567 results
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2. Towards an Implementation‐STakeholder Engagement Model (I‐STEM) for improving health and social care services.
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Potthoff, Sebastian, Finch, Tracy, Bührmann, Leah, Etzelmüller, Anne, van Genugten, Claire R., Girling, Melissa, May, Carl R., Perkins, Neil, Vis, Christiaan, and Rapley, Tim
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STAKEHOLDER analysis ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERNET ,GROUNDED theory ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEORY ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL services ,DATA analysis software ,EMPIRICAL research ,COGNITIVE therapy ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Background: The implementation science literature acknowledges a need for engagement of key stakeholders when designing, delivering and evaluating implementation work. To date, the literature reports minimal or focused stakeholder engagement, where stakeholders are engaged in either barrier identification and/or barrier prioritisation. This paper begins to answer calls from the literature for the development of tools and guidance to support comprehensive stakeholder engagement in implementation research and practice. The paper describes the systematic development of the Implementation‐STakeholder Engagement Model (I‐STEM) in the context of an international, large‐scale empirical implementation study (ImpleMentAll) aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of a tailored implementation toolkit. The I‐STEM is a sensitising tool that defines key considerations and activities for undertaking stakeholder engagement activities across an implementation process. Methods: In‐depth, semistructured interviews and observations were conducted with implementers who were tailoring implementation strategies to integrate and embed internet‐based cognitive behavioural therapy (iCBT) services in 12 routine mental health care organisations in nine countries in Europe and Australia. The analytical process was informed by principles of first‐ and third‐generation Grounded Theory, including constant comparative method. Results: We conducted 55 interviews and observed 19 implementation‐related activities (e.g., team meetings and technical support calls). The final outcome of our analysis is expressed in an initial version of the I‐STEM, consisting of five interrelated concepts: engagement objectives, stakeholder mapping, engagement approaches, engagement qualities and engagement outcomes. Engagement objectives are goals that implementers plan to achieve by working with stakeholders in the implementation process. Stakeholder mapping involves identifying a range of organisations, groups or people who may be instrumental in achieving the engagement objectives. Engagement approaches define the type of work that is undertaken with stakeholders to achieve the engagement objectives. Engagement qualities define the logistics of the engagement approach. Lastly, every engagement activity may result in a range of engagement outcomes. Conclusion: The I‐STEM represents potential avenues for substantial stakeholder engagement activity across key phases of an implementation process. It provides a conceptual model for the planning, delivery, evaluation and reporting of stakeholder engagement activities. The I‐STEM is nonprescriptive and highlights the importance of a flexible, iterative approach to stakeholder engagement. It is developmental and will require application and validation across a range of implementation activities. Patient or Public Contribution: Patient contribution to ImpleMentAll trial was facilitated by GAMIAN‐Europe at all stages—from grant development to dissemination. GAMIAN‐Europe brings together a wide variety of patient representation organisations (local, regional and national) from almost all European countries. GAMIAN‐Europe was involved in pilot testing the ItFits‐toolkit and provided their views on the various aspects, including stakeholder engagement. Patients were also represented in the external advisory board providing support and advice on the design, conduct and interpretation of the wider project, including the development of the ItFits‐toolkit. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03652883. Retrospectively registered on 29 August 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. 'It gives you encouragement because you're not alone': A pilot study of a multi‐component social media skills intervention for people with acquired brain injury.
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Brunner, Melissa, Rietdijk, Rachael, Summers, Kayla, Southwell, Kylie, Avramovic, Petra, Power, Emma, Miao, Melissa, Rushworth, Nick, MacLean, Liza, Brookes, Anne‐Maree, and Togher, Leanne
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BRAIN physiology ,REHABILITATION for brain injury patients ,SOCIAL media ,HUMAN services programs ,DATA analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL care ,PILOT projects ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CONTENT analysis ,INTERNET ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH methodology ,STATISTICS ,BRAIN injuries ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL skills education ,COGNITION - Abstract
Background: People with an acquired brain injury (ABI) find it challenging to use social media due to changes in their cognition and communication skills. Using social media can provide opportunities for positive connection, but there is a lack of interventions specifically designed to support safe and successful social media use after ABI. Aims: To investigate the outcomes of completing a social media skills intervention and identify barriers and facilitators for future implementation. Methods & Procedures: The study used a mixed‐methods, pre‐post‐intervention design. A total of 17 adults with an ABI were recruited. Participants completed an intervention that included a short self‐guided course about social media skills (social‐ABI‐lity course), and then participated in a private, moderated Facebook group over a 12‐week period (social‐ABI‐lity Facebook group). Data were collected over this period through observation of group activity and weekly surveys. They were also collected on social media use and quality of life at pre‐intervention, post‐intervention and after 3 months. Participants provided feedback on the experience of participating in the programme via a post‐intervention interview. Outcomes & Results: At post‐intervention, there were significant improvements in confidence in using Facebook (p = 0.002) and enjoyment of using Facebook to connect with others (p = 0.013). There was no significant change in reported quality of life, although participants described the multiple benefits of connection they perceived from involvement in the group. Observational data and feedback interviews were informative about the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention. Conclusions & Implications: This pilot study provided preliminary evidence that an intervention comprising a short, self‐guided training course and a private, moderated Facebook group improved outcomes for people with ABI. Key recommendations for future implementation include embedding active peer moderators within groups and taking an individualized approach to delivery of the intervention. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Research has documented the challenges that people with ABI experience in using social media, and the difficulty for rehabilitation clinicians in providing appropriate support in this field. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This pilot study reports the outcomes of people with ABI completing a short, self‐guided social media skills course and participating in a private, moderated Facebook group. After the intervention, participants reported significantly increased confidence and enjoyment in using Facebook, described the benefits of connection found in the groups, and suggested potential improvements for future implementation. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: With the growing use of social media for connection and participation, there is a professional obligation to address social media communication skills in cognitive–communication rehabilitation for people with ABI. The findings of this study will inform interventions and future research to assist people with ABI to build their social media skills for communication, social support and a sense of connection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. A qualitative study assessing allied health provider perceptions of telepractice functionality in therapy delivery for people with disability.
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Benz, Cloe, Dantas, Jaya, Welsh, Mai, Norman, Richard, Robinson, Suzanne, and Hendrie, Delia
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RESEARCH ,SHOES ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,TELEPSYCHOLOGY ,RESEARCH methodology ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,METAPHOR ,THEORY ,SHOPPING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,DATA analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,ALLIED health personnel - Abstract
Introduction: Telepractice service delivery of allied health interventions to people with disability can potentially reduce access barriers and improve service equity. However, questions remain regarding telepractice functionality for people with disability. This study addressed questions related to how allied health clinicians and managers perceive telepractice as functioning in the provision of therapy services to people with disability. Methods: Thirteen interviews of allied health clinicians and managers from across Australia were conducted between 21 November and 22 February via MS teams. Qualitative methodology and critical realist theoretical paradigm underpin the study. Data analysis was completed using a reflective thematic analysis method and five themes were generated and described utilising an analytic metaphor. Results: The study themes were described in relation to a shopping for shoes analytic metaphor and the five themes included (1) a shoe for every foot, (2) planned purchases, (3) shoe on the other foot, (4) you need both shoes and (5) help choosing their shoes. In summary, the function of telepractice fits differently for each individual, similar to pairs of shoes. Conclusions: Telepractice has its own strengths and weaknesses and isn't a direct substitute for in‐person sessions, much like left and right shoes are similar but not the same. The results support participant perceptions that telepractice functions best as an adjunct to in‐person sessions through a flexible hybrid delivery model in the provision of therapy services to people with a disability. A strategy for improving perceived usefulness may involve positioning telepractice as unique with strengths and weaknesses, not replacing in‐person care. Patient or Public Contribution: The paper forms part of a larger codesign process which included customer and carer participants throughout the design and planning of the project, inclusion of a peer researcher, and the selection of the analytic metaphor including in the findings of this article production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Who cares for the carer? Codesigning a carer health and wellbeing clinic for older care partners of older people in Australia.
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Layton, Natasha, Lalor, Aislinn, Slatyer, Susan, Lee, Den‐Ching A, Bryant, Christina, Watson, Moira, Khushu, Anjali, Burton, Elissa, Oliveira, Déborah, Brusco, Natasha L., Jacinto, Alessandro, Tiller, Elizabeth, and Hill, Keith D.
