48 results on '"Sibbritt, David"'
Search Results
2. A systematic review of school-based weight-related interventions in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries
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Banany, Mohammed, Kang, Melissa, Gebel, Klaus, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2024
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3. Women's utilisation of quality antenatal care, intrapartum care and postnatal care services in Ethiopia: a population-based study using the demographic and health survey data
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Negero, Melese Girmaye, Sibbritt, David, and Dawson, Angela
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- 2023
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4. The direct and mediating effect of social support on health-related quality of life during pregnancy among Australian women
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2023
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5. An examination of the association between marital status and prenatal mental disorders using linked health administrative data
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, Xu, Fenglian, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2022
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6. Use of massage therapy by mid-aged and older Australian women
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Ladanyi, Suzy, Adams, Jon, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2022
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7. Effects of undernutrition on mortality and morbidity among adults living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Alebel, Animut, Demant, Daniel, Petrucka, Pammla, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2021
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8. Correction to: Prevalence and determinants of low social support during pregnancy among Australian women: a community-based cross-sectional study
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2021
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9. The mediational role of social support in the relationship between stress and antenatal anxiety and depressive symptoms among Australian women: a mediational analysis
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2021
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10. How can human resources for health interventions contribute to sexual, reproductive, maternal, and newborn healthcare quality across the continuum in low- and lower-middle-income countries? A systematic review
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Negero, Melese Girmaye, Sibbritt, David, and Dawson, Angela
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- 2021
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11. Progressing our understanding of the impacts of nutrition on the brain and behaviour in anorexia nervosa: a tyrosine case study example
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Hart, Melissa, Sibbritt, David, Williams, Lauren T., Nunn, Kenneth P., and Wilcken, Bridget
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- 2021
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12. The relationship between social support and mental health problems during pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2021
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13. Prevalence and determinants of low social support during pregnancy among Australian women: a community-based cross-sectional study
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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- 2021
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14. Do women who consult with naturopaths or herbalists have a healthy lifestyle?: a secondary analysis of the Australian longitudinal study on women’s health
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Steel, Amie, Tiveron, Stefania, Reid, Rebecca, Wardle, Jon, Cramer, Holger, Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, and Lauche, Romy
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- 2020
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15. A critical review of self-care for sleep disturbances: prevalence, profile, motivation, perceived effectiveness and medical provider communication
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Meredith, Sophie, Frawley, Jane, Sibbritt, David, and Adams, Jon
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- 2020
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16. Prevalence and factors associated with the use of primary headache diagnostic criteria by chiropractors
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Moore, Craig, Leaver, Andrew, Sibbritt, David, and Adams, Jon
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- 2019
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17. Antimicrobial prescription patterns and ventilator associated pneumonia: findings from a 10-site prospective audit
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Elliott, Rosalind M., Burrell, Anthony R., Harrigan, Peter W., Murgo, Margherita, Rolls, Kaye D., Sibbritt, David W., Iredell, Jonathan R., and Elliott, Doug
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- 2018
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18. The management of common recurrent headaches by chiropractors: a descriptive analysis of a nationally representative survey
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Moore, Craig, Leaver, Andrew, Sibbritt, David, and Adams, Jon
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- 2018
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19. A workforce survey of Australian osteopathy: analysis of a nationally-representative sample of osteopaths from the Osteopathy Research and Innovation Network (ORION) project
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Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, Steel, Amie, and Peng, Wenbo
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- 2018
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20. The association between social support and antenatal depressive and anxiety symptoms among Australian women.
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Bedaso, Asres, Adams, Jon, Peng, Wenbo, and Sibbritt, David
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PRENATAL diagnosis ,MENTAL depression ,ANXIETY ,AUSTRALIANS ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Background: Antenatal depression and antenatal anxiety adversely affect several obstetric and foetal outcomes, and increase the rate of postnatal mental illness. Thus, to tackle these challenges the need for social support during pregnancy is vital. However, an extensive literature search failed to show a published study on the relationship between domains of social support and antenatal depressive, as well as antenatal anxiety symptoms in Australia. This study examined the association between domains of social support and antenatal depressive and anxiety symptoms among Australian women.Methods: The current study used data obtained from the 1973-78 cohort of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH), focusing upon women who reported being pregnant (n = 493). Depression and anxiety were assessed using the 10 item Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D-10) scale, and the 9-item Goldberg Anxiety and Depression scale (GADS) respectively. The 19 item-Medical Outcomes Study Social Support index (MOSS) was used to assess social support. A logistic regression model was used to examine the associations between domains of social support and antenatal depressive and anxiety symptoms after adjusting for potential confounders.Result: The current study found 24.7 and 20.9% of pregnant women screened positive for depressive and anxiety symptoms respectively. After adjusting for potential confounders, our study found that the odds of antenatal depressive symptoms was about four and threefold higher among pregnant women who reported low emotional/informational support (AOR = 4.75; 95% CI: 1.45, 15.66; p = 0.010) and low social support (overall support) (AOR = 3.26; 95%CI: 1.05, 10.10, p = 0.040) respectively compared with their counterpart. In addition, the odds of antenatal anxiety symptoms was seven times higher among pregnant women who reported low affectionate support/positive social interaction (AOR = 7.43; 95%CI: 1.75, 31.55; p = 0.006).Conclusion: A considerable proportion of pregnant Australian women had depressive symptoms and/or anxiety symptoms, which poses serious health concerns. Low emotional/informational support and low affectionate support/positive social interaction have a significant association with antenatal depressive and anxiety symptoms respectively. As such, targeted screening of expectant women for social support is essential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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21. Modelling the cost of place of birth: a pathway analysis.
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Scarf, Vanessa L., Yu, Serena, Viney, Rosalie, Cheah, Seong Leang, Dahlen, Hannah, Sibbritt, David, Thornton, Charlene, Tracy, Sally, and Homer, Caroline
