the children attending rural UCCs were also Disadvantaged. Contrary to previous research, the rate of injury amongst children from urban areas was significantly higher than their more rural counterparts., Conclusions: Findings support the notion that injury in Victoria differs according to socioeconomic status and suggest that targeted interventions for the reduction of injury should consider socioeconomic as well as geographical differences in the design of their programs.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Understanding childhood injuries in rural areas: Using Rural Acute Hospital Data Register to address previous data deficiencies.
- Author
-
Peck B, Terry DR, and Kloot K
- Subjects
- Child, Databases, Factual, Humans, Rural Population, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitals, Rural
- Abstract
Objective: The state of childhood injury in rural areas of Victoria is poorly understood. Currently only data on those children transferred from smaller hospital settings to larger settings appear in existing government datasets, significantly underestimating the characteristics of injury., Methods: Detailed emergency presentation data (Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset [VEMD] and non-VEMD) that makes up the Rural Acute Hospital Data Register database was collected and compared among children (aged 0-14 years) who have a principal diagnosis of injury., Results: Of the 8647 episodes of care identified for injured children aged 0-14 years, 3257 children were managed initially at smaller hospitals that do not report episode data to existing datasets., Conclusions: The Rural Acute Hospital Data Register database captures the presentations at low-resource sites and highlights as much as a 35% deficit in the data that is currently available to inform injury prevention and safety initiatives in Victoria., (© 2020 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Patient feedback for safety improvement in primary care: results from a feasibility study.
- Author
-
Hernan AL, Giles SJ, Beks H, McNamara K, Kloot K, Binder MJ, and Versace V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Attitude of Health Personnel, Australia, Child, Child, Preschool, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Organizational Culture, Young Adult, Feedback, Patient Safety, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient involvement in safety improvement is a developing area of research. The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility of a patient feedback on safety intervention in primary care. Specifically, the intervention acceptability, fidelity, implementation enablers and barriers, scalability, and process of systematically collecting safety data were examined., Design, Setting and Participants: Mixed-methods feasibility trial with six purposively selected Australian primary care practices., Intervention: The intervention comprised an iterative process with a cycle of measurement, learning, feedback, action planning and implementation period of 6 months., Primary and Secondary Outcomes: Qualitative and quantitative data relating to feasibility measures (acceptability, fidelity, enablers, barriers, scalability and process of collecting safety data) were collected and analysed., Results: A total of n=1750 patients provided feedback on safety. There was a statistically significant increase in mean patient safety scores indicating improved safety (4.30-4.37, p=0.002). Staff deemed the intervention acceptable, with minor recommendations for improvement. Intervention fidelity was high and implementation enablers were attributed to the intervention structure and framework, use of intuitive problem-solving approaches, and multidisciplinary team involvement. Practice-based safety interventions resulted in sustainable and measurable changes to systems for safety, such as increased access to care and improved patient information accuracy., Conclusions: The findings indicate that this innovative patient feedback on safety intervention is feasible for scale-up to a larger effectiveness trial and further spread into policy and practice. This intervention complements existing safety improvement strategies and activities, and integrates into current patient feedback service requirements for Australian primary care. Further research is needed to examine the intervention effects on safety incident reduction., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The data deficit for asthma emergency presentations might surprise you: how RAHDaR addresses the data chasm.
- Author
-
Terry DR, Peck B, and Kloot K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Ambulatory Care Facilities statistics & numerical data, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection standards, Female, Hospitals, Public statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Rural statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Male, Retrospective Studies, Victoria, Asthma epidemiology, Data Collection statistics & numerical data, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Sentinel Surveillance
- Abstract
Introduction: National and state-based minimum data sets remain inadequate in providing a complete representation of emergency presentations, especially among paediatric asthma presentations. Thus, the aim of the study was to identify if a deficit exists in current emergency paediatric asthma hospital presentation datasets and how this may inform an understanding of childhood asthma in Victoria Methods: This retrospective cross-sectional study examined emergency hospital presentation data between 1 February 2017 and 31 January 2019. All paediatric (0-14 years) emergency asthma presentation data were collected from nine hospitals in south-western Victoria, Australia, using the Rural Acute Hospital Data Register (RAHDaR), which gathers both Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset (VEMD) data from larger government hospitals, and non-VEMD data from smaller, more rural institutions., Results: Of the 854 emergency presentations identified for children with asthma aged 0-14 years, 540 (63.2%) were managed initially at larger government-reporting hospitals. A total of 314 (36.8%) emergency presentations were initially managed at emergency facilities, such as urgent care centres. Overall, it was found that a total 278 (32.5%) of all emergency presentations did not appear in current government datasets., Conclusion: The RAHDaR database, a complete register of data, captures all emergency presentations in south-western Victoria and highlights as much as a 33% deficit in the data currently available to inform asthma resource initiatives including policy development, funding allocation, prevention and management initiatives in Victoria. More accurate data from sources such as RAHDaR are essential to fill the now-evident data chasm.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Investigating the feasibility of a patient feedback tool to improve safety in Australian primary care: a study protocol.