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CAREGIVER attitudes ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,MEETINGS ,SOCIAL support ,FOCUS groups ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,TELEPHONES ,MEDICAL care ,EXECUTIVES ,HEALTH status indicators ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,CLINICS ,INTERVIEWING ,LANGUAGE & languages ,QUALITATIVE research ,EXPERIENCE ,SURVEYS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,HEALTH ,AGING ,RESEARCH funding ,NEEDS assessment ,JUDGMENT sampling ,POLICY sciences ,DATA analysis software ,ADULT education workshops ,EMAIL - Abstract
Introduction: Older carers or 'care partners' of older people experiencing care needs often provide essential support, at times while neglecting their own health and well‐being. This is an increasingly frequent scenario due to both demographic changes and policy shifts towards ageing in place. Multiple community stakeholders within the care and support ecosystem hold valuable expertise about the needs of older care partners, and the programme and policy responses that may better support their health and well‐being. The aim of this study was to identify the perspectives of stakeholders obtained through the codesign phase of a multicomponent research project investigating new models of care and support for older care partners suitable for the Australian context. Methods: Principles of codesign were used to engage a purposeful sample of older care partners, health professionals, researchers, policy makers and health service administrators. Participants took part in a series of three codesign workshops conducted remotely via video conferencing. The workshops were supported with briefing material and generated consensus‐based summaries, arriving at a preferred service model. Findings: This paper reports the research design and structure of the codesign panels, the range of findings identified as important to support the health and well‐being of older carers of older people, and the resulting service model principles. The codesigned and preferred model of care is currently being prepared for implementation and evaluation in Australia. Public Contribution: This study was conducted using codesign methodology, whereby stakeholders including older care partners and others involved in supporting older carers, were integrally involved with design, development, results and conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. A survey of speech pathologists' opinions about the prospective acceptability of an online implementation platform for aphasia services.
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Trebilcock, Megan, Shrubsole, Kirstine, Worrall, Linda, and Ryan, Brooke
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TELEREHABILITATION ,SPEECH therapy ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SELF-efficacy ,REHABILITATION of aphasic persons ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SPEECH therapists ,INTERNET service providers - Abstract
Background: Online knowledge translation (KT) approaches are becoming increasingly prevalent within healthcare due to their accessibility and facilitation of international support networks. Online platforms enable timely and far‐reaching dissemination of current evidence and best‐practice recommendations. Although there is potential to improve the uptake of rehabilitation guidelines, it is essential to consider the acceptability of online approaches to healthcare professionals to ensure their successful integration within everyday clinical settings. Aims: To establish the prospective acceptability of a theoretically informed online intervention for speech pathologists, Aphasia Nexus: Connecting Evidence to Practice, that aims to facilitate the implementation of aphasia best practice. Methods & Procedures: A mixed‐methods multinational electronic survey based on the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability (TFA) completed by aphasia researchers and clinicians. Outcomes & Results: A total of 43 participants completed the survey with 91% (n = 39) indicating that they would use Aphasia Nexus. Understanding the intervention and how it works (intervention coherence as per the TFA) was the key factor influencing the likelihood of integration within everyday clinical practice. Participants identified potential areas where the intervention could influence service change and also recommended further design and content changes to improve the intervention. Conclusions & Implications: Aphasia Nexus is an acceptable platform for further feasibility testing in the form of a pilot trial within an Australian‐based health service. The study progresses the theory of TFA as it was a valuable framework facilitating the identification of prominent factors influencing acceptability. The study also informs further intervention refinements in preparation for the next stage of research. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Online strategies have the potential to enhance KT and promote the uptake of rehabilitation guidelines. An online intervention, however, can only be effective if implemented well. For this reason, it is essential to establish the acceptability of online interventions to the intended recipients and therefore increase the likelihood of successful implementation. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study used a theoretically based framework to establish the acceptability of an online implementation intervention, Aphasia Nexus, to multinational aphasia clinicians and researchers. It demonstrated the value in identifying the prominent factors influencing acceptability to inform further intervention refinements and warrant continuing research. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Speech pathologists should use online platforms to drive the implementation of best practice on an international scale. It is important for clinicians to have an in‐depth understanding of online interventions and how they work to enhance their successful uptake into routine clinical practice. Aphasia Nexus is an acceptable online platform for implementing best practice in aphasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. An Australian hospital pharmacy department's pandemic response plan to coronavirus disease of 2019.
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Ziser, Kate E.D., Olding, Suzanne H., Patel, Anjali B., Batger, Mellissa R., Peng, Shiqin, Brown, Samantha L., Grieve, Fallon C., and Crane, Jennifer A.
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EVALUATION of human services programs ,COUNSELING ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITAL pharmacies ,LABOR supply ,PHARMACISTS ,COMMUNICATION ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Aim: This paper provides the main accomplishments of the Royal North Shore Hospital (RNSH) Pharmacy Department's COVID‐19 Pandemic Response Plan and key recommendations for other departments developing a remote model of care. Methods: The overall objective was to preserve the active workforce by minimising staff‐to‐staff and staff‐to‐patient contact. The response plan involved splitting the department into teams, implementing a remote ward‐based clinical pharmacy service, staff upskilling and optimising the physical environment. Results: In April 2020, 1240 clinical tasks were completed remotely compared with 1254 tasks completed on site. In May 2020, 1700 tasks were completed offsite, compared with 1544 tasks onsite. The percentage of pharmacists rating themselves 5 out of 5 (very confident) in communicating over the phone increased from 34.8% prior to remote service delivery, to 60% after completion of the service. Counselling patients over the phone increased from 17.4% to 40% while providing remote clinical service increased from 26.1% to 80%. Discussion: The paper provides key recommendations for other sites wanting to implement a remote model of care. There are details of recommendations for communication, adequate skill mix, upskilling, education, training, staff resilience, role expansion and administration. Conclusion: The formation of a team hospital pharmacy department COVID‐19 Pandemic Response Plan has provided assurance that a complete pharmacy service could continue in the event of reduced staffing. Intense, thoughtful, collaborative work was required in a short period of time to design an appropriate physical environment, create a remote working model of care, and to train and educate members of staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. The perspectives of Australian speech pathologists in providing evidence‐based practices to children with autism.
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Sandham, Victoria, Hill, Anne E., and Hinchliffe, Fiona
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PROFESSIONAL practice ,RESEARCH evaluation ,FOCUS groups ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,SELF-efficacy ,AUTISM ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SPEECH therapists ,VIDEO recording ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Bridging the research–practice gap in autism communication services is an identified priority for improving services. Limited research has investigated the views of practitioners regarding this research–practice gap. Investigation of the barriers experienced and facilitators used in clinical practice may assist to identify scalable and sustainable strategies to increase use of evidence‐based practices (EBPs) in the delivery of communication services to children with autism. Aims: To elucidate how Australian speech pathologists engage with external evidence and how communication outcomes are measured to demonstrate the effectiveness of service provision to children with autism. Methods & Procedures: A total of 15 Australian speech pathologists, with experience ranging from less than 1 to more than 16 years, participated in three focus groups. Data from focus groups were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis within an interpretive phenomenological paradigm. Outcomes & Results: Seven themes were identified. Participants reported on the diversity of individuals with autism, their experiences of resource constraints, seeking collegial advice and accessing a diverse range of evidence sources, the role of clinical expertise in translating evidence to practice, the barriers experienced in outcome measurement and use of stakeholders to facilitate data collection to demonstrate outcomes. Conclusions & Implications: Individual practitioner skill and beliefs are facilitators to translating research to practice. Interventions to improve clinician use of EBP should address the skill and belief barriers, aiming to increase a clinician's EBP self‐efficacy and increasing their expectation that investing in EBP activities will result in improved services for children with autism. Modelling and reflective practice are two strategies that may have an application as interventions to improve EBP use in clinical practice. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: Constrained resources, especially lack of time, is a barrier to routine uptake of best available evidence in clinical services for children with autism. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: In this study, the perception that speech pathologists lacked time to engage in EBP activities was linked with the speech pathologist's research skill and their beliefs about the benefits of engaging in EBP. Speech Pathologists reported using a range of information sources, as "evidence" but also reported feeling uneasy when using evidence of disputable, or unknown quality. Accessibility and relevance to their individual client were highly prioritised in selecting evidence. Clinical expertise was an essential skill for research translation. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Interventions which target professional beliefs and research translation capability are requisite for motivating speech pathologists to improve their use of EBP.Modelling of EBP use, individual reflective practice and collegial active listening to facilitate reflective practice, might be useful strategies which target beliefs and capability of individual speech pathologists; thereby changing their EBP use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Walk‐in Together: A pilot study of a walk‐in online family therapy intervention.