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Background: In New South Wales (NSW), Australia there are three settings available for women at low risk of complications to give birth: home, birth centre and hospital. Between 2000 and 2012, 93.6% of babies were planned to be born in hospital, 6.0% in a birth centre and 0.4% at home. Availability of alternative birth settings is limited and the cost of providing birth at home or in a birth centre from the perspective of the health system is unknown.Objectives: The objective of this study was to model the cost of the trajectories of women who planned to give birth at home, in a birth centre or in a hospital from the public sector perspective.Methods: This was a population-based study using linked datasets from NSW, Australia. Women included met the following selection criteria: 37-41 completed weeks of pregnancy, spontaneous onset of labour, and singleton pregnancy at low risk of complications. We used a decision tree framework to depict the trajectories of these women and Australian Refined-Diagnosis Related Groups (AR-DRGs) were applied to each trajectory to estimate the cost of birth. A scenario analysis was undertaken to model the cost for 30 000 women in one year.Findings: 496 387 women were included in the dataset. Twelve potential outcome pathways were identified and each pathway was costed using AR-DRGs. An overall cost was also calculated by place of birth: $AUD4802 for homebirth, $AUD4979 for a birth centre birth and $AUD5463 for a hospital birth.Conclusion: The findings from this study provides some clarity into the financial saving of offering more options to women seeking an alternative to giving birth in hospital. Given the relatively lower rates of complex intervention and neonatal outcomes associated with women at low risk of complications, we can assume the cost of providing them with homebirth and birth centre options could be cost-effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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22. World Congress Integrative Medicine & Health 2017: Part one
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Brinkhaus, Benno, Falkenberg, Torkel, Haramati, Aviad, Willich, Stefan N, Briggs, Josephine P, Willcox, Merlin, Linde, Klaus, Theorell, Töres, Wong, Lisa M, Dusek, Jeffrey, Wu, Darong, Eisenberg, David, Berger, Bettina, Kemper, Kathi, Schröer, Beate, Klein, Hedda, Ferreri, Rosaria, Kaplan, Gary, Matthes, Harald, Rotter, Gabriele, Schiff, Elad, Arnon, Zahi, Hahn, Eckhard, Luberto, Christina M, Martin, David, Schwarz, Silke, Tauschel, Diethard, Flower, Andrew, Gramminger, Harsha, Gupta, Hedwig H, Gupta, S. N, Kerckhoff, Annette, Kessler, Christian S, Michalsen, Andreas, Kim, Eun S, Jang, Eun H, Kim, Rana, Jan, Sae B, Mittwede, Martin, Mohme, Wiebke, Arye, Eran, Bonucci, Massimo, Saad, Bashar, Breitkreuz, Thomas, Rossi, Elio, Kebudi, Rejin, Daher, Michel, Razaq, Samaher, Gafer, Nahla, Nimri, Omar, Hablas, Mohamed, Kienle, Gunver S, Samuels, Noah, Silbermann, Michael, Bandelin, Lena, Lang, Anna-Lena, Wartner, Eva, Holtermann, Christoph, Binstock, Maxwell, Riebau, Robert, Mujkanovic, Edin, Cramer, Holger, Lauche, Romy, Michalsen, Andres, Ward, Lesley, Irnich, Dominik, Stör, Wolfram, Burnstock, Geoffrey, Schaible, Hans-Georg, Ots, Thomas, Langhorst, Jost, Sundberg, Tobias, Amarell, Catherina, Anheyer, Melanie, Eckert, Marion, Ogal, Mercedes, Schönauer, Annette, Reisenberger, Birgit, Brand, Bernhard, Anheyer, Dennis, Dobos, Gustav, Kroez, Matthias, Ammendola, Aldo, Mao, Jun J, Witt, Claudia, Yang, Yufei, Oritz, Miriam, Horneber, Markus, Voiß, Petra, Rosenstiel, Alexandra, Amarell, Catharina, Schad, Friedemann, Schläppi, Marc, Kröz, Matthias, Büssing, Arndt, Sela, Gil, Avshalomov, David, Attias, Samuel, Cotton, Sian, Jong, Miek, Jong, Mats, Scheffer, Christian, Edelhäuser, Friedrich, AlBedah, Abdullah, Lee, Myeong S, Khalil, Mohamed, Ogawa, Keiko, Motoo, Yoshiharu, Arimitsu, Junsuke, Ogawa, Masao, Shimizu, Genki, Stange, Rainer, Kraft, Karin, Kuchta, Kenny, Watanabe, Kenji, Bonin, D, Gruber, Harald, Koch, Sabine, Pohlmann, Urs, Caldwell, Christine, Krantz, Barbara, Kortum, Ria, Martin, Lily, Wieland, Lisa S, Kligler, Ben, Fogerite, Susan, Zhang, Yuqing, Riva, John J, Lumpkin, Michael, Ratner, Emily, Ping, Liu, Jian, Pei, Hamme, Gesa-Meyer, Mao, Xiaosong, Chouping, Han, Schröder, Sven, Hummelsberger, Josef, Wullinger, Michael, Brodzky, Marc, Zalpour, Christoff, Langley, Julia, Weber, Wendy, Mudd, Lanay M, Wayne, Peter, Witt, Clauda, Weidenhammer, Wolfgang, Fønnebø, Vinjar, Boon, Heather, Steel, Amie, Bugarcic, Andrea, Rangitakatu, Melisa, Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, Wardle, Jon, Leach, Matthew, Schloss, Janet, Dieze, Helene, Ijaz, Nadine, Heinrich, Michael, Lewith, George, Graz, Bertrand, Adam, Daniela, Grabenhenrich, Linus, Ortiz, Miriam, Binting, Sylvia, Reinhold, Thomas, Andermo, Susanne, Nordberg, Johanna H, Arman, Maria, Bhasin, Manoj, Fan, Xueyi, Libermann, Towia, Fricchione, Gregory, Denninger, John, Benson, Herbert, Martin, David D, Boers, Inge, Vlieger, Arine, Teut, Michael, Ullmann, Alexander, Lotz, Fabian, Roll, Stephanie, Canella, Claudia, Mikolasek, Michael, Rostock, Matthias, Beyer, Jörg, Guckenberger, Matthias, Jenewein, Josef, Linka, Esther, Six, Claudia, Stoll, Sarah, Stupp, Roger, Witt, Claudia M, Chuang, Elisabeth, McKee, Melissa D, Klose, Petra, Lange, Silke, Chung, Vincent C H, Wong, Hoi L C, Wu, Xin Y, Wen, Grace Y G, Ho, Robin S T, Ching, Jessica Y L, Wu, Justin C Y, Coakley, Amanda, Flanagan, Jane, Annese, Christine, Empoliti, Joanne, Gao, Zishan, Liu, Xugang, Yu, Shuguang, Yan, Xianzhong, Liang, Fanrong, Hohmann, Christoph D, Steckhan, Nico, Ostermann, Thomas, Paetow, Arion, Hoff, Evelyn, Hu, Xiao-Yang, Wu, Ruo-Han, Logue, Martin, Blonde, Clara, Lai, Lily Y, Stuart, Beth, Fei, Yu-Tong, Moore, Michael, Liu, Jian-Ping, Jeitler, Michael, Zillgen, Hannah, Högl, Manuel, Stöckigt, Barbara, Seifert, Georg, Kessler, Christian, Khadivzadeh, Talat, Bashtian, Maryam H, Aval, Shapour B, Esmaily, Habibollah, Kim, Jihye, Kim, Keun H, Klocke, Carina, Joos, Stefanie, Koshak, Abdulrahman, Wie, Li, Koshak, Emad, Wali, Siraj, Alamoudi, Omer, Demerdash, Abdulrahman, Qutub, Majdy, Pushparaj, Peter, Kruse, Sigrid, Fischer, Isabell, Tremel, Nadine, Rosenecker, Joseph, Leung, Brenda, Takeda, Wendy, Liang, Ning, Feng, Xue, Liu, Jian-ping, Cao, Hui-juan, Shinday, Nina, Philpotts, Lisa, Park, Elyse, Fricchione, Gregory L, Yeh, Gloria, Munk, Niki, Zakeresfahani, Arash, Foote, Trevor R, Ralston, Rick, Boulanger, Karen, Özbe, Dominik, Gräßel, Elmar, Luttenberger, Katharina, Pendergrass, Anna, Pach, Daniel, Strobl, Judit, Chang, Yinhui, Pasura, Laura, Liu, Bin, Jäger, Sven F, Loerch, Ronny, Jin, Li, Icke, Katja, Shi, Xuemin, Paul, Friedemann, Rütz, Michaela, Lynen, Andreas, Schömitz, Meike, Vahle, Maik, Salomon, Nir, Lang, Alon, Lahat, Adi, Kopylov, Uri, Horin, Shomron, Noi, Ofir, Avidan, Benjamin, Elyakim, Rami, Gamus, Dorit, NG, Siew, Chang, Jessica, Wu, Justin, Kaimiklotis, John, Schumann, Dania, Buttó, Ludovica, Haller, Dirk, Smith, Caroline, Lacey, Sheryl, Chapman, Michael, Ratcliffe, Julie, Johnson, Neil, Lyttleton, Jane, Boothroyd, Clare, Fahey, Paul, Tjaden, Bram, Vliet, Marja, Wietmarschen, Herman, Tröger, Wilfried, Vuolanto, Pia, Aarva, Paulina, Sorsa, Minna, Helin, Kaija, Wenzel, Claudia, Zoderer, Iris, Pammer, Patricia, Simon, Patrick, Tucek, Gerhard, Wode, Kathrin, Henriksson, Roger, Sharp, Lena, Stoltenberg, Anna, ying, Yang, Wang, Li-qiong, Li, Jin-gen, Wang, Ying, Balneaves, Lynda, Capler, Rielle, Bocci, Chiara, Guffi, Marta, Paolini, Marina, Meaglia, Ilaria, Porcu, Patrizia, Ivaldi, Giovanni B, Dragan, Simona, Bucuras, Petru, Pah, Ana M, Petrescu, Marius, Buleu, Florina, Stoichescu, Gheorghe, Christodorescu, Ruxandra, Kao, Lan, Cho, Yumin, Klafke, Nadja, Mahler, Cornelia, von Hagens, Cornelia, Uhlmann, Lorenz, Bentner, Martina, Schneeweiß, Andreas, Mueller, Andreas, Szecsenyi, Joachim, Neri, Isabella, Schnabel, Katharina, Cree, Margit, Suhr, Ralf, Baccetti, Sonia, Firenzuoli, Fabio, Monechi, Maria V, Stefano, Mariella, Amunni, Gianni, Wong, Wendy, Chen, Bingzhong, Amri, Hakima, Kotlyanskaya, Lucy, Anderson, Belinda, Evans, Roni, Marantz, Paul, Bradley, Ryan, LaForce, Cathryn, Zwickey, Heather, Kligler, Benjamin, Brooks, Audrey, Kreitzer, Mary J, Lebensohn, Patricia, Goldblatt, Elisabeth, Esmel, Neus, Herrera, Maria, Jocham, Alexandra, Berberat, Pascal O, Schneider, Antonius, Masetti, Morgana, Murakozy, Henriette, Agdal, Rita, Atarzadeh, Fatemeh, Jaladat, Amir M, Hoseini, Leila, Amini, Fatemeh, Bai, Chen, Liu, Tiegang, Zheng, Zian, Wan, Yuxiang, Xu, Jingnan, Wang, Xuan, Yu, He, Gu, Xiaohong, Daneshfard, Babak, Nimrouzi, Majid, Tafazoli, Vahid, Alorizi, Seyed M E, Saghebi, Seyed A, Fattahi, Mohammad R, Salehi, Alireza, Rezaeizadeh, Hossein, Zarshenas, Mohammad M, Fox, Kealoha, Hughes, John, Kostanjsek, Nenad, Espinosa, Stéphane, Fisher, Peter, Latif, Abdul, Lefeber, Donald, Paske, William, Öztürk, Ali Ö, Öztürk, Gizemnur, Tissing, Wim, Naafs, Marianne, Busch, Martine, Sanaye, Mohammad R, Dräger, Kilian, Leininger, Brent, Shafto, Kate, Breen, Jenny, Wüst, Ana P, Puigmartí, Carolina, Dongen, Martien, Dagnelie, Pieter, Thijs, Carel, White, Shelley, Wiesener, Solveig, Salamonsen, Anita, Stub, Trine, Abanades, Sergio, Blanco, Mar, Masllorens, Laia, Sala, Roser, Ahnoumy, Shafekah, Han, Dongwoon, He, Luzhu, Kim, Ha Y, Choi, Da, Alræk, Terje, Kristoffersen, Agnete, Sceidt, Christel, Bruset, Stig, Musial, Frauke, Saha, Felix J, Haller, Heidemarie, Azizi, Hoda, Khadem, Nayereh, Hassanzadeh, Malihe, Estiri, Nazanin, Azizi, Hamideh, Tavassoli, Fatemeh, Lotfalizadeh, Marzieh, Zabihi, Reza, Shabestari, Mahmoud M, Paeizi, Reza, Azari, Masoumeh