- Author
-
Hernan AL, Kloot K, Giles SJ, Beks H, McNamara K, Binder MJ, and Versace V
- Subjects
- Australia, Feasibility Studies, Feedback, Humans, Patient Safety standards, Primary Health Care standards, Quality Improvement, Research Design
- Abstract
Introduction: Patients are a valuable source of information about ways to prevent harm in healthcare, and can provide feedback about the factors that contribute to safety incidents. The Primary Care Patient Measure of Safety (PC PMOS) is a novel and validated tool that captures patient feedback on safety and can be used by primary care practice teams to identify and prevent safety incidents. The aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of PC PMOS as a tool for data-driven safety improvement and monitoring in Australian primary care., Methods and Analysis: Feasibility will be assessed using a mixed-methods approach to understand the enablers, barriers, acceptability, practicability, intervention fidelity and scalability of C PMOS as a tool for safety improvement across six primary care practices in the south-west region of Victoria. Patients over the age of 18 years attending their primary care practice will be invited to complete the PC PMOS when presenting for an appointment. Staff members at each practice will form a safety improvement team. Staff will then use the patient feedback to develop and implement specific safety interventions over a 6-month period. Data collection methods during the intervention period includes audio recordings of staff meetings, overt observations at training and education workshops, reflexive researcher insights, document collection and review. Data collection postintervention includes patient completion of the PC PMOS and semistructured interviews with staff. Triangulation and thematic analysis techniques will be employed to analyse the qualitative and content data. Analysis methods will use current evidence and models of healthcare culture, safety improvement and patient involvement in safety to inform the findings., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethics approval was granted by Deakin University Human Ethics Advisory Group, Faculty of Health (HEAG-H 175_2017). Study results will be disseminated through local and international conferences and peer-reviewed publications., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Building a research-ready database of rural emergency presentations: The RAHDaR pilot study.
- Author
-
Kloot K and Baker TR
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual statistics & numerical data, Electronic Health Records statistics & numerical data, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Humans, Pilot Projects, Research Design statistics & numerical data, Rural Health Services organization & administration, Rural Health Services standards, Triage classification, Triage statistics & numerical data, Victoria, Databases, Factual trends, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Rural Health Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: A small amount of data from rural emergency facilities is collated with large urban datasets, but there are no dedicated rural emergency datasets., Methods: A network of 10 rural hospitals provided ongoing detailed emergency presentation data., Results: Of 59 044 emergency presentations, 25 237 patients were managed entirely at the small local hospital, including 586 triage category 2 cardiac patients, 5663 paediatric patients and 310 mental health clients., Conclusions: The RAHDaR dataset includes high-risk presentations managed entirely at low resource sites and, as further sites are added, will tackle the biases that can misrepresent the performance of small rural hospitals., (© 2018 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Initial destination hospital of paediatric prehospital patients in rural Victoria.
- Author
-
Kloot K, Salzman S, Kilpatrick S, Baker T, and Brumby SA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Decision Making, Female, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Infant, Male, Victoria, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Rural Health Services statistics & numerical data, Transportation of Patients statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this present study was to describe the initial destination hospital of paediatric patients transported by Ambulance Victoria paramedics within the South Western area of Victoria to determine the proportion of patients that bypassed their closest hospital., Methods: All Ambulance Victoria primary ambulance transports for paediatric patients aged 1 month to 14 years in the Barwon South West region between 1 April 2008 and 28 February 2011 were reviewed. Each case was examined to determine the destination hospital location relative to the case scene location, and the overall nature of each case was grouped into one of seven categories (medical respiratory, medical cardiac, medical neurological, medical other, trauma time critical, and trauma non-time critical)., Results: There were 1191 cases identified, with 978 (82%) being taken to the closest hospital and 213 (18%) to a more distant facility. The average distance travelled from the scene to the destination hospital was 15.2 km, and almost 90% of patients transported to the nearest hospital were within 15 km of that hospital. Time critical trauma cases and respiratory-related medical cases had higher rates of transport to more distant hospitals as their initial destination (26% to non-closest and 23% to non-closest, respectively)., Conclusion: The patient's condition and their location relative to the larger medical facilities appear to influence the decision of destination hospital. Uncertainty regarding the availability of 24 h hospital services and staffing details may contribute to longer transfers., (© 2016 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.