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Hartley, Eliza, Moore, Lynda, Knuckey, Aaron, von Doussa, Henry, Painter, Felicity, Story, Karen, Barrington, Nick, Young, Jeff, and McIntosh, Jennifer
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FAMILIES & psychology ,FAMILY psychotherapy ,PILOT projects ,PATIENT aftercare ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOTHERAPISTS ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Many Australians are requiring mental health care, including families, leading to long wait times in order to access support. Walk‐in therapy reduces barriers to mental health support services by providing support at the time that families seek help. This paper presents a proof‐of‐concept study investigating the acceptability and short‐term effectiveness of an online walk‐in family therapy service, Walk‐in Together (WIT). Part 1 of the paper describes the experiences of 44 family members from 22 families who presented to a public family therapy clinic for a virtual walk‐in family therapy session. The session was conducted by a team of three experienced family therapists. Family members' experiences were sought pre‐session, post‐session, and at 6 weeks follow‐up via survey and interview. Part 2 of the paper explores therapist perceptions (n = 7) of the WIT approach, through thematic analysis of semi‐structured interview data. Post‐session feedback showed 85% of family members found WIT to be helpful and 50% were optimistic about their future as a family after their WIT session. Six weeks post‐session it was revealed that WIT supported planning for families in equipping them to move forward with 88% of family members reporting that they knew what to do after the session. All therapists uniformly experienced the model as offering a timely and beneficial service, suitable for diverse presentations and constellations of families. These preliminary results suggest the significant utility of this WIT intervention as a well‐received and helpful service for families, who valued the easy access and rapid therapeutic response afforded by the online, walk‐in delivery model. This proof‐of‐concept paper suggests the potential for further development and growth of WIT, as well as other mental health support services using a walk‐in, telehealth model to meet the rising demand for therapeutic support for families in distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Time to solve persistent, pernicious and widespread nursing workforce shortages.
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Peters, Micah
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OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,WELL-being ,HEALTH policy ,TIME ,MEDICAL care ,WORLD health ,LABOR supply ,NURSE supply & demand ,NURSING care facilities ,LABOR turnover ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,NURSES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTENTION ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Aim: This paper discusses four main strategies for addressing nursing shortages that have been persistent, widespread and growing. Fallout from the COVID‐19 pandemic might offer valuable impetus to address this tenacious challenge. Background: Nursing shortages are common, widespread and have been persistent for most of a century. Many of the reasons behind these shortages are well known and are themselves enduring, as are the types of strategies put forward for addressing them. These strategies can generally be classified into four main categories: enhancing retention, improving recruitment, encouraging return to practice and drawing on international human resources. The COVID‐19 pandemic is the latest major threat to ensuring a sufficiently sized and skilled nursing workforce. Many nurses have succumbed to burnout as well the plethora of factors that predated the pandemic and have a negative impact on nurse wellbeing, turnover and intention to leave. Sources of evidence: This discussion paper draws on international sources of evidence. Discussion/conclusion: This paper highlights how many of the factors behind and strategies for addressing nursing shortages at the local, national and global levels are widely studied and known. A sustained combination of strategies that focus both within and beyond health and nursing, including on the broader social context, is necessary. While COVID‐19 has been extremely damaging, it might present an opportunity to make sustainable, effective reforms to address nursing shortages. Implications for policy: Knowledge users must recognise that a combination of approaches across the gamut of policies that influence nursing workforces is necessary to address nursing shortages. Attention must also focus on factors beyond nursing and healthcare if shortages are to be remedied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. FROM OTHER JOURNALS.
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BECK, Sierra, HONAN, Bridget, MALLOWS, James L., and TING, Joseph
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MEDICINE ,DEHUMANIZATION ,SERIAL publications ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,MEDICAL care ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,MEDICAL care use ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,BOOKS ,GOAL (Psychology) ,EMERGENCY medicine - Abstract
The article emphasizes the need to consider the potential harm of testing and interventions. It presents two papers that challenge the traditional view that testing and interventions are always helpful. It is reported that the first paper shows that early aggressive intravenous hydration in patients with mild acute pancreatitis causes increased fluid overload while the second paper shows that prophylactic fluid bolus given during intubation of critically ill adults did not prevent hypotension.
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- 2023
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12. Hospital pharmacy services supporting Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia: a systematic review.
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Welch, Susan, McMillan, Faye, and Moles, Rebekah
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ABORIGINAL Australians ,CONTINUUM of care ,HOSPITAL pharmacies ,HOSPITALS ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL care ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,PATIENTS ,RURAL conditions ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEORY - Abstract
Aim: To systematically review the literature to investigate the role of the hospital pharmacist and the services provided for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people. Methods: A systematic literature review was performed following a search from inception to present of MEDLINE, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (IPA), EMBASE, Scopus and Pubmed, in accordance with PRISMA guidelines. All forms of published literature were included. Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people and hospital pharmacists/pharmacy department services in Australia were the populations included. Results: 1592 studies were identified. After removal of duplicates and application of inclusion and exclusion criteria, 16 papers underwent full text review, with 7 papers included in the final review. No high‐level evidence articles were found. Joanna Briggs Institute Levels of Evidence for meaningfulness were low. Settings were varied and included rural, remote and urban sites. Five articles were allocated a Donabedian Model level where the structure was described. Two papers described structure and process. None described outcomes. Hospital pharmacy services included development of models for patient care, partnerships and resource sharing in rural and remote areas and ensuring continuity of care. Conclusion: Systematic review of the literature to determine the role of hospital pharmacy services for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people produced limited publications for review. From these, roles identified included: development of models for patient care, partnerships and resource sharing in rural and remote areas and ensuring continuity of care. Future research and publication of work by hospital pharmacists nurturing and developing relationships in partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities is encouraged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. Formal and informal governance networks: Diabetes care in Australia and India.
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Ugyel, Lhawang
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NETWORK governance ,MEDICAL care ,TREATMENT of diabetes ,PUBLIC administration ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
The concept of networks has gained interest in public administration and management. They address concerns such as the coordination of multiple actors within the policy process. Networks take both formal and informal forms. As the integration of formal and informal networks in public service delivery is gaining traction, this paper uses the example of diabetes care in Australia and India to provide an analytical framework to examine one of the ways such integration of networks take place. Diabetes, a chronic long‐term disease, poses to be a global problem with a high rate of diagnosis with implications for public health expenditure. A multi‐disciplinary team, which comprises both formal and informal categories, is required to manage diabetes. This paper highlights the integration of networks in diabetes care in different institutional and cultural settings. For such form of integration of networks to work, collaboration among the various actors is important. Lessons learnt from diabetes care will be relevant for other long‐term chronic conditions to help reduce the human resource and financial burden. The analytical framework developed based on the example of diabetes care will provide useful lessons for examining the mechanics and dynamics of the integration between formal and informal networks in the field of public administration and management. The concept of networks is gaining prominence as a useful model. This paper supports the existing literature on the need for both formal and informal networks using the example of diabetes care. It develops an analytical framework to examine the interactions of formal and informal networks, which will be relevant for similar studies related to other long‐term chronic conditions and for public administration and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Setting a prioritized agenda to drive speech–language therapy research in health.
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Finch, Emma, Ward, Elizabeth C., Brown, Bena, Cornwell, Petrea, Hill, Anne E., Hill, Annie, Hobson, Tania, Rose, Tanya, Scarinci, Nerina, Marshall, Jeanne, Cameron, Ashley, and Shrubsole, Kirstine
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SPEECH therapy ,RESEARCH evaluation ,FACILITATED communication ,PRIORITY (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH methodology ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENT-centered care ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL practice ,STATISTICAL sampling ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Background: Prioritized research agendas are viewed internationally as an important method for ensuring that health research meets actual areas of clinical need. There is growing evidence for speech–language therapy‐prioritized research agendas, particularly in disorder‐specific areas. However, there are few general research priority agendas to guide speech–language therapy research. Aims: To collaboratively develop a prioritized research agenda for an Australian public health context with clinical speech–language therapists (SLTs), academic SLTs and consumers of speech–language therapy services. Methods & Procedures: An initial stimulus list of potential research areas for prioritization was collected from SLTs via an online survey. Two categories (service delivery and expanded scope of practice) were selected from this list for prioritization due to their relevance across multiple health services. The Nominal Group Technique (NGT) was used to develop a prioritized research agenda for each of the two categories. One NGT session was conducted with each of the three participant groups (clinical SLTs, academic SLTs, consumers) for each category (total NGT sessions = six). The prioritization data for each group within each category were summed to give a single, ranked prioritized research agenda for each category. Outcomes & Results: Two prioritized research agendas were developed. Within each agenda, SLTs and consumers prioritized a need for more research in areas related to specific practice areas (e.g., Alternative and Augmentative Communication, Communication Partner Training), as well as broader professional issues (e.g., telehealth, working with culturally and linguistically diverse families). Conclusions & Implications: The current findings support the need for funding proposals and targeted projects that address these identified areas of need. What this paper adds: What is already known on this subject: Evidence‐based practice is a critical component of SLT practice. There is often a disconnect between the research evidence generated and areas of clinical need, and in some areas a lack of evidence. Prioritized research agendas can help drive research in areas of clinical need. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: A collaborative, prioritized SLT research agenda was developed using the NGT according to the views of clinical SLTs, academic SLTs and consumers of speech–language therapy services in a conglomerate of public health services. SLTs and consumers identified a need for further research in specific areas of SLT practice as well as broader emerging professional issues What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Targeted research projects funded on a large scale are required to address these identified areas of need. Other health services around the world could replicate this prioritization process to drive research in areas of clinical need [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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15. Service delivery and intervention intensity for phonology‐based speech sound disorders.