A, Taghanaki, Hamidreza, Baars, Erik, Bruin, Anja, Ponstein, Anne, Segantini, Sergio, Voller, Fabio, Barth, Jürgen, Kern, Alexandra, Lüthi, Sebastian, Zieger, Anja, Otto, Fabius, Beccia, Ariel, Dunlap, Corina, Courneene, Brendan, Bedregal, Paula, Passi, Alvaro, Rodríguez, Alfredo, Chang, Mayling, Gutiérrez, Soledad, Beissner, Florian, Preibisch, Christine, Arau, Annemarie, Popovici, Roxana, Meissner, Karin, Beljanski, Sylvie, Belland, Laura, Reyes, Laura, Hwang, Ula, Sethe, Dominik, Hilgard, Dörte, Heusser, Peter, Bishop, Felicity, Abbadey, Miznah, Bradbury, Katherine, Carnes, Dawn, Dimitrov, Borislav, Fawkes, Carol, Foster, Jo, MacPherson, Hugh, Roberts, Lisa, Yardley, Lucy, Holmes, Michelle, Little, Paul, Cooper, Cyrus, Bogani, Patrizia, Maggini, Valentina, Gallo, Eugenia, Miceli, Elisangela, Biffi, Sauro, Mengoni, Alessio, Fani, Renato, Guendling, Nadine, Guendling, Peter W, Bronfort, Gert, Haas, Mitch, Schulz, Craig, Bu, Xiangwei, Wang, J., Fang, T., Shen, Z., He, Y., Zhang, X., Zhang, Zhengju, Wang, Dali, Meng, Fengxian, Baumann, Klaus, Frick, Eckhard, Jacobs, Christoph, Grünther, Ralph-Achim, Lötzke, Désirée, Jung, Sonny, Recchia, Daniela R, Robens, Sibylle, Stankewitz, Josephin, Jeitler, Mika, Cheon, Chunhoo, Jang, Bo H, Ko, Seong G, Huang, Ching W, Sasaki, Yui, Ko, Youme, Cheshire, Anna, Ridge, Damien, Peters, David, Panagioti, Maria, Simon, Chantal, Cho, Hyun J, Choi, Soo J, Jung, Young S, Im, Hyea B, Cooley, Kieran, Simmons, Laura, Wasson, Rachel, Kraemer, Kristen, Sears, Richard, Hueber, Carly, Derk, Gwendolyn, Lill, JR, An, Ruopeng, Steinberg, Lois, Rodriguez, Lourdes D, Fuente, Francisca G, Vega, Miguel, Román, Keyla, Ruiz, Jonatan, Villanueva, Irene, Fuente, Francisca, Guerrero, Fanny, Castillo, Noelia, Saez, Gualberto, Jimenez, José I, Gomez, Olga, Muñoz, Luis, Diez, Camino, Dicen, Demijon, Diezel, Helene, Frawley, Jane, Broom, Alex, Dong, Fei, Ma, Xueyan, Yan, Liyi, Wu, Liqun, Ma, Jiaju, Zhen, Jianhua, Dubois, Julie, Rodondi, Pierre-Yves, Schwartze, Sophia, Trapp, Barbara, Cysarz, Dirk, Brinkhaus, Benno, Falkenberg, Torkel, Haramati, Aviad, Willich, Stefan N, Briggs, Josephine P, Willcox, Merlin, Linde, Klaus, Theorell, Töres, Wong, Lisa M, Dusek, Jeffrey, Wu, Darong, Eisenberg, David, Berger, Bettina, Kemper, Kathi, Schröer, Beate, Klein, Hedda, Ferreri, Rosaria, Kaplan, Gary, Matthes, Harald, Rotter, Gabriele, Schiff, Elad, Arnon, Zahi, Hahn, Eckhard, Luberto, Christina M, Martin, David, Schwarz, Silke, Tauschel, Diethard, Flower, Andrew, Gramminger, Harsha, Gupta, Hedwig H, Gupta, S. N, Kerckhoff, Annette, Kessler, Christian S, Michalsen, Andreas, Kim, Eun S, Jang, Eun H, Kim, Rana, Jan, Sae B, Mittwede, Martin, Mohme, Wiebke, Arye, Eran, Bonucci, Massimo, Saad, Bashar, Breitkreuz, Thomas, Rossi, Elio, Kebudi, Rejin, Daher, Michel, Razaq, Samaher, Gafer, Nahla, Nimri, Omar, Hablas, Mohamed, Kienle, Gunver S, Samuels, Noah, Silbermann, Michael, Bandelin, Lena, Lang, Anna-Lena, Wartner, Eva, Holtermann, Christoph, Binstock, Maxwell, Riebau, Robert, Mujkanovic, Edin, Cramer, Holger, Lauche, Romy, Michalsen, Andres, Ward, Lesley, Irnich, Dominik, Stör, Wolfram, Burnstock, Geoffrey, Schaible, Hans-Georg, Ots, Thomas, Langhorst, Jost, Sundberg, Tobias, Amarell, Catherina, Anheyer, Melanie, Eckert, Marion, Ogal, Mercedes, Schönauer, Annette, Reisenberger, Birgit, Brand, Bernhard, Anheyer, Dennis, Dobos, Gustav, Kroez, Matthias, Ammendola, Aldo, Mao, Jun J, Witt, Claudia, Yang, Yufei, Oritz, Miriam, Horneber, Markus, Voiß, Petra, Rosenstiel, Alexandra, Amarell, Catharina, Schad, Friedemann, Schläppi, Marc, Kröz, Matthias, Büssing, Arndt, Sela, Gil, Avshalomov, David, Attias, Samuel, Cotton, Sian, Jong, Miek, Jong, Mats, Scheffer, Christian, Edelhäuser, Friedrich, AlBedah, Abdullah, Lee, Myeong S, Khalil, Mohamed, Ogawa, Keiko, Motoo, Yoshiharu, Arimitsu, Junsuke, Ogawa, Masao, Shimizu, Genki, Stange, Rainer, Kraft, Karin, Kuchta, Kenny, Watanabe, Kenji, Bonin, D, Gruber, Harald, Koch, Sabine, Pohlmann, Urs, Caldwell, Christine, Krantz, Barbara, Kortum, Ria, Martin, Lily, Wieland, Lisa S, Kligler, Ben, Fogerite, Susan, Zhang, Yuqing, Riva, John J, Lumpkin, Michael, Ratner, Emily, Ping, Liu, Jian, Pei, Hamme, Gesa-Meyer, Mao, Xiaosong, Chouping, Han, Schröder, Sven, Hummelsberger, Josef, Wullinger, Michael, Brodzky, Marc, Zalpour, Christoff, Langley, Julia, Weber, Wendy, Mudd, Lanay M, Wayne, Peter, Witt, Clauda, Weidenhammer, Wolfgang, Fønnebø, Vinjar, Boon, Heather, Steel, Amie, Bugarcic, Andrea, Rangitakatu, Melisa, Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, Wardle, Jon, Leach, Matthew, Schloss, Janet, Dieze, Helene, Ijaz, Nadine, Heinrich, Michael, Lewith, George, Graz, Bertrand, Adam, Daniela, Grabenhenrich, Linus, Ortiz, Miriam, Binting, Sylvia, Reinhold, Thomas, Andermo, Susanne, Nordberg, Johanna H, Arman, Maria, Bhasin, Manoj, Fan, Xueyi, Libermann, Towia, Fricchione, Gregory, Denninger, John, Benson, Herbert, Martin, David D, Boers, Inge, Vlieger, Arine, Teut, Michael, Ullmann, Alexander, Lotz, Fabian, Roll, Stephanie, Canella, Claudia, Mikolasek, Michael, Rostock, Matthias, Beyer, Jörg, Guckenberger, Matthias, Jenewein, Josef, Linka, Esther, Six, Claudia, Stoll, Sarah, Stupp, Roger, Witt, Claudia M, Chuang, Elisabeth, McKee, Melissa D, Klose, Petra, Lange, Silke, Chung, Vincent C H, Wong, Hoi L C, Wu, Xin Y, Wen, Grace Y G, Ho, Robin S T, Ching, Jessica Y L, Wu, Justin C Y, Coakley, Amanda, Flanagan, Jane, Annese, Christine, Empoliti, Joanne, Gao, Zishan, Liu, Xugang, Yu, Shuguang, Yan, Xianzhong, Liang, Fanrong, Hohmann, Christoph D, Steckhan, Nico, Ostermann, Thomas, Paetow, Arion, Hoff, Evelyn, Hu, Xiao-Yang, Wu, Ruo-Han, Logue, Martin, Blonde, Clara, Lai, Lily Y, Stuart, Beth, Fei, Yu-Tong, Moore, Michael, Liu, Jian-Ping, Jeitler, Michael, Zillgen, Hannah, Högl, Manuel, Stöckigt, Barbara, Seifert, Georg, Kessler, Christian, Khadivzadeh, Talat, Bashtian, Maryam H, Aval, Shapour B, Esmaily, Habibollah, Kim, Jihye, Kim, Keun H, Klocke, Carina, Joos, Stefanie, Koshak, Abdulrahman, Wie, Li, Koshak, Emad, Wali, Siraj, Alamoudi, Omer, Demerdash, Abdulrahman, Qutub, Majdy, Pushparaj, Peter, Kruse, Sigrid, Fischer, Isabell, Tremel, Nadine, Rosenecker, Joseph, Leung, Brenda, Takeda, Wendy, Liang, Ning, Feng, Xue, Liu, Jian-ping, Cao, Hui-juan, Shinday, Nina, Philpotts, Lisa, Park, Elyse, Fricchione, Gregory L, Yeh, Gloria, Munk, Niki, Zakeresfahani, Arash, Foote, Trevor R, Ralston, Rick, Boulanger, Karen, Özbe, Dominik, Gräßel, Elmar, Luttenberger, Katharina, Pendergrass, Anna, Pach, Daniel, Strobl, Judit, Chang, Yinhui, Pasura, Laura, Liu, Bin, Jäger, Sven F, Loerch, Ronny, Jin, Li, Icke, Katja, Shi, Xuemin, Paul, Friedemann, Rütz, Michaela, Lynen, Andreas, Schömitz, Meike, Vahle, Maik, Salomon, Nir, Lang, Alon, Lahat, Adi, Kopylov, Uri, Horin, Shomron, Noi, Ofir, Avidan, Benjamin, Elyakim, Rami, Gamus, Dorit, NG, Siew, Chang, Jessica, Wu, Justin, Kaimiklotis, John, Schumann, Dania, Buttó, Ludovica, Haller, Dirk, Smith, Caroline, Lacey, Sheryl, Chapman, Michael, Ratcliffe, Julie, Johnson, Neil, Lyttleton, Jane, Boothroyd, Clare, Fahey, Paul, Tjaden, Bram, Vliet, Marja, Wietmarschen, Herman, Tröger, Wilfried, Vuolanto, Pia, Aarva, Paulina, Sorsa, Minna, Helin, Kaija, Wenzel, Claudia, Zoderer, Iris, Pammer, Patricia, Simon, Patrick, Tucek, Gerhard, Wode, Kathrin, Henriksson, Roger, Sharp, Lena, Stoltenberg, Anna, ying, Yang, Wang, Li-qiong, Li, Jin-gen, Wang, Ying, Balneaves, Lynda, Capler, Rielle, Bocci, Chiara, Guffi, Marta, Paolini, Marina, Meaglia, Ilaria, Porcu, Patrizia, Ivaldi, Giovanni B, Dragan, Simona, Bucuras, Petru, Pah, Ana M, Petrescu, Marius, Buleu, Florina, Stoichescu, Gheorghe, Christodorescu, Ruxandra, Kao, Lan, Cho, Yumin, Klafke, Nadja, Mahler, Cornelia, von Hagens, Cornelia, Uhlmann, Lorenz, Bentner, Martina, Schneeweiß, Andreas, Mueller, Andreas, Szecsenyi, Joachim, Neri, Isabella, Schnabel, Katharina, Cree, Margit, Suhr, Ralf, Baccetti, Sonia, Firenzuoli, Fabio, Monechi, Maria V, Stefano, Mariella, Amunni, Gianni, Wong, Wendy, Chen, Bingzhong, Amri, Hakima, Kotlyanskaya, Lucy, Anderson, Belinda, Evans, Roni, Marantz, Paul, Bradley, Ryan, LaForce, Cathryn, Zwickey, Heather, Kligler, Benjamin, Brooks, Audrey, Kreitzer, Mary J, Lebensohn, Patricia, Goldblatt, Elisabeth, Esmel, Neus, Herrera, Maria, Jocham, Alexandra, Berberat, Pascal O, Schneider, Antonius, Masetti, Morgana, Murakozy, Henriette, Agdal, Rita, Atarzadeh, Fatemeh, Jaladat, Amir M, Hoseini, Leila, Amini, Fatemeh, Bai, Chen, Liu, Tiegang, Zheng, Zian, Wan, Yuxiang, Xu, Jingnan, Wang, Xuan, Yu, He, Gu, Xiaohong, Daneshfard, Babak, Nimrouzi, Majid, Tafazoli, Vahid, Alorizi, Seyed M E, Saghebi, Seyed A, Fattahi, Mohammad R, Salehi, Alireza, Rezaeizadeh, Hossein, Zarshenas, Mohammad M, Fox, Kealoha, Hughes, John, Kostanjsek, Nenad, Espinosa, Stéphane, Fisher, Peter, Latif, Abdul, Lefeber, Donald, Paske, William, Öztürk, Ali Ö, Öztürk, Gizemnur, Tissing, Wim, Naafs, Marianne, Busch, Martine, Sanaye, Mohammad R, Dräger, Kilian, Leininger, Brent, Shafto, Kate, Breen, Jenny, Wüst, Ana P, Puigmartí, Carolina, Dongen, Martien, Dagnelie, Pieter, Thijs, Carel, White, Shelley, Wiesener, Solveig, Salamonsen, Anita, Stub, Trine, Abanades, Sergio, Blanco, Mar, Masllorens, Laia, Sala, Roser, Ahnoumy, Shafekah, Han, Dongwoon, He, Luzhu, Kim, Ha Y, Choi, Da, Alræk, Terje, Kristoffersen, Agnete, Sceidt, Christel, Bruset, Stig, Musial, Frauke, Saha, Felix J, Haller, Heidemarie, Azizi, Hoda, Khadem, Nayereh, Hassanzadeh, Malihe, Estiri, Nazanin, Azizi, Hamideh, Tavassoli, Fatemeh, Lotfalizadeh, Marzieh, Zabihi, Reza, Shabestari, Mahmoud M, Paeizi, Reza, Azari, Masoumeh A, Taghanaki, Hamidreza, Baars, Erik, Bruin, Anja, Ponstein, Anne, Segantini, Sergio, Voller, Fabio, Barth, Jürgen, Kern, Alexandra, Lüthi, Sebastian, Zieger, Anja, Otto, Fabius, Beccia, Ariel, Dunlap, Corina, Courneene, Brendan, Bedregal, Paula, Passi, Alvaro, Rodríguez, Alfredo, Chang, Mayling, Gutiérrez, Soledad, Beissner, Florian, Preibisch, Christine, Arau, Annemarie, Popovici, Roxana, Meissner, Karin, Beljanski, Sylvie, Belland, Laura, Reyes, Laura, Hwang, Ula, Sethe, Dominik, Hilgard, Dörte, Heusser, Peter, Bishop, Felicity, Abbadey, Miznah, Bradbury, Katherine, Carnes, Dawn, Dimitrov, Borislav, Fawkes, Carol, Foster, Jo, MacPherson, Hugh, Roberts, Lisa, Yardley, Lucy, Holmes, Michelle, Little, Paul, Cooper, Cyrus, Bogani, Patrizia, Maggini, Valentina, Gallo, Eugenia, Miceli, Elisangela, Biffi, Sauro, Mengoni, Alessio, Fani, Renato, Guendling, Nadine, Guendling, Peter W, Bronfort, Gert, Haas, Mitch, Schulz, Craig, Bu, Xiangwei, Wang, J., Fang, T., Shen, Z., He, Y., Zhang, X., Zhang, Zhengju, Wang, Dali, Meng, Fengxian, Baumann, Klaus, Frick, Eckhard, Jacobs, Christoph, Grünther, Ralph-Achim, Lötzke, Désirée, Jung, Sonny, Recchia, Daniela R, Robens, Sibylle, Stankewitz, Josephin, Jeitler, Mika, Cheon, Chunhoo, Jang, Bo H, Ko, Seong G, Huang, Ching W, Sasaki, Yui, Ko, Youme, Cheshire, Anna, Ridge, Damien, Peters, David, Panagioti, Maria, Simon, Chantal, Cho, Hyun J, Choi, Soo J, Jung, Young S, Im, Hyea B, Cooley, Kieran, Simmons, Laura, Wasson, Rachel, Kraemer, Kristen, Sears, Richard, Hueber, Carly, Derk, Gwendolyn, Lill, JR, An, Ruopeng, Steinberg, Lois, Rodriguez, Lourdes D, Fuente, Francisca G, Vega, Miguel, Román, Keyla, Ruiz, Jonatan, Villanueva, Irene, Fuente, Francisca, Guerrero, Fanny, Castillo, Noelia, Saez, Gualberto, Jimenez, José I, Gomez, Olga, Muñoz, Luis, Diez, Camino, Dicen, Demijon, Diezel, Helene, Frawley, Jane, Broom, Alex, Dong, Fei, Ma, Xueyan, Yan, Liyi, Wu, Liqun, Ma, Jiaju, Zhen, Jianhua, Dubois, Julie, Rodondi, Pierre-Yves, Schwartze, Sophia, Trapp, Barbara, and Cysarz, Dirk
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- 2017
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23. The treatment of migraine patients within chiropractic: analysis of a nationally representative survey of 1869 chiropractors.
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Moore, Craig, Adams, Jon, Leaver, Andrew, Lauche, Romy, and Sibbritt, David
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HEADACHE treatment ,MIGRAINE ,CHIROPRACTIC ,CHIROPRACTORS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEADACHE ,MEDICAL care ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,NECK pain ,PATIENTS ,REPORT writing ,SURVEYS ,DISEASE management ,COMORBIDITY ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: While the clinical role of manual therapies in migraine management is unclear, the use of chiropractors for this condition is considerable. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence and characteristics of chiropractors who frequently manage patients with migraine. Methods: A national cross-sectional survey of chiropractors collected information on practitioner characteristics, clinical management characteristics and practice settings. A secondary analysis was conducted on 1869 respondents who reported on their migraine caseload to determine the predictors associated with the frequent management of patients with migraine. Results: A large proportion of chiropractors report having a high migraine caseload (HMC) (n =990; 53.0%). The strongest factors predicting a chiropractor having a HMC include the frequent treatment of patients with axial neck pain (OR = 2.89; 95%CI: 1.18, 7.07), thoracic pain (referred/radicular) (OR = 2.52; 95%CI: 1.58, 3.21) and non-musculoskeletal disorders (OR = 3.06; 95%CI: 2.13, 4.39). Conclusions: Several practice-setting and clinical management characteristics are associated with chiropractors managing a HMC. These findings raise key questions about the therapeutic approach to chiropractic migraine management that deserves further examination. There is a need for more primary research to assess the approach to headache and migraine management provided by chiropractors and to understand the prevalence, burden and comorbidities associated with migraine found within chiropractic patient populations. This information is vital in helping to inform safe, effective and coordinated care for migraine sufferers within the wider health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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24. Efficacy of Chinese herbal medicine for stroke modifiable risk factors: a systematic review.
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Wenbo Peng, Lauche, Romy, Ferguson, Caleb, Frawley, Jane, Adams, Jon, and Sibbritt, David
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STROKE risk factors ,STROKE prevention ,CHINESE medicine ,CINAHL database ,CROSSOVER trials ,HERBAL medicine ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDLINE ,TIME ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: The vast majority of stroke burden is attributable to its modifiable risk factors. This paper aimed to systematically summarise the evidence of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) interventions on stroke modifiable risk factors for stroke prevention. Methods: A literature search was conducted via the MEDLINE, CINAHL/EBSCO, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Database from 1996 to 2016. Randomised controlled trials or cross-over studies were included. Risk of bias was assessed according to the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool. Results: A total of 46 trials (6895 participants) were identified regarding the use of CHM interventions in the management of stroke risk factors, including 12 trials for hypertension, 10 trials for diabetes, eight trials for hyperlipidemia, seven trials for impaired glucose tolerance, three trials for obesity, and six trials for combined risk factors. Amongst the included trials with diverse study design, an intervention of CHM as a supplement to biomedicine and/or a lifestyle intervention was found to be more effective in lowering blood pressure, decreasing blood glucose level, helping impaired glucose tolerance reverse to normal, and/or reducing body weight compared to CHM monotherapy. While no trial reported deaths amongst the CHM groups, some papers do report moderate adverse effects associated with CHM use. However, the findings of such beneficial effects of CHM should be interpreted with caution due to the heterogeneous set of complex CHM studied, the various control interventions employed, the use of different participants' inclusion criteria, and low methodological quality across the published studies. The risk of bias of trials identified was largely unclear in the domains of selection bias and detection bias across the included studies. Conclusion: This study showed substantial evidence of varied CHM interventions improving the stroke modifiable risk factors. More rigorous research examining the use of CHM products for sole or multiple major stroke risk factors are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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25. Substantial out-of-pocket expenditure on maternity care practitioner consultations and treatments during pregnancy: estimates from a nationally-representative sample of pregnant women in Australia.
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Adams, Jon, Steel, Amie, Frawley, Jane, Broom, Alex, and Sibbritt, David
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MATERNAL health services ,PREGNANT women ,UTILIZATION of maternal health services ,HEALTH insurance ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,HUMAN services ,TREATMENT of pregnancy complications ,PREGNANCY complications ,MEDICAL care cost statistics ,GENERAL practitioners ,MEDICAL referrals ,PRENATAL care ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: A wide range of health care options are utilised by pregnant women in Australia. The out-of-pocket costs of maternity care in Australia vary depending on many factors including model of care utilised, health insurance coverage, and women's decision to access health services outside of conventional maternity care provision.Methods: Women from the 1973-78 cohort of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) who identified as pregnant or as recently having given birth in 2009 were invited to complete a sub-study questionnaire investigating health service utilisation during their most recent pregnancy.Results: A total of 1,835 women agreed to participate in the sub-study. The majority of women (99.8%) consulted with a conventional health care practitioner during pregnancy, 49.4% consulted with a complementary and alternative medicine practitioner at least once during pregnancy and 89.6% of the women used a complementary and alternative medicine product. Women reported an average of AUD$781.10 in out-of-pocket expenses for consultations with conventional health care practitioners, AUD$185.40 in out-of-pocket expenses for consultations with complementary and alternative medicine practitioners and AUD$179.60 in out-of-pocket expenses for complementary and alternative medicine products. From the study data we estimate Australian pregnant women spend over AUD$337 M on out-of-pocket health services.Conclusion: While the majority of pregnant women in Australia may obtain health services via the publically-funded health care system and/or private health insurance coverage, our analysis identifies substantial out-of-pocket expenditure for health care by pregnant women - a trend in public spending for maternity care of importance to policy makers, health administrators, and health professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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26. A critical review of manual therapy use for headache disorders: prevalence, profiles, motivations, communication and self-reported effectiveness.