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Sugden, Eleanor, Baker, Elise, Munro, Natalie, Williams, A. Lynn, and Trivette, Carol M.
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ARTICULATION disorders ,CINAHL database ,DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry ,EMPLOYMENT ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,MEDICAL care ,PHONETICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SPEECH therapists ,SPEECH therapy ,SURVEYS ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,TREATMENT duration ,DATA analysis software ,WORK experience (Employment) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,META-synthesis ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Abstract: Background: When planning evidence‐based intervention services for children with phonology‐based speech sound disorders (SSD), speech and language therapists (SLTs) need to integrate research evidence regarding service delivery and intervention intensity within their clinical practice. However, relatively little is known about the optimal intensity of phonological interventions and whether SLTs’ services align with the research evidence. Aims: The aims are twofold. First, to review external evidence (i.e., empirical research evidence external to day‐to‐day clinical practice) regarding service delivery and intervention intensity for phonological interventions. Second, to investigate SLTs’ clinical practice with children with phonology‐based SSD in Australia, focusing on service delivery and intensity. By considering these complementary sources of evidence, SLTs and researchers will be better placed to understand the state of the external evidence regarding the delivery of phonological interventions and appreciate the challenges facing SLTs in providing evidence‐based services. Methods & Procedures: Two studies are presented. The first is a review of phonological intervention research published between 1979 and 2016. Details regarding service delivery and intervention intensity were extracted from the 199 papers that met inclusion criteria identified through a systematic search. The second study was an online survey of 288 SLTs working in Australia, focused on the service delivery and intensity of intervention provided in clinical practice. Main Contributions: There is a gap between the external evidence regarding service delivery and intervention intensity and the internal evidence from clinical practice. Most published intervention research has reported to provide intervention two to three times per week in individual sessions delivered by an SLT in a university clinic, in sessions lasting 30–60 min comprising 100 production trials. SLTs reported providing services at intensities below that found in the literature. Further, they reported workplace, client and clinician factors that influenced the intensity of intervention they were able to provide to children with phonology‐based SSD. Conclusions & Implications: Insufficient detail in the reporting of intervention intensity within published research coupled with service delivery constraints may affect the implementation of empirical evidence into everyday clinical practice. Research investigating innovative solutions to service delivery challenges is needed to provide SLTs with evidence that is relevant and feasible for clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
16. A qualitative analysis of the needs and wishes of people with type 2 diabetes and healthcare professionals for optimal diabetes care.
- Author
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Vasconcelos Silva, Carina, Bird, Dominique, Clemensen, Jane, Janda, Monika, de Camargo Catapan, Soraia, Fatehi, Farhad, Gray, Len, Menon, Anish, and Russell, Anthony
- Subjects
SOCIAL support ,FOCUS groups ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,QUALITATIVE research ,ACTION research ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,NEEDS assessment ,PATIENT care ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Aim: Globally, type 2 diabetes care is often fragmented and still organised in a provider‐centred way, resulting in suboptimal care for many individuals. As healthcare systems seek to implement digital care innovations, it is timely to reassess stakeholders' priorities to guide the redesign of diabetes care. This study aimed to identify the needs and wishes of people with type 2 diabetes, and specialist and primary care teams regarding optimal diabetes care to explore how to better support people with diabetes in a metropolitan healthcare service in Australia. Methods: Our project was guided by a Participatory Design approach and this paper reports part of the first step, identification of needs. We conducted four focus groups and 16 interviews (November 2019–January 2020) with 17 adults with type 2 diabetes and seven specialist clinicians from a diabetes outpatient clinic in Brisbane, Australia, and seven primary care professionals from different clinics in Brisbane. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis, building on the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation and Behaviour model. Results: People with diabetes expressed the wish to be equipped, supported and recognised for their efforts in a holistic way, receive personalised care at the right time and improved access to connected services. Healthcare professionals agreed and expressed their own burden regarding their challenging work. Overall, both groups desired holistic, personalised, supportive, proactive and coordinated care pathways. Conclusions: We conclude that there is an alignment of the perceived needs and wishes for improved diabetes care among key stakeholders, however, important gaps remain in the healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
17. Economic Issues in Health Policy: Comment.
- Author
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Owens, Helen
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL economics ,ECONOMICS literature ,HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Four key issues arising from the Johnson paper relating to ongoing reform of Australia's health sector are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Acute surgical unit: the Australasian experience.
- Author
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Page, Dean E., Dooreemeah, Dilshad, and Thiruchelvam, Dhan
- Subjects
SURGICAL emergencies ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background The acute surgical unit ( ASU) model of care is a new paradigm shift in the provision of emergency surgery. Clinical and non-clinical outcomes have been described after the introduction of the ASU model in Australia and New Zealand. This paper reviews and analyses the current published literature and methods of implementation of contemporary ASU models. Method We conducted a comprehensive database search to identify all relevant published papers pertaining to the ASU. Included papers compared ASU models to emergency surgery's traditional model of care. Relevant clinical and non-clinical end points were extracted for analysis. Results Seven papers and two abstracts published data assessing clinical and non-clinical end points within the ASU. Four out of six studies reported a reduction in hospital length of stay. Two out of three studies showed reduction in mean time to emergency department review and two out of four studies reported a reduction in time to surgery. Additionally, four out of five studies showed a reduction in after hours operating with an ASU model. Conclusion Trends in clinical outcomes are seen including reduced length of stay, time to emergency department assessment and surgery, supplemented by non-clinical outcomes including reduced after hours operating and the potential for increased training opportunities. The published data presents certain weaknesses and further information is required to appreciate the applicability of certain aspects of the ASU model to smaller centres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
19. The Evolution of Out-of-Hospital Medical Costs to and through Retirement.
- Author
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Johar, Meliyanni
- Subjects
RETIREES ,RETIREMENT & economics ,HEALTH care networks ,HEALTH insurance ,DRUG prices ,HEALTH ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
This paper shows how the cost of out-of-hospital medical services and prescription drugs change as Australians enter and live through retirement. We use a sample of over 65,000 retired individuals aged forty-five and over, and extract their Medicare claims for period 2005-2014. Analysing the expenditure distribution for up to eight years after retirement, the result shows that expenditure on medical services continues to increase while pharmaceutical expenditure declines for most retirees. Partially retired individuals have higher medical service cost but lower pharmaceutical cost, while those retiring prior to Age Pension age have slower growth in medical service and pharmaceutical costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Perspectives of operational staff working in residential care and aged care reforms.
- Author
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Monro, Cathy, Mackenzie, Lynette, O'Loughlin, Kate, and Low, Lee‐Fay
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MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,NURSING care facilities ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH care reform ,LABOR supply ,RESIDENTIAL care ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,ELDER care ,NURSING home employees - Abstract
Australia is undergoing major aged care reforms, changing from the previous service provider‐driven approach to consumer‐directed care principles. In residential aged care, this has resulted in a significant reduction in government funding in order to support reform initiatives in home and community‐based care. There has been limited research on the impact of structural aspects of the reforms such as the effect of changes in funding focus. Using a qualitative descriptive research methodology, this study explores the impact of the reforms on staff at various levels of operational responsibility in residential aged care. Issues identified by participants centered on the capacity to deliver care in three areas, the impact of funding reduction, challenges in meeting increasingly complex needs of residents and their families, and new requirements for care roles within current limitations. This paper provides an insight into how and why operational issues have informed the findings of the current Australian Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety. It identifies areas of support for the aged care workforce that are crucial in fulfilling consumer‐focused care delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
21. Foreword.
- Author
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Marchington, Mick
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RESOURCE management ,KNOWLEDGE management ,MEDICAL care ,WORK environment ,CAREER development ,PERIODICALS ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
This editorial discusses the "Human Resource Management Journal. " The article notes that the January 2007 issue marks the first publication since the reorganization of the journal's editorial board in 2006, and the author notes that editors from countries such as Australia, the Netherlands, and the United States have joined the journal's editorial board. The author also previews the January 2007 issue of the journal, and states that topics such as the role of line managers, healthcare in Australia, and learning in the workplace, are discussed.