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Moore, Craig S., Sibbritt, David W., and Adams, Jon
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- *
HEADACHE treatment , *ANALGESIA , *PUBLIC health administration , *THERAPEUTICS , *DISEASE prevalence , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background: Despite the expansion of conventional medical treatments for headache, many sufferers of common recurrent headache disorders seek help outside of medical settings. The aim of this paper is to evaluate research studies on the prevalence of patient use of manual therapies for the treatment of headache and the key factors associated with this patient population.Methods: This critical review of the peer-reviewed literature identified 35 papers reporting findings from new empirical research regarding the prevalence, profiles, motivations, communication and self-reported effectiveness of manual therapy use amongst those with headache disorders.Results: While available data was limited and studies had considerable methodological limitations, the use of manual therapy appears to be the most common non-medical treatment utilized for the management of common recurrent headaches. The most common reason for choosing this type of treatment was seeking pain relief. While a high percentage of these patients likely continue with concurrent medical care, around half may not be disclosing the use of this treatment to their medical doctor.Conclusions: There is a need for more rigorous public health and health services research in order to assess the role, safety, utilization and financial costs associated with manual therapy treatment for headache. Primary healthcare providers should be mindful of the use of this highly popular approach to headache management in order to help facilitate safe, effective and coordinated care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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27. An Overview of the Practitioner Research and Collaboration Initiative (PRACI): a practice-based research network for complementary medicine.
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Steel, Amie, Sibbritt, David, Schloss, Janet, Wardle, Jon, Leach, Matthew, Diezel, Helene, and Adams, Jon
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JOB classification ,ACTION research ,BUSINESS networks ,CHI-squared test ,ELECTRONICS ,LABOR supply ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVEYS ,RESEARCH in alternative medicine - Abstract
Background: The Practitioner Research and Collaboration Initiative (PRACI) is an innovative, multi-modality practice-based research network (PBRN) that represents fourteen complementary medicine (CM) professions across Australia. It is the largest known PBRN for complementary healthcare in the world and was launched in 2015. The purpose of this paper is to provide an update on the progress of the PRACI project, including a description of the characteristics of PRACI members in order to facilitate further sub-studies through the PRACI PBRN. Methods: A CM workforce survey was distributed electronically to CM practitioners across fourteen disciplines, throughout Australia. Practitioners electing to become a member of PRACI were registered on the PBRN database. The database was interrogated and the data analysed to described sociodemographic characteristics, practice characteristics, professional qualification and practice interest of PRACI members. Results: Foundational members of PRACI were found to be predominately female (76.2%) and middle-aged (82.5%). Members were primarily located in urban settings (82.5%) across the Eastern seaboard of Australia (82.5%), with few working remotely. The main modalities represented include massage therapists (58.5%), naturopaths (26.4%) and nutritionists (14.4%). The primary area of clinical interest for PRACI members were general health and well-being (75.4%), musculoskeletal complaints (72%) and pain management (62.6%). Conclusions: PRACI provides an important infrastructure for complementary healthcare research in Australia and its success relies on CM practitioners being involved in the research being conducted through the PBRN. The aim of this database is to ensure that the research conducted through PRACI is rigorous, robust, clinically relevant and reflects the diversity of clinical practice amongst CM practitioners in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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28. A workforce survey of Australian chiropractic: the profile and practice features of a nationally representative sample of 2,005 chiropractors.
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Adams, Jon, Lauche, Romy, Wenbo Peng, Steel, Amie, Moore, Craig, Amorin-Woods, Lyndon G., and Sibbritt, David
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CHIROPRACTORS ,LABOR supply ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,HUMAN research subjects ,PATIENT selection ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: This paper reports the profile of the Australian chiropractic workforce and characteristics of chiropractic care from a large nationally-representative sample of practitioners. Methods: A 21-item questionnaire examining practitioner, practice and clinical management characteristics was distributed to all registered chiropractors (n = 4,684) in Australia in 2015 via both online and hard copy mail out. Results: The survey attracted a response rate of 43% (n = 2,005), and the sample is largely representative of the national chiropractic workforce on a number of key indicators. The average age of the chiropractors was 42.1 years, nearly two-thirds are male, and the vast majority hold a bachelor degree or higher qualification. Australian chiropractors are focused upon treating people across a wide age range who mainly present with musculoskeletal conditions. Australian chiropractors have referral relationships with a range of conventional, allied health and complementary medicine (CAM) providers. Conclusion: The chiropractic profession represents a substantial component of the contemporary Australian health care system with chiropractors managing an estimated 21.3 million patient visits per year. While the Australian chiropractic workforce is well educated, research engagement and research capacity remains sub-optimal and there is much room for further capacity building to help chiropractic reach full potential as a key integrated profession within an evidence-based health care system. Further rich, in-depth research is warranted to improve our understanding of the role of chiropractic within the Australian health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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29. Severity of back pain may influence choice and order of practitioner consultations across conventional, allied and complementary health care: a cross-sectional study of 1851 mid-age Australian women.
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Sibbritt, David, Lauche, Romy, Sundberg, Tobias, Wenbo Peng, Moore, Craig, Broom, Alex, Kirby, Emma, Adams, Jon, and Peng, Wenbo
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- *
BACKACHE , *TREATMENT of backaches , *HEALTH practitioners , *ALLIED health personnel , *PHYSICAL therapists , *PATIENTS , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL personnel , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Back pain is a common, disabling and costly disorder for which patients often consult with a wide range of health practitioners. Unfortunately, no research to date has directly examined the association between the severity of back pain and back pain sufferers' choice of whom and in what order to consult different health practitioners.Methods: This is a sub-study of the large nationally representative Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH). The mid-age cohort women (born 1946-51, n = 13,715) of the ALSWH were recruited from the Australian national Medicare database in 1996. These women have been surveyed six time, with survey 6 being conducted in 2010 (n = 10,011). Mid-age women (n = 1851) who in 2010 had sought help from a health care practitioner for their back pain were mailed a self-report questionnaire targeting their previous 12 months of health services utilisation, health status and their levels of back pain intensity.Results: A total of 1620 women were deemed eligible and 1310 (80.9 %) returned completed questionnaires. Mid-age women with back pain visited various conventional, allied health and CAM practitioners for care: 75.6 % consulted a CAM practitioner; 58.4 % consulted a medical doctor; and 54.2 % consulted an allied health practitioner. Women with the most severe back pain sought conventional care from a general practitioner, and those who consulted a general practitioner first had more severe back pain than those who consulted another practitioner first. Following the general practitioner visit, the women with more severe back pain were more likely to be referred to a conventional specialist, and those with less severe back pain were more likely to be referred to a physiotherapist.Conclusions: Our findings suggest that women with more severe back pain are likely to visit a conventional practitioner first, whereas women with less severe back pain are likely to explore a range of treatment options including CAM practitioners. The improvement of back pain over time following the various possible sequencing of consultations with different types of health practitioners is a topic with implications for ensuring safe and effective back pain care and worthy of further detailed investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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30. The use of complementary and alternative medicine by 7427 Australian women with cyclic perimenstrual pain and discomfort: a cross-sectional study.
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Fisher, Carole, Adams, Jon, Hickman, Louise, and Sibbritt, David
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DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,DIAGNOSIS of endometriosis ,TYPE 2 diabetes diagnosis ,PAIN diagnosis ,PREMENSTRUAL syndrome ,METRORRHAGIA ,ACUPUNCTURE ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,CHI-squared test ,DYSMENORRHEA ,ENDOMETRIOSIS ,HYPERTENSION ,IRON deficiency anemia ,MASSAGE therapy ,CHINESE medicine ,MENOPAUSE ,MENSTRUATION disorders ,RESEARCH funding ,VITAMINS ,WOMEN'S health ,COMORBIDITY ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,CONFOUNDING variables ,DISEASE complications ,SYMPTOMS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: To assess the prevalence of cyclic perimenstrual pain and discomfort and to detail the pattern of complementary and alternative (CAM) use adopted by women for the treatment of these symptoms. Methods: Data from the 2012 national Australian Longitudinal Study of Women's Health (ALSWH) cross-sectional survey of 7427 women aged 34-39 years were analysed to estimate the prevalence of endometriosis, premenstrual syndrome (PMS), irregular or heavy periods and severe dysmenorrhoea and to examine the association between their symptoms and their visits to CAM practitioners as well as their use of CAM therapies and products in the previous 12 months. Results: The prevalence of endometriosis was 3.7 % and of the perimenstrual symptoms assessed, PMS was most prevalent at 41.2 % whilst irregular bleeding (22.2 %), heavy periods (29.8 %) and severe period pain (24.1 %) were reported at lower levels. Women with endometriosis were more likely than non-sufferers to have consulted with a massage therapist or acupuncturist and to have used vitamins/minerals, yoga/meditation or Chinese medicines (p < 0.05). PMS sufferers were more likely to consult with an osteopath, massage therapist, naturopath/herbalist or alternative health practitioner and to have used all forms of CAM therapies except Chinese medicines than women who had infrequent PMS (all p<0.05). Women with irregular periods did not have different patterns of CAM use from non-sufferers and those with heavy periods did not favour any form of CAM but were less likely to visit a massage therapist or use yoga/meditation than non-sufferers (p<0.05). For women with severe dysmenorrhoea there was no difference in their visits to CAM practitioners compared to non-sufferers but they were more likely to use aromatherapy oils (p<0.05) and for more frequent dysmenorrhoea also herbal medicines, Chinese medicines and other alternative therapies compared to non-sufferers (all p<0.05). Conclusions: There is a high prevalence of cyclic perimenstrual pain and discomfort amongst women in this age group. Women were using CAM differentially when they had specific symptoms of cyclic perimenstrual pain and discomfort. The use of CAM needs to be properly assessed to ensure their safe, effective use and to ascertain their significance as a treatment option enabling women with menstrual problems and their care providers to improve their quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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31. The characteristics, experiences and perceptions of naturopathic and herbal medicine practitioners: results from a national survey in New Zealand.