- Published
- 2007
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22. Hiding in plain sight: Inconvenient facts for patient safety in non‐24/7 theatre on‐site staffed obstetric units.
- Author
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McGurgan, Paul
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,MATERNAL health services ,INTENSIVE care units ,CHILDBIRTH ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,OBSTETRICS surgery ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,HOSPITAL maternity services ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDICAL care use ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,HOSPITAL wards ,QUALITY assurance ,OBSTETRICAL emergencies ,INFANT mortality ,PATIENT safety ,MENTAL health services ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
The views expressed here are based on my professional experience as a consultant obstetrician, and previous role as clinical head of service for a small (<1800 births/year) obstetric unit in Perth metro. The obstetric unit in which I work has no 24/7 on‐site staffed theatre capacity, no high dependency unit, and at night is staffed by a resident medical officer and junior obstetric registrar, with a consultant on‐call within 30 min travel time. Based on my review of the literature on obstetric services nationally and various state guidelines (see Sources section), other Australian metro‐located obstetric services appear to have similar challenges, but in this paper I focus on the health service models and patient safety systems that I am most familiar with (Perth metro) and ask why obstetric services in this, and by inference, other areas of the country which have similar high population density, would continue to have these staffing/service profiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Professionalising care into compliance: The challenge for personalised care models.
- Author
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Cole, Clare, Mummery, Jane, and Peck, Blake
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL roles ,MEDICAL quality control ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,PROFESSIONS ,EMPATHY ,NURSING ,CODES of ethics ,PATIENT-centered care ,MEDICAL care ,NURSING practice ,NURSES ,LEGAL compliance ,PROFESSIONALISM - Abstract
One of the most basic understandings of nursing is that a nurse is a caregiver for a patient who helps to prevent illness, treat health conditions, and manage the physical needs of patients. Nursing is often presented as a caring profession, which provides patient care driven by ideals of empathy, compassion and kindness. These ideals of care have further been foregrounded through the development and implementation of stress on patient centred care (PCC) and/or person‐centred practice (PCP). Although the idealisation of nursing as a caring profession is common, and one certainly seen as integral by nurses and written into the heart of regulatory documentation, we contend that the actual delivery of care is being undercut by the very regulatory climate that strives to professionalise care. As we outline, with specific reference to the context of Australian Nursing, this transformation delivers a commodified, even McDonaldized, model of patient management rather than care. It seems that even with its explicit stress on PCC and PCP, Australian Nursing cannot live up to its own care ideals. Having outlined this problem, the paper then demonstrates the ways in which PCC is thwarted at the coal face of nursing practice and that there must be an institutionalised change to be able to provide genuine patient‐centred care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Co‐designing a peer‐led model of delivering behavioural activation for people living with depression or low mood in Australian farming communities.
- Author
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Kennedy, Alison J., Gunn, Kate M., Duke, Sonya, Jones, Martin, Brown, Ellie, Barnes, Kelly, Macdonald, Joanna, Brumby, Susan, Versace, Vincent L., and Gray, Richard
- Subjects
AFFINITY groups ,FOCUS groups ,RURAL health services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,CLINICAL governance ,AGRICULTURE ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HUMAN services programs ,QUALITATIVE research ,MENTAL depression ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COMMUNICATION ,THEMATIC analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,AGRICULTURAL laborers ,PATIENT safety ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Introduction: Farmers face a range of factors that negatively influence their mental health and suicide risk, yet have limited access to appropriate support. Behavioural activation (BA) is an evidence‐based therapy that can be effectively delivered by nonclinical workers. Working with members of farming communities to deliver BA to their peers has the potential to overcome many well‐established barriers to mental health help‐seeking and improve outcomes for this at‐risk group. Objective: This paper describes the findings of a co‐design phase informing the development of a peer (farmer)‐led approach for delivering BA for farmers living with depression or low mood. Design: This qualitative study used a co‐design approach involving members of the target community. Focus groups were transcribed and analysed using Thematic Analysis and the Framework approach. Findings: Ten online focus groups with 22 participants were held over 3 months. Four overarching, interlinked themes were identified: (i) filling the gap in rural mental health support; (ii) alignment with the farming context—tailoring how, where and when we engage about mental health; (iii) the 'messenger' is as important as the message; and (iv) sustainability, governance and support. Discussion: Findings suggest BA could be a contextually appropriate model of support for the farming community—given its practical and solution‐focused approach—and could help improve access to support. Having peer workers deliver the intervention was viewed as appropriate. Ensuring governance structures are developed to support peers to deliver the intervention will be essential to facilitate effectiveness, safety and sustainability. Conclusion: Insights gained through co‐design have been critical to the success of developing this new model of support for members of farming communities experiencing depression or low mood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Health promotion interventions to address climate change using a primary health care approach: a literature review.
- Author
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Walker, Rae, Hassall, John, Chaplin, Sue, Congues, Janet, Bajayo, Rachael, and Mason, Wendy
- Subjects
HEALTH promotion ,CLIMATE change ,MEDICAL care ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Issue addressed: This project explored the literature in which key concepts in primary health care and health promotion are overtly applied to the problem of climate change. This paper contains a discussion of the literature relevant to health promotion principles and intervention strategies for addressing climate change mitigation and adaptation in the primary health care sector. The concept of primary health care is that used by the World Health Organization, based on the Declaration of Alma Ata and often referred to as comprehensive primary health care to differentiate it from primary medical care. Methods: This was a review of literature identified in electronic databases using two sets of search terms. Set A consisted of 'climate change or global warming or greenhouse effect' and set B consisted of 11 key concepts in primary health care and health promotion, for example community resilience, health promotion, social change, food security and economic development. Relevant literature was identified at the intersection of search term A with a term from set B. A search was completed for each set B term. Results: This paper reports a discussion of major categories of health promotion interventions, namely health communication, community building and settings approaches and uses examples drawn from literature on community resilience and summer heat. These interventions are all applicable to the primary health care sector. Conclusion: There is a small literature on health promotion interventions for climate change mitigation and adaptation but it is incomplete and scattered across many sources. An important area for further research is to link the logic of service provision in primary health care to the logic of mitigation and adaptation in a changing environment. Interventions that link the logic must also link diverse services to provide coherent action on local and domestic scales, the scales at which primary health care acts. Another research gap is in regard to institutional change in the primary health care sector. How do the patterns of knowledge, practice and values need to change in the array of organisations that make up comprehensive primary health care? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Transforming routinely collected residential aged care provider data into timely information: Current and future directions.
- Author
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Seaman, Karla L., Jorgensen, Mikaela L., Raban, Magdalena Z., Lind, Kimberly E., Bell, J Simon, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,DATA quality ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,CLINICAL governance ,MEDICAL care ,DATABASE management ,RESIDENTIAL care ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,POLICY sciences ,ELDER care - Abstract
Electronic information systems are becoming increasingly common in residential aged care in Australia. These systems contain valuable data generated during day‐to‐day care delivery for older adults. These data (termed 'routinely collected residential aged care provider data') are currently underutilised, however have potential significant benefits for both care delivery and research purposes. Routinely collected residential aged care provider data are more readily accessible, contain up‐to‐date information and can be linked to existing national or state‐based administrative data sets, while providing more granular details about care delivered at the coalface. The aim of this paper is to provide clinicians, researchers, policymakers and providers with an understanding of the strengths of these types of data, as well as identifying areas that require future development to maximise their potential to drive improvements in resident care and outcomes. These considerations include data quality, data standardisation and models for data governance, consent and consumer involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Scientism, conflicts of interest, and the marginalization of ethics in medical education.