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Cottingham, Phillip, Adams, Jon, Vempati, Ram, Dunn, Jill, and Sibbritt, David
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL referrals ,BOTANIC medicine ,NATUROPATHS ,SENSORY perception ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,T-test (Statistics) ,WORK ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Despite the popularity of naturopathic and herbal medicine in New Zealand there remains limited data on New Zealand-based naturopathic and herbal medicine practice. In response, this paper reports findings from the first national survey examining the characteristics, perceptions and experiences of New Zealand-based naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners across multiple domains relating to their role and practice. Methods: An online survey (covering 6 domains: demographics; practice characteristics; research; integrative practice; regulation and funding; contribution to national health objectives) was administered to naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners. From a total of 338 naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners, 107 responded providing a response rate of 32%. Data were statistically analysed using STATA. Results: A majority of the naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners surveyed were female (91%), and aged between 45 and 54 years. Most practiced part-time (64%), with practitioner caseloads averaging 8 new clients and over 20 follow-up clients per month. Our analysis shows that researched information impacts upon and is useful for naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners to validate their practices. However, the sources of researched information utilised by New Zealand naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners remain variable, with many sources beyond publications in peer-reviewed journals being utilised. Most naturopathic and herbal medicine practitioners (82%) supported registration, with statutory registration being favoured (75%). Integration with conventional care was considered desirable by the majority of naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners surveyed (83%). Naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners feel that they contribute to several key national health objectives, including: improved nutrition (93%); increased physical activity (85%); reducing incidence and impact of CVD (79%); reducing incidence and impact of cancer (68%). Conclusions: There is a need for greater understanding and communication between practitioners of conventional care and naturopathic and herbal medicine which could support informed, coordinated and effective health provision within the New Zealand health care system. There is a need for further in-depth research examining naturopaths and herbal medicine practitioners' perceptions and practices, to provide insights of benefit to all those practising and managing health services as well as those directing health policy in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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32. Helping address the national research and research capacity needs of Australian chiropractic: introducing the Australian Chiropractic Research Network (ACORN) project.
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Adams, Jon, Steel, Amie, Sungwon Chang, and Sibbritt, David
- Subjects
ATTITUDE testing ,CHIROPRACTIC diagnosis ,CHIROPRACTORS ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,GOVERNMENT aid ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Chiropractic is a popular health care choice in Australia and yet major gaps in our empirical understanding of this area of practice remain. Furthermore, while some research excellence exists, a largely uncoordinated approach to research activity and development has in effect led to silos of interest and a lack of strategic 'big-picture' planning essential to producing a sustainable research culture and capacity for the profession. This commentary identifies the significance of a number of key features - including a national, coordinated focus, and a rich engagement with the practitioner and patient base amongst others - arguably important to the future development of research and research capacity within Australian chiropractic. The design features and phases of the Australian Chiropractic Research Network (ACORN) project are also outlined. ACORN is one contemporary initiative specifically developed to address chiropractic's research and research capacity building needs and help grow a broad evidence-base to inform safe, effective patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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33. A critical review of traditional medicine and traditional healer use for malaria and among people in malaria-endemic areas: contemporary research in low to middle-income Asia-Pacific countries.
- Author
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Suswardany, Dwi L., Sibbritt, David W., Supardi, Sudibyo, Sungwon Chang, and Adams, Jon
- Subjects
- *
ENDEMIC diseases , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *MALARIA treatment , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Background: Malaria is a leading health threat for low to middle-income countries and around 1.8 billion people in the Southeast Asian region and 870 million people in the Western Pacific region remain at risk of contracting malaria. Traditional medicine/traditional healer (TM/TH) use is prominent amongst populations in low- to middle-income countries and constitutes an important issue influencing and potentially challenging effective, safe and coordinated prevention and treatment strategies around malaria. This paper presents the first critical review of literature on the use of TM/TH for malaria prevention and treatment in low- to middle-income countries in the Asia-Pacific region. Methods: A comprehensive search of English language, peer-reviewed literature reporting TM and/or TH use for malaria or among people in malaria-endemic areas in low- to middle-income Asia-Pacific countries published between 2003 and 2014 was undertaken. Results: Twenty-eight papers reporting 27 studies met the inclusion criteria. Prevalence of TM/TH use for malaria treatment ranged from 1 to 40.1%. A majority of studies conducted in rural/remote areas reported higher prevalence of TM/TH use than those conducted in mixed areas of urban, semi-urban, rural, and remote areas. Those utilizing TM/TH for malaria are more likely to be: women, people with lower educational attainment, people with lower household income, those with farming occupations, and those from ethnic minorities (identified from only three studies). The majority of adult participants delayed seeking treatment from a health centre or conventional providers while initially practicing TH use. The most common reasons for TM/TH use for malaria across the Asia-Pacific region are a lack of accessibility to conventional health services (due to geographical and financial barriers), faith in traditional treatment, and the perception of lower severity of malaria symptoms. Conclusion: This review has provided crucial insights into the prevalence and profile of TM/TH use for malaria. Those managing and providing conventional programmes, treatment and care for malaria in the Asia-Pacific should remain mindful of the possible use of TM/TH amongst community members and patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
34. The interface with naturopathy in rural primary health care: a survey of referral practices of general practitioners in rural and regional New South Wales, Australia.
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Wardle, Jon L, Sibbritt, David W, and Adams, Jon
- Abstract
Background: Naturopathy forms an increasingly significant part of the Australian healthcare setting, with high utilisation of naturopaths by the Australian public and a large therapeutic footprint in rural and regional Australia. However, despite these circumstances, there has been little exploration of the interface between naturopathy providers and conventional primary health care practitioners in rural and regional Australia. The study reported here examined the referral practices and factors that underlie referral to naturopaths amongst a sample of rural and regional Australian general practitioners (GPs). Methods: A 27-item questionnaire was sent to all 1,486 GPs currently practising in rural and regional Divisions of General Practice in New South Wales, Australia. Results: A total of 585 GPs responded to the questionnaire, with 49 questionnaires returned as "no longer at this address" (response rate: 40.7%). One-quarter of GPs (25.8%) referred to a naturopath at least a few times per year while nearly half (48.8%) stated that they would not refer to a naturopath under any circumstances. GPs were more likely to refer to a naturopath if the GP: was not initially from a rural area (OR=1.78; 95% CI: 0.95, 3.33); believes in the efficacy of naturopathy (OR=5.62; 95% CI: 2.42, 11.36); has seen positive results from naturopathy previously (OR=2.61; 95% CI: 1.35, 5.05); perceives a lack of other treatment options for their patient (OR=5.25; 95% CI: 2.42; 11.36); uses peer-reviewed literature as their major source of CAM information (OR=3.03; 95% CI: 1.65, 5.55); uses CAM practitioners as a major source of CAM information (OR=6.09; 95% CI: 2.91, 12.72); and does not have an existing relationship with any CAM provider (OR=3.03; 95% CI: 1.53, 6.25). Conclusions: There is little interaction (both via referrals as well as the development of professional relationships) between the naturopathic and GP communities in rural and regional Australia, with significant levels of both support and opposition for naturopathic referral amongst GPs. The significant presence and high utilisation of naturopathy in rural primary health care, which appears to work in parallel to conventional medical care rather than in conjunction with it, should serve as an impetus for increased research into naturopathy practice, policy and regulation in rural and regional health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
35. A qualitative study of influences on older women's practitioner choices for back pain care.
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Kirby, Emma R., Broom, Alex F., Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David W., and Refshauge, Kathryn M.
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BACKACHE ,PAIN management ,BACK diseases ,OLDER women ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background Back pain is an increasingly prevalent health concern amongst Australian women for which a wide range of treatment options are available, offered by biomedical, allied health and complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) providers. Although there is an emerging literature on patterns of provider utilisation, less is known about the reasons why women with back pain select their chosen practitioner. In this paper we explore the influences on back pain sufferers' decision-making about treatment seeking with practitioners for their most recent episode of back pain. Methods Drawing on 50 semi-structured interviews with women aged 60-65 years from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) who have chronic back pain, we focus on the factors which influence their choice of practitioner. Analysis followed a framework approach to qualitative content analysis, augmented by NVivo 9 qualitative data analysis software. Key themes were identified and tested for rigour through inter-rater reliability and constant comparison. Results The women identified four predominant influences on their choice of practitioner for back pain: familiarity with treatment or experiences with individual practitioners; recommendations from social networks; geographical proximity of practitioners; and, qualifications and credentials of practitioners. The therapeutic approach or evidence-base of the practices being utilised was not reported by the women as central to their back pain treatment decision making. Conclusions Choice of practitioner appears to be unrelated to the therapeutic approaches, treatment practices or the scientific basis of therapeutic practices. Moreover, anecdotal lay reports of effectiveness and the 'treatment experience' may be more influential than formal qualifications in guiding women's choice of practitioner for their back pain. Further work is needed on the interpersonal, collective and subjective underpinnings of practitioner choice, particularly over time, in order to better understand why women utilise certain practitioners for back pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
36. Birthplace in New South Wales, Australia: an analysis of perinatal outcomes using routinely collected data.
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Homer, Caroline S. E., Thornton, Charlene, Scarf, Vanessa L., Ellwood, David A., Oats, Jeremy J. N., Foureur, Maralyn J., Sibbritt, David, McLachlan, Helen L., Forster, Della A., and Dahlen, Hannah G.
- Abstract
Background: The outcomes for women who give birth in hospital compared with at home are the subject of ongoing debate. We aimed to determine whether a retrospective linked data study using routinely collected data was a viable means to compare perinatal and maternal outcomes and interventions in labour by planned place of birth at the onset of labour in one Australian state. Methods: A population-based cohort study was undertaken using routinely collected linked data from the New South Wales Perinatal Data Collection, Admitted Patient Data Collection, Register of Congenital Conditions, Registry of Birth Deaths and Marriages and the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Eight years of data provided a sample size of 258,161 full-term women and their infants. The primary outcome was a composite outcome of neonatal mortality and morbidity as used in the Birthplace in England study. Results: Women who planned to give birth in a birth centre or at home were significantly more likely to have a normal labour and birth compared with women in the labour ward group. There were no statistically significant differences in stillbirth and early neonatal deaths between the three groups, although we had insufficient statistical power to test reliably for these differences. Conclusion: This study provides information to assist the development and evaluation of different places of birth across Australia. It is feasible to examine perinatal and maternal outcomes by planned place of birth using routinely collected linked data, although very large data sets will be required to measure rare outcomes associated with place of birth in a low risk population, especially in countries like Australia where homebirth rates are low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Referral to Chinese medicine practitioners in Australian primary care: a survey of New South Wales rural and regional general practitioners.