- Author
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Mayes, Christopher, Williams, Jane, Kerridge, Ian, and Lipworth, Wendy
- Subjects
MEDICAL education ,CONFLICT of interests ,DEBATE ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL schools ,MEDICAL ethics ,HEALTH policy ,PSYCHOLOGY of medical students ,MEDICAL practice ,MEDICAL research ,MEDICAL societies ,SCIENTISTS ,SOCIOLOGY ,TEACHER-student relationships ,EMAIL ,EVIDENCE-based medicine - Abstract
Abstract: Aim: This paper reports on the findings from 6 focus groups conducted with Australian medical students. The focus groups sought students' perspectives on how the influence of commercial interests on medical practice and education could be managed. Method: We conducted 6 focus groups with medical students in New South Wales, Australia. Participants were recruited via student‐run medical society and faculty e‐mail lists. Forty‐nine students from 6 medical schools in New South Wales participated. The research team reflected on the extent to which students uncritically appealed to science in the abstract as a management solution for conflicts of interest. Data analysis was largely inductive, looking for uses of scientific terminology, EBM, and appeals to “science” in the management of COI and applied theoretical analyses of scientism. Results: The students in our study suggested that science and evidence‐based medicine, rather than ethics or professionalism, were the best tools to deal with undue influence and bias. This paper uses philosophy of science literature to critically examine these scientistic appeals to science and EBM as a means of managing the influence of pharmaceutical reps and commercial interests. We argue that a scientistic style of reasoning is reinforced through medical curricula and that students need to be made aware of the epistemological assumptions that underpin science, medicine, and EBM to address the ethical challenges associated with commercialised health care. Conclusion: More work is needed to structure medical curricula to reflect the complexities of practice and realities of science. However, curricula change alone will not sufficiently address issues associated with commercial interests in medicine. For real change to occur, there needs to be a broader social and professional debate about the ways in which medicine and industry interact, and structural changes that restrict or mitigate commercial influences in educational, research, and policy settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Nonparametric kernel estimation of the impact of tax policy on the demand for private health insurance in Australia.
- Author
-
Gong, Xiaodong and Gao, Jiti
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,DECONVOLUTION (Mathematics) ,REGRESSION discontinuity design ,HEALTH insurance ,MONTE Carlo method - Abstract
Summary: This paper is motivated by our attempt to answer a policy question: how is private health insurance take‐up in Australia affected by the income threshold at which the Medicare Levy Surcharge (MLS) kicks in? We propose a new difference deconvolution kernel estimator for the location and size of regression discontinuities. We also propose a bootstrapping procedure for estimating the confidence interval for the estimated discontinuity. Performance of the estimator is evaluated by Monte Carlo simulations before it is applied to estimating the effect of the income threshold of MLS on the take‐up of private health insurance in Australia, using contaminated data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Residential Aged Care Policy in Australia - Are We Learning from Evidence?
- Author
-
Baldwin, Richard, Chenoweth, Lynn, and dela Rama, Marie
- Subjects
ELDER care ,MEDICAL care for older people ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC spending ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL quality control ,QUALITY of service ,MEDICAL care costs ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The residential aged care industry in Australia will expand rapidly over the next 10 years leading to substantial increases in government expenditure. Recent and future reforms are likely leading to changes in the structure of the industry with a potential impact on quality of care. The purpose of this paper is to stimulate broader public debate, based on the available evidence, about the preferred structure of this important industry. It examines the literature on the impact structure has on the quality of services and compares this with a fresh analysis of current trends. The paper argues that future policy should be evidence based and explicit about the structure of the industry that will emerge from current policy reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Technical Papers.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,MEDICAL care ,POVERTY ,AUSTRALIAN economy ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
Lists several papers and research results in economics featured in the June 1978 issue of the periodical 'The Australian Economic Review.' Health care under voluntary insurance; Incidence of poverty; Index of official economic forecasts and projections; Demand for and supply of professionally-trained social workers; Volunteers in social welfare agencies.
- Published
- 1978
31. Multicultural presentation of chest pain at an emergency department in Australia.
- Author
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Middleton, Paul M, Wu, Tammy LL, Lee, Riccardo Yih‐Nan, Ren, Shiquan, and McLaws, Mary‐Louise
- Subjects
CULTURE ,EVALUATION of medical care ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,DATABASES ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,ACQUISITION of data methodology ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LINGUISTICS ,MEDICAL care ,CHEST pain ,MEDICAL records ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMMUNICATION ,ETHNIC groups ,DATA analysis software ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objective: To investigate differences in presenting patient characteristics, investigation, management and related outcomes between culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) and non‐CALD chest pain (CP) patients presenting to the ED. Methods: A cohort study of 258 patients was enrolled on presentation to Liverpool Hospital ED with a complaint of CP over a 2‐week period. Main outcomes included frequency and timeliness of diagnostic and radiological investigations, medication administered and ED length of stay. Administrative and clinical data were extracted and linked from Cerner EMR FirstNet®, PowerChart® and paper records. Results: There were 155 (60%) CALD and 103 (40%) non‐CALD patients. CALD patients were older by 10 years (95% CI 4, 15; P < 0.0001). There were no significant differences in the number of pathology and imaging investigations carried out in each group, and similarly there were no significant differences in the number of patients administered analgesia or cardiac‐specific medications. Neither group differed in their ED length of stay (median 280 vs 259.5 min; P = 0.79) or hospital admission rate (median 56% vs 55%, P = 0.8). Conclusion: Both CALD and non‐CALD ED CP patients had similar test ordering, medication administration and clinical outcomes, but this was in the context of CALD patients being 10 years older together with a small study sample size. A larger cohort, matched for age, would provide further insights into potentially important differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Dental insurance, service use and health outcomes in Australia: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Gnanamanickam, E. S., Teusner, D. N., Arrow, P. G., and Brennan, D. S.
- Subjects
DENTAL insurance ,COST of dental care ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH insurance & economics ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Private health insurance plays a key role in financing dental care in Australia. Having private dental insurance has been associated with higher levels of access to dental care, visiting for a check-up and receiving a favourable pattern of services. Associations with better oral health have also been reported. In the absence of any existing review, this paper aims to systematically review the relationship between dental insurance and dental service use and/or oral health outcomes in Australia. A systematic search of online databases and subsequent sifting resulted in 36 publications, 33 of which were cross sectional and three cohort analyses. Dental service outcomes were more commonly reported than oral health outcomes. There was considerable heterogeneity in the outcome measures reported, for both service use and health outcomes. Overall, the majority of the evidence was from cross sectional studies and few studies reported analyses adjusted for confounding factors. The consolidated evidence points towards a positive association between dental insurance and dental visiting. Dentally insured adults are likely to have more regular access to dental care and have a more favourable pattern of service use than the uninsured. However, evidence of associations between dental insurance and oral health are mixed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Experiences of health service literacy and access amongst Australian young adults from migrant backgrounds.
- Author
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Raymundo, Gianina, Smith‐Merry, Jennifer, McNab, Justin, and Elmer, Shandell
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,MEDICAL care use ,AUSTRALIANS ,YOUNG adults ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH services accessibility - Abstract
Issue addressed: We currently know very little about the attitudes of young adult Australians from migrant backgrounds towards health service utilisation. This qualitative study aimed to explore their experiences of accessing health services and identify barriers and facilitators to health service utilisation. Methods: Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with young people aged between 18‐24 and living in Greater Western Sydney. Interview questions focused on facilitators and barriers to health service access. NVivo 11 was used to facilitate thematic analysis of the interviews. Results: Twenty‐five young adults between 18‐24 years from migrant backgrounds participated. Twenty semi‐structured individual interviews and one group interview with five participants were conducted. Analysis identified themes relating to health literacy, cultural factors and quality of care and showed the importance of families, the education system and service outreach in facilitating access. Conclusions: Findings indicate that more effective delivery of health services information in education, positive engagement between service‐providers and service‐users, and age‐appropriate, culturally considerate health promotion strategies are needed to overcome barriers to health services accessibility. So what?: The results show the importance of families and communities, the education system and health service outreach in facilitating health service access for young people from migrant backgrounds. The paper highlights the need for more effective health promotion strategies targeting this group, their families and communities. To increase access, health promotion practitioners need to actively reach out to families and young people from migrant backgrounds through education and community‐relevant forums. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. ENHANCING THE VALUE OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES AT A REGIONAL LEVEL.
- Author
-
Williams, Galina
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL economics ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIAL medicine ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The presence of a quality health care service (HCS) industry in a region can contribute significantly to the attraction of new industries, retain the existing ones, and contribute to the overall social and economic prosperity of the region. However, when conducting an economic impact assessment it is not always clear how the value of the HCS industry can be increased at a regional level. The HCS industry is often one of the largest industries in a region in terms of creating employment and generating income, but unless it creates linkages with other industries, its contribution to the prosperity of the region will be limited. This paper suggests a methodology for economic impact assessment aimed at increasing the benefits of HCS at a regional level. Using a case study of the Fitzroy Statistical Division, a non-metropolitan region in Queensland, Australia, the regional economic impact is assessed using input-output analysis. In each region, the key sectors need to be encouraged to enhance connections with the HCS industry in order to enhance the value of HCS in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Establishing an occupational therapy assessment clinic in a public mental health service: A pragmatic mixed methods evaluation of feasibility, utilisation, and impact.
- Author
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Griffin, Georgia, Bicker, Samantha, Zammit, Kathleen, and Patterson, Sue
- Subjects
CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH services accessibility ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL records ,MEDICAL referrals ,MEDICAL students ,MENTAL health services ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,OCCUPATIONAL therapists ,PATIENTS ,PUBLIC health ,QUALITY assurance ,SATISFACTION ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIAL services case management ,DATA analysis software ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy needs assessment ,ACQUISITION of data methodology ,CLINICAL governance - Abstract
Introduction: Employment of occupational therapists in generic roles in public mental health services (PMHSs) constrains capacity to undertake discipline‐specific activity meaning consumers may be unable to access valuable occupational therapy assessments and interventions that could promote recovery. Establishing a dedicated occupational therapy clinic has been identified as one way of improving care provided and outcomes for organisations, therapists, and consumers. To inform such developments, this paper reports evaluation of feasibility, acceptability, and sustainability of a pilot clinic established within a PMHS. Methods: An observational evaluation was used combining quantitative and qualitative data collected from service documents, clinic records, and in semi‐structured interviews with 42 stakeholders. Quantitative data were used to describe referrals and flow through the clinic. Framework analysis of qualitative data examined the process and outcomes of referrals and enabled understanding of acceptability, perceived impact and areas for improvement. Results: Substantial ground work, particularly stakeholder engagement, and redistribution of resources enabled establishment and successful operation of an assessment clinic for 12 months. Assessments were completed for 68% of the 100 accepted referrals, with the remainder in process or unable to be completed. Stakeholders agreed that the clinic enabled clinicians' timely access to specialist assessment, improving care for consumers. Occupational therapists valued the opportunity to deploy and develop discipline‐specific skills and when there was some impact on work flow of occupational therapists' 'home teams', team managers judged the investment worthwhile. Strong leadership by the discipline lead and support from team managers who enabled allocation of occupational therapists to the clinic were critical to success. Conclusion: An occupational therapy assessment clinic can be established and operate successfully within a public mental health setting. Redistribution of resources supported increased efficiency and consumer access to specialist interventions that support their recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Indigenous beliefs about biomedical and bush medicine treatment efficacy for indigenous cancer patients: a review of the literature.
- Author
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van Schaik, K. D. and Thompson, S. C.
- Subjects
TUMOR treatment ,COMBINED modality therapy ,FEAR ,HEALTH attitudes ,HOLISTIC medicine ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care use ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,TRADITIONAL medicine ,TUMORS ,CULTURAL values ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Australia's Indigenous people suffer from higher cancer mortality than non-Indigenous Australians, a discrepancy partly caused by differences in beliefs about treatment efficacy between Indigenous patients and their non-Indigenous healthcare providers. This paper critically reviews the literature associated with Indigenous beliefs about cancer treatment, both 'bush medicine' and biomedical, in order to provide recommendations to healthcare providers about accommodating Indigenous beliefs when treating cancer. Methods: A search was undertaken of peer-reviewed journal papers using electronic databases and citation snowballing. Papers were selected for inclusion based upon relevance to themes that addressed the research questions. Results: Literature suggests that Indigenous beliefs about treatment efficacy for cancer involve five themes: (i) concerns about the toxicity of treatment; (ii) disconnect with the physician; (iii) fears about absence from home during treatment; (iv) different beliefs about disease aetiology; (v) biomedical cancer treatments failing to address holistic health. Conclusions: Although some information is known about Indigenous Australian healing beliefs and practices associated with cancer treatment, few studies have addressed ways in which Indigenous and biomedical approaches to cancer treatment might be integrated. Some recent work has examined the role of belief in cancer treatment, specifically bush medicine, but more research is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
37. Key considerations in delivering appropriate and accessible health care for rural and remote populations: Discussant overview.
- Author
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Humphreys, John S.
- Subjects
RURAL health ,PUBLIC health research ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objective: To provide an overview of papers discussing optimal service delivery models for rural and remote Australia. Design: A synthesis of overarching considerations guiding rural and remote health service policies. Setting: Small rural and remote communities in Australia. Participants: Invited delegates attending the Inaugural Rural and Remote Health Scientific Symposium in Brisbane 2008. Main outcome measures: Key issues underpinning health service provision for small rural and remote communities. Results: The formulation and implementation of effective health service provision policies must be underpinned by overarching health goals, agreed health service requirements, recognition of how rural and remote health contexts impact upon health service provision and the constraints limiting health service responses. Conclusion: Systemic change is required in order to ensure equitable access to health care services in small rural and remote communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Invisible partners: The Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps pathway to the Malayan Emergency.
- Author
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McLeod, Margaret and Francis, Karen
- Subjects
MILITARY nursing ,MILITARY hospitals ,NURSING services administration ,MEDICAL care ,MALAYAN Emergency, 1948-1960 - Abstract
This paper highlights the role of women from the Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps who served in the Malayan Emergency. The British administrators of Malaya declared an Emergency in 1948 in response to threats posed by Chinese Communist Terrorists. Australia was slow to support Britain, but in 1955 Australian ground troops, accompanied by six Army nurses were deployed to Malaya. The nurses worked in British Military Hospitals, continuing the traditions of their antecedents; yet their contributions remain hidden from view. The exact number of Australian nurses who served in the Emergency is unknown, because of the poor record-keeping of the Southeast Asian conflicts. However, it is estimated that 33 Australian Army nurses served in Malaya from 1955, with some continuing their service into the early 1960s. The experiences of four of these nurses are revealed in this paper: they are no longer invisible partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Muslims in Australian hospitals: The clash of cultures.
- Author
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Mohammadi, Nooredin, Evans, David, and Jones, Tina
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MEDICAL care ,MULTICULTURALISM ,HOSPITALS ,MUSLIMS ,HEALTH care industry - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to review the multicultural nature of Australian society, with a specific focus on the Islamic culture. Islamic principles will be presented and the impact this has on the health-care provision of Muslim people will be explored. This paper highlights issues that Muslim patients face when hospitalized in Australia. Australia has seen a major shift in its society, from English-speaking European to one that boasts enormous cultural diversity. However, this cultural diversity poses a number of challenges for a Western-based health-care service based on differing needs and expectations. This challenge is perhaps most evident during times of illness, when the Muslim patient must attempt to adhere to the principles of their faith in the non-Islamic environment of the Australian hospital. The differences discussed in this paper serve to highlight the importance of having strategies that identify the needs and expectations of culturally diverse consumers of the hospital system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Primary medical care workforce enumeration in rural and remote areas of Australia: Time for a new approach?
- Author
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Pegram, Robert W., Humphreys, John S., and Calcino, Gordon
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PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL personnel ,COMMUNITY health services ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The rural and remote primary medical workforce continues to struggle to meet community needs. This paper looks at the strengths and weaknesses of the various datasets used to measure workforce. The analysis concludes that no current data set adequately describes workforce from a community need perspective. In particular, activity based data sets based on claims data do not capture issues such as service mix or the importance of issues outside activity collections, such as time on call. The paper calls for a new approach to workforce measurement based on a community needs model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Ninety and not out—Understanding our oldest old.
- Author
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Gibson, Diane and Goss, John
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,AGING ,HEALTH planning ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HEALTH policy ,OLD age - Abstract
Objective: This paper draws attention to the rapidly growing number of Australian nonagenarians, presents previously unpublished information on this sub‐group of older people and explores the implications for future patterns of service delivery, planning and policy. Methods: Statistical analyses of Census data and other Australian Bureau of Statistics Surveys using Table Builder Pro, combined with analysis of de‐identified Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) unit record data on aged care and AIHW GRIM (mortality) data. Results: Male nonagenarians almost doubled from 2006 to 2016, while their female counterparts grew by 55%. This cohort is the first to reap cumulative advantage from the dramatic reduction in death rates from 1970. Their demographic circumstances reveal both changes and continuities compared to the previous cohort. Conclusion: Men and women aged 90 and over use a substantial proportion of aged care services, and their characteristics and circumstances are highly relevant to planning current and future aged care services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Challenges of delivering evidence‐based stroke services for rural areas in Australia.
- Author
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Prior, Sarah Jane, Reeves, Nicole S., and Campbell, Steven J.