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Wardle, Jonathan L., Sibbritt, David W., and Adams, Jon
- Subjects
- *
CONFIDENCE intervals , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *MEDICAL referrals , *CHINESE medicine , *GENERAL practitioners , *PRIMARY health care , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Chinese medicine practitioners (CMPs) play an important part in rural and regional Australian healthcare. A survey was conducted to investigate referral practices between Chinese medicine (CM) and conventional primary health care practitioners in this region. Methods: A 27-item questionnaire was sent to all 1486 general practitioners (GPs) currently practising in rural and regional Divisions of General Practice in New South Wales, Australia. This survey explored GP opinions, perceptions and practices in relation to complementary and alternative medicine or Chinese medicine specifically. Results: A total of 585 GPs completed the questionnaire. Forty-nine were returned as 'no longer at this address', resulting in an adjusted response rate of 40.7%. One in ten GPs (9.9%) had referred their patients to CMPs at least a few times over the past 12 months, one in five GPs (17.4%) could not locate a CMP to refer to in their local area, and over one-third of GPs (37.7%) stated they would not refer to a CMP under any circumstances. GPs that had graduated from an Australian medical college (OR = 3.71; CI: 1.22, 11.23), GPs observing positive responses previously in patients using CM (OR = 2.53; 95% CI: 1.12, 8.58), GPs perceiving a lack of other options for patients (OR = 3.10; 95% CI: 1.12, 8.58), GPs reporting satisfactory or higher levels of CM knowledge (OR = 15.62; 95% CI: 5.47, 44.56), and GPs interested in increasing their complementary and alternative medicine knowledge (OR = 3.28; 95% CI: 1.17, 9.21) referred to CMPs more frequently than did other groups of GPs amongst the rural GPs included in this study. Conclusion: There has been little interaction between CMPs and Australian rural and regional GPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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38. Utilisation of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practitioners within maternity care provision: results from a nationally representative cohort study of 1,835 pregnant women.
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Steel, Amie, Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, Broom, Alex, Gallois, Cindy, and Frawley, Jane
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ALTERNATIVE medicine ,PREGNANT women ,MATERNAL health services ,OBSTETRICS ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: There is little known about women's concurrent use of conventional and complementary health care during pregnancy, particularly consultation patterns with complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). This study examines health service utilisation among pregnant women including consultations with obstetricians, midwives, general practitioners (GPs) and CAM practitioners. Methods: A sub-study of pregnant women (n=2445) was undertaken from the nationally-representative Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH). Women's consultations with conventional practitioners (obstetricians, GPs and midwives) and CAM practitioners for pregnancy-related health conditions were analysed. The analysis included Pearson chi-square tests to compare categorical variables. Results: The survey was completed by 1835 women (response rate = 79.2%). A substantial number (49.4%) of respondents consulted with a CAM practitioner for pregnancy-related health conditions. Many participants consulted only with a CAM practitioner for assistance with certain conditions such as neck pain (74.6%) and sciatica (40.4%). Meanwhile, women consulted both CAM practitioners and conventional maternity health professionals (obstetricians, midwives and GPs) for back pain (61.8%) and gestational diabetes (22.2%). Women visiting a general practitioner (GP) 3-4 times for pregnancy care were more likely to consult with acupuncturists compared with those consulting a GP less often (p=<0.001, x2=20.5). Women who had more frequent visits to a midwife were more likely to have consulted with an acupuncturist (p=<0.001, x2=18.9) or a doula (p=<0.001, x2=23.2) than those visiting midwives less frequently for their pregnancy care. Conclusions: The results emphasise the necessity for a considered and collaborative approach to interactions between pregnant women, conventional maternity health providers and CAM practitioners to accommodate appropriate information transferral and co-ordinated maternity care. The absence of sufficient clinical evidence regarding many commonly used CAM practices during pregnancy also requires urgent attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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39. Use of complementary and alternative medicine by mid-age women with back pain: a national cross-sectional survey.
- Author
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Broom, Alex F., Kirby, Emma R., Sibbritt, David W., Adams, Jon, and Refshauge, Kathryn M.
- Subjects
TREATMENT of backaches ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH status indicators ,HEALTH surveys ,LIFE skills ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVEYS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,MIDDLE age - Abstract
Background: The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has increased significantly in Australia over the past decade. Back pain represents a common context for CAM use, with increasing utilisation of a wide range of therapies provided within and outside conventional medical facilities. We examine the relationship between back pain and use of CAM and conventional medicine in a national cohort of mid-aged Australian women. Methods: Data is taken from a cross-sectional survey (n = 10492) of the mid-aged cohort of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health, surveyed in 2007. The main outcome measures were: incidence of back pain the previous 12 months, and frequency of use of conventional or CAM treatments in the previous 12 months. Results: Back pain was experienced by 77% (n = 8063) of the cohort in the previous twelve month period. The majority of women with back pain only consulted with a conventional care provider (51.3%), 44.2% of women with back pain consulted with both a conventional care provider and a CAM practitioner. Women with more frequent back pain were more likely to consult a CAM practitioner, as well as seek conventional care. The most commonly utilised CAM practitioners were massage therapy (26.5% of those with back pain) and chiropractic (16.1% of those with back pain). Only 1.7% of women with back pain consulted with a CAM practitioner exclusively. Conclusions: Mid-aged women with back pain utilise a range of conventional and CAM treatments. Consultation with CAM practitioners or self-prescribed CAM was predominantly in addition to, rather than a replacement for, conventional care. It is important that health professionals are aware of potential multiple practitioner usage in the context of back pain and are prepared to discuss such behaviours and practices with their patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
40. The urban-rural divide in complementary and alternative medicine use: a longitudinal study of 10,638 women.
- Author
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Adams, Jon, Sibbritt, David, and Chi-Wai Lui
- Subjects
ALTERNATIVE medicine ,CHI-squared test ,COMPUTER software ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL population ,T-test (Statistics) ,CITY dwellers ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Background: Research has identified women in rural and remote areas as higher users of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practitioners than their urban counterparts. However, we currently know little about what influences women's CAM consumption across the urban/rural divide. This paper analyses 10,638 women's CAM use across urban and rural Australia. Methods: Data for this research comes from Survey 5 of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health conducted in 2007. The participants were aged 56-61years. The health status and health service use of CAM users and non-users were compared using chi-square tests for categorical variables and t-tests for continuous variables. Results: Women who consulted a CAM practitioner varied significantly by place of residence: 28%, 32% and 30% for urban, rural and remote areas respectively (P < .005). CAM users tended to be more dissatisfied with conventional care than CAM non-users, but this was consistent across the 3 areas of residence. CAM users have higher percentages of most symptoms but the only rural/urban differences were for severe tiredness, night sweats, depression and anxiety. For diagnosed diseases, CAM users have higher percentages of most diagnoses but only hypertension and skin cancer were statistically significantly higher for rural and remote but not urban women (P < .005). Conclusions: In contrast to some recent claims, our analysis suggests the lack of access to and/or patient dissatisfaction with conventional health practitioners may not play a central role in explaining higher use of CAM by women in rural and remote areas when compared to women in urban areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A GP Caregiver Needs Toolkit versus usual care inthe management of the needs of caregivers ofpatients with advanced cancer: a randomizedcontrolled trial.
- Author
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Mitchell, Geoffrey, Girgis, Afaf, Jiwa, Moyez, Sibbritt, David, and Burridge, Letitia
- Subjects
FAMILY medicine ,CANCER ,CAREGIVERS ,VOLUNTEERS ,BURDEN of care - Abstract
Background: Caring for a person with progressive cancer creates challenges for caregivers. However the needs of caregivers are often not assessed or recognised by health care providers. Research is also lacking in this area, with little knowledge relating to effective strategies to address the specific needs of caregivers. This paper outlines a study protocol aimed at developing and evaluating the effectiveness of a general practice-based intervention to better meet the needs of caregivers of patients with advanced cancer. Methods/Design: Two hundred and sixty caregivers will be randomised into each of two arms of the intervention (520 participants in total) through patients with advanced cancer attending medical and radiation oncology outpatient clinics at two tertiary hospital sites. Consenting caregivers will be followed up for six months, and telephone surveyed at baseline, 1, 3 and 6 months following their entry into the study or until the patient's death, whichever occurs first. Assessment and management of the unmet needs of caregivers in the intervention arm will be facilitated through a specifically developed general practice-based strategy; caregivers in the control group will receive usual care. Qualitative interviews will be conducted with a sample of up to 20 caregivers and 10 GPs at the conclusion of their participation, to explore their views regarding the usefulness of the intervention. Discussion: This study will determine whether systematic assessment of caregiver needs supported by caregiverspecific information for General Practitioners is effective in alleviating the unmet needs experienced by caregivers caring for patients with advanced cancer. Trial registration number: ISRCTN: ISRCTN43614355 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Facilitating needs based cancer care for people with a chronic disease: Evaluation of an intervention using a multi-centre interrupted time series design.