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CINAHL database ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDLINE ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL conditions ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,STROKE rehabilitation - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this paper was to use current stroke care guidelines to identify and discuss current stroke care challenges in rural Australian health care and potential solutions for delivery of evidence‐based practice. Design and setting: A review of national guidelines since 2002 for organised stroke care was undertaken to determine best practice for delivering primary stroke care. We then employed a narrative literature review strategy looking at relevant articles, based on keywords, outlining current stroke service availability in Australia, highlighting the challenges of implementing evidence‐based stroke care in rural areas in Australia based on the current guidelines. Results: Delivery of evidence‐based stroke care in rural Australia is fraught with challenges. Although national best‐practice guidelines for stroke care are well established, the recommendations made in these guidelines do not always reflect the resource availability in rural Australia. Redesigning processes and utilising available resources, such as telemedicine or local clinical pathways, can achieve an evidence‐based standard; however, ultimately better resourcing of these areas is required. Conclusion: Evidence‐based stroke care, aligned with current national standards is the key to providing adequate stroke services in rural Australia. Improved health service resourcing and better utilisation of currently available resources are options for achieving elements of evidence‐based stroke care. Implications for public health: Availability of adequate services for stroke patients directly impacts public health as it determines health outcomes for these patients. Indirect implications for public health include the effects on health professionals and the general public. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Chronic kidney disease, Queensland: Profile of patients with chronic kidney disease from regional Queensland, Australia: A registry report.
- Author
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Venuthurupalli, Sree K, Healy, Helen, Fassett, Robert, Cameron, Anne, Wang, Zaimin, and Hoy, Wendy E
- Subjects
CHRONIC kidney failure ,CHRONICALLY ill ,HEALTH planning ,NEPHROLOGISTS ,DIABETIC nephropathies ,PERIPHERAL vascular diseases ,MEDICAL care ,IGA glomerulonephritis - Abstract
Background: Chronic kidney disease, Queensland (CKD.QLD) is a multidisciplinary, collaborative research platform for CKD in Queensland. Most public renal services contribute towards the CKD Registry, including Toowoomba Hospital, which is a referral hospital for Darling Downs Health serving a largely regional population in Queensland. We aim to present the profile of the CKD cohort recruited to the CKD.QLD Registry from Toowoomba Hospital, the first comprehensive report on a pre‐dialysis population from regional Australia. Methods: Study subjects were patients in the Darling Downs Health Service who consented to be included in the CKD.QLD registry from June 2011 to December 2016. Those who were on renal replacement therapy (RRT) were excluded. Patients were followed until date of RRT, death, discharge or loss to follow up or a censor date of 30th June 2017. Results: Overall 1051 subjects, representing 13% of all CKD.QLD Registry patients gave consent of whom, 42.7% were ≥70 years of age. The mean age was 63.8 ± 15.1 years (median age 67 years) with male predominance (55.4%). The majority were born in Australia (86.4%). Aboriginal and Torre Strait Islanders (A&TSI) constituted 9.6% of the cohort. The predominant CKD stages were 3b (28.9%) and 4 (27.7%). Hypertension and diabetes were noted in 91% and 44% of subjects, respectively. Diabetic nephropathy was the leading cause of CKD (26.7%) followed by renovascular disease (17.3%) and glomerulonephritis (14.8%). In 12%, the diagnosis was uncertain. Major co‐morbidities included coronary artery disease (24.7%) chronic lung disease (14.8%), cerebrovascular disease (11.6%) and peripheral vascular disease (8.9%). Non‐vascular co‐morbidities included arthritis (24.6%), gout (23.6%) and gastro‐oesophageal reflux disease (19%). The multi‐morbidity profile was differed by gender, diabetic status and age. Over a follow‐up period upto 72 months, 93 (8.8%) started RRT and 175 (16.6%) died. Of those 82% died without RRT and 18% died after RRT. Conclusion: This CKD Registry cohort from regional Queensland consisted mainly of older Caucasians with male predominance. A&TSI patients were overrepresented compared to the overall population. A significant proportion had cardio‐vascular disease and multiple co‐morbidities which differed by gender, diabetic status and age. This report provides valuable data for health services planning and delivery in regional Queensland. SUMMARY AT A GLANCE: This paper reports the profile of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) in a regional population of Australia registered in the Queensland CKD registry. The cohort mainly comprises older Caucasian males but with over representation of Australian indigenous people. Not unexpectedly, CKD was associated with significant comorbidities, in particular cardiovascular diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Are external management consultancies effective in healthcare improvement, do they reflect value for money and what are the alternative models?
- Author
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Skouteris, Helen, Kirkpatrick, Ian, Currie, Graeme, Braithwaite, Jeffrey, and Teede, Helena
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Despite the increasing use and costs associated with external management consultancy for healthcare improvement, there is a paucity of formal evaluations examining impact. This paper aims to: (i) discuss the potential benefits and disadvantages of external consultancies in addressing complex healthcare challenges and delivering healthcare improvement in Australia; and (ii) explore potential alternative models, including internal consultancy and hybrid models delivered through platforms of collaborative expertise. We propose that the substantive reliance on high cost external management consultancies without demonstrating value or benefit, is unsustainable. An integrative approach that embeds research and capacity building within healthcare services may be of value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Promoting positive and safe care in forensic mental health inpatient settings: Evaluating critical factors that assist nurses to reduce the use of restrictive practices.
- Author
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Barr, Lesley, Wynaden, Dianne, and Heslop, Karen
- Subjects
CONTENT analysis ,FORENSIC psychiatry ,HOSPITAL patients ,INTERVIEWING ,LEADERSHIP ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,FORENSIC medicine ,MENTAL health services ,NURSES' attitudes ,NURSING ,NURSING practice ,PATIENTS ,PATIENT safety ,SECLUSION of psychiatric hospital patients ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,RESTRAINT of patients ,TEAMS in the workplace ,QUALITATIVE research ,PROFESSIONAL standards - Abstract
Reducing and eliminating the use of restrictive practices, such as seclusion and restraint, is a national priority for Australia's mental health services. Whilst legislation, organization and practice changes have all contributed to a reduction in these practices, forensic mental health services continue to report high rates. This paper details the findings of research that examined the experiences of nurses working in the inpatient forensic mental health setting. The research aimed to (i) document the experiences of nurses working in the forensic mental health setting, (ii) articulate their perceived unique skill set to manage challenging patient behaviours, and (iii) determine how their experiences and skill set can inform practice changes to reduce the use of restrictive practices. Thirty‐two nurses were recruited from one Australian forensic mental health service. Data were collected using semi‐structured interviews and analysed using inductive content analysis. Four categories were identified that influenced practice experiences: (i) working in a challenging but interesting environment, (ii) specialty expertize, (iii) exposure to aggression and resilience as a protective factor, and (iv) the importance of effective teamwork and leadership. Forensic mental health care is complex, highly specialized, and often delivered in an unpredictable environment. Whilst high rates of restrictive practices may be linked to the unique characteristics of forensic patients, training, teamwork, and leadership are critical factors influencing their use in this setting. Nurses working in this area need to be educated and supported to work confidently and safely with this high‐risk patient cohort. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Review article: Clinical characteristics and outcomes of patient presentations to the emergency department via police: A scoping review.
- Author
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Crilly, Julia, Johnston, Amy NB, Wallis, Marianne, Polong‐Brown, Josea, Heffernan, Ed, Fitzgerald, Gerard, Young, Jesse T, and Kinner, Stuart
- Subjects
AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,CINAHL database ,EMERGENCY medical services ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL care ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,POLICE ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LITERATURE reviews ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DRUG abusers ,SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
People brought in by police (BIBP) to the ED are a potentially vulnerable group. This narrative scoping review aimed to identify, evaluate and summarise current literature regarding the frequency of presentation, demographic and clinical profile of patients (including reason for presentation), care delivery, and outcomes for people BIBP to the ED, and identify current gaps in knowledge. The review involved searching EMBASE, CINAHL and PubMed using a combination of terms: emergency/ED coupled with police custody/watch house or police presentation, for papers published in English language from January 2006 to November 2017. A total of 20 studies met the inclusion criteria. These included 17 observational (non‐randomised controlled trials) quantitative studies and three descriptive case reports. The proportion of presentations to ED that were BIBP varied depending on the study design and sampling frame. People BIBP often presented with mental health problems, substance use problems, aggressive behaviour and injury caused by self or others. Of studies focused specifically on patients arriving to the ED in mental health crisis (i.e. suicidal ideation or self‐harm), 18–27% were BIBP. ED presentations BIBP were mostly male and typically younger than people arriving by other means. The nature of care provided in the ED and outcomes of the acute episode of care were typically not well described. Limited research regarding people BIBP to the ED limits the ability to comprehensively understand their demographic and clinical profile and outcomes of emergency care. Further research is required to inform if and where in the patient's journey further improvements may be targeted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Structured Interdisciplinary Bedside Rounds in an Australian tertiary hospital emergency department: Patient satisfaction and staff perspectives.
- Author
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Chow, Maria YK