- Author
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Waller, Amy, Girgis, Afaf, Johnson, Claire, Mitchell, Geoff, Yates, Patsy, Kristjanson, Linda, Tattersall, Martin, Lecathelinais, Christophe, Sibbritt, David, Kelly, Brian, Gorton, Emma, and Currow, David
- Subjects
CANCER treatment ,CANCER patients ,CHRONICALLY ill patient care ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,ANXIETY ,MENTAL depression ,QUALITY of life ,PATIENT satisfaction - Abstract
Background: Palliative care should be provided according to the individual needs of the patient, caregiver and family, so that the type and level of care provided, as well as the setting in which it is delivered, are dependent on the complexity and severity of individual needs, rather than prognosis or diagnosis [1]. This paper presents a study designed to assess the feasibility and efficacy of an intervention to assist in the allocation of palliative care resources according to need, within the context of a population of people with advanced cancer. Methods/design: People with advanced cancer and their caregivers completed bi-monthly telephone interviews over a period of up to 18 months to assess unmet needs, anxiety and depression, quality of life, satisfaction with care and service utilisation. The intervention, introduced after at least two baseline phone interviews, involved a) training medical, nursing and allied health professionals at each recruitment site on the use of the Palliative Care Needs Assessment Guidelines and the Needs Assessment Tool: Progressive Disease - Cancer (NAT: PD-C); b) health professionals completing the NAT: PD-C with participating patients approximately monthly for the rest of the study period. Changes in outcomes will be compared pre-and post-intervention. Discussion: The study will determine whether the routine, systematic and regular use of the Guidelines and NAT: PD-C in a range of clinical settings is a feasible and effective strategy for facilitating the timely provision of needs based care. Trials registration: ISRCTN21699701 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A GP Caregiver Needs Toolkit versus usual care in the management of the needs of caregivers of patients with advanced cancer: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Mitchell, Geoffrey, Girgis, Afaf, Jiwa, Moyez, Sibbritt, David, and Burridge, Letitia
- Abstract
Background: Caring for a person with progressive cancer creates challenges for caregivers. However the needs of caregivers are often not assessed or recognised by health care providers. Research is also lacking in this area, with little knowledge relating to effective strategies to address the specific needs of caregivers. This paper outlines a study protocol aimed at developing and evaluating the effectiveness of a general practice-based intervention to better meet the needs of caregivers of patients with advanced cancer.Methods/design: Two hundred and sixty caregivers will be randomised into each of two arms of the intervention (520 participants in total) through patients with advanced cancer attending medical and radiation oncology outpatient clinics at two tertiary hospital sites. Consenting caregivers will be followed up for six months, and telephone surveyed at baseline, 1, 3 and 6 months following their entry into the study or until the patient's death, whichever occurs first. Assessment and management of the unmet needs of caregivers in the intervention arm will be facilitated through a specifically developed general practice-based strategy; caregivers in the control group will receive usual care. Qualitative interviews will be conducted with a sample of up to 20 caregivers and 10 GPs at the conclusion of their participation, to explore their views regarding the usefulness of the intervention.Discussion: This study will determine whether systematic assessment of caregiver needs supported by caregiver-specific information for General Practitioners is effective in alleviating the unmet needs experienced by caregivers caring for patients with advanced cancer.Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN: ISRCTN43614355. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Efficacy of Chinese herbal medicine for stroke modifiable risk factors: a systematic review.
- Author
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Peng W, Lauche R, Ferguson C, Frawley J, Adams J, and Sibbritt D
- Abstract
Background: The vast majority of stroke burden is attributable to its modifiable risk factors. This paper aimed to systematically summarise the evidence of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) interventions on stroke modifiable risk factors for stroke prevention., Methods: A literature search was conducted via the MEDLINE, CINAHL/EBSCO, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Database from 1996 to 2016. Randomised controlled trials or cross-over studies were included. Risk of bias was assessed according to the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool., Results: A total of 46 trials (6895 participants) were identified regarding the use of CHM interventions in the management of stroke risk factors, including 12 trials for hypertension, 10 trials for diabetes, eight trials for hyperlipidemia, seven trials for impaired glucose tolerance, three trials for obesity, and six trials for combined risk factors. Amongst the included trials with diverse study design, an intervention of CHM as a supplement to biomedicine and/or a lifestyle intervention was found to be more effective in lowering blood pressure, decreasing blood glucose level, helping impaired glucose tolerance reverse to normal, and/or reducing body weight compared to CHM monotherapy. While no trial reported deaths amongst the CHM groups, some papers do report moderate adverse effects associated with CHM use. However, the findings of such beneficial effects of CHM should be interpreted with caution due to the heterogeneous set of complex CHM studied, the various control interventions employed, the use of different participants' inclusion criteria, and low methodological quality across the published studies. The risk of bias of trials identified was largely unclear in the domains of selection bias and detection bias across the included studies., Conclusion: This study showed substantial evidence of varied CHM interventions improving the stroke modifiable risk factors. More rigorous research examining the use of CHM products for sole or multiple major stroke risk factors are warranted.
- Published
- 2017
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45. Is dietary zinc protective for type 2 diabetes? Results from the Australian longitudinal study on women's health.
- Author
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Vashum KP, McEvoy M, Shi Z, Milton AH, Islam MR, Sibbritt D, Patterson A, Byles J, Loxton D, and Attia J
- Abstract
Background: Animal studies have shown that zinc intake has protective effects against type 2 diabetes, but few studies have been conducted to examine this relationship in humans. The aim of this study is to investigate if dietary zinc is associated with risk of type 2 diabetes in a longitudinal study of mid-age Australian women., Methods: Data were collected from a cohort of women aged 45-50 years at baseline, participating in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health. A validated food frequency questionnaire was used to assess dietary intake and other nutrients. Predictors of 6-year incidence of type 2 diabetes were examined using multivariable logistic regression., Results: From 8921 participants, 333 incident cases of type 2 diabetes were identified over 6 years of follow-up. After adjustment for dietary and non-dietary factors, the highest quintile dietary zinc intake had almost half the odds of developing type 2 diabetes (OR = 0.50, 95% C.I. 0.32-0.77) compared with the lowest quintile. Similar findings were observed for the zinc/iron ratio; the highest quintile had half the odds of developing type 2 diabetes (OR = 0.50, 95% C.I 0.30-0.83) after multivariable adjustment of covariates., Conclusions: Higher total dietary zinc intake and high zinc/iron ratio are associated with lower risk of type 2 diabetes in women. This finding is a positive step towards further research to determine if zinc supplementation may reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
- Published
- 2013
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46. A comparison of complementary and alternative medicine users and use across geographical areas: a national survey of 1,427 women.
- Author
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Adams J, Sibbritt D, Broom A, Loxton D, Pirotta M, Humphreys J, and Lui CW
- Subjects
- Adult, Australia, Complementary Therapies economics, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Complementary Therapies statistics & numerical data, Rural Health economics, Urban Health economics, Women's Health economics
- Abstract
Background: Evidence indicates that people who reside in non-urban areas have a higher use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) than people who reside in urban areas. However, there is sparse research on the reasons for such differences. This paper investigates the reasons for geographical differences in CAM use by comparing CAM users from four geographical areas (major cities, inner regional, outer region, rural/remote) across a range of health status, healthcare satisfaction, neighbourhood and community factors., Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 1,427 participants from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) conducted in 2009., Results: The average total cost of consultations with CAM practitioners was $416 per annum and was highest for women in the major cities, declining with increasing distance from capital cities/remoteness (p < 0.001). The average total cost of self-prescribed CAM was $349 per annum, but this did not significantly differ across geographical areas. The increased use of CAM in rural and remote areas appears to be influenced by poorer access to conventional medical care (p < 0.05) and a greater sense of community (p < 0.05) amongst these rural and remote residents. In contrast to the findings of previous research this study found that health status was not associated with the differences in CAM use between urban and non-urban areas., Conclusion: It appears that a number of factors influence the different levels of CAM use across the urban/non-urban divide. Further research is needed to help tease out and understand these factors. Such research will help support health care policy and practice with regards to this topic.
- Published
- 2011
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47. Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents.
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Watson JF, Collins CE, Sibbritt DW, Dibley MJ, and Garg ML
- Abstract
Background: Dietary intake during childhood and adolescence is of increasing interest due to its influence on adult health, particularly obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There is a need to develop and validate dietary assessment methods suitable for large epidemiologic studies of children and adolescents. Limited large scale dietary studies of youth have been undertaken in Australia, due partly to the lack of a suitable dietary intake tool. A self-administered, semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ), the 'Australian Child and Adolescent Eating Survey' (ACAES), was developed for youth aged 9-16 years. This study evaluated reproducibility and comparative validity of the ACAES FFQ using assisted food records (FRs) as the reference method., Methods: The ACAES FFQ was completed twice (FFQ1 and FFQ2) at an interval of 5 months, along with four one-day assisted FRs. Validity was evaluated by comparing the average of the FRs with FFQ2 (n = 113) as well as with the average of FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). Reproducibility was evaluated by comparing FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). The two methods were compared using correlations, Kappa statistics and Bland-Altman plots., Results: Correlation coefficients for comparative validity ranged from 0.03 for retinol to 0.56 for magnesium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data, with correlation coefficients greater than 0.40 for total fat, saturated fat, monounsaturated fat, carbohydrate, sugars, riboflavin, vitamin C, folate, beta-carotene, magnesium, calcium and iron. Correlation coefficients for reproducibility ranged from 0.18 for vitamin A to 0.50 for calcium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data. The ACAES FFQ ranked individuals reasonably accurately, with the comparative validity analysis showing that over 50% of participants were classified within one quintile for all nutrients, with only a small percentage grossly misclassified (0-7%)., Conclusion: The ACAES FFQ is the first child and adolescent specific FFQ available for ranking the dietary intakes of Australian children and adolescents for a range of nutrients in epidemiologic research and public health interventions.
- Published
- 2009
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48. Energy and macronutrient intakes in preschool children in urban areas of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
- Author
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Huynh DT, Dibley MJ, Sibbritt DW, and Tran HT
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- Adult, Asian People statistics & numerical data, Body Mass Index, Body Weight, Caregivers, Child, Preschool, Dietary Carbohydrates administration & dosage, Dietary Fats administration & dosage, Dietary Fats analysis, Dietary Proteins administration & dosage, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Nutrition Policy, Obesity etiology, Overweight etiology, Prevalence, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urban Population, Vietnam epidemiology, Diet Surveys, Energy Intake, Feeding Behavior, Obesity ethnology, Overweight ethnology
- Abstract
Background: An increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity has been documented in preschool children in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam. However, little is known about what preschool children in HCMC eat or how well their nutrient intake meets nutrient recommendations. This study aims to describe the energy and macronutrient intake and compare these nutrient intakes with the recommendations for Vietnamese children aged four to five years., Methods: The data comes from the baseline measurement of a one year follow-up study on obesity in 670 children attending kindergartens in HCMC. Dietary information for each child at the school and home settings was collected using Food Frequency Questionnaires (FFQs), by interviewing teachers and parents or main caregivers. The average energy and nutrient intake in a day was calculated. The proportion of children with energy intake from macronutrients meeting or exceeding the recommendations was estimated based on the 2006 recommended daily allowance (RDA) for Vietnamese children in this age group., Results: The dietary intake of the participants contained more energy from protein and fat, particularly animal protein and fat, and less energy from carbohydrates, than the RDA. Most children (98.1%) had mean energy intake from protein greater than the recommended level of 15%, and no child obtained energy from animal fat that was in accordance with the recommendation of less than 30% of the total fat intake. Nearly one half of children (46.5%) consumed less than the advised range of mean energy intake from carbohydrate (60%-70%)., Conclusion: In this preschool child population in HCMC, in which obesity is emerging as major public health problem, there is an imbalance in dietary intake. Healthy eating programs need to be developed as a part of an obesity prevention program for young children in HCMC.
- Published
- 2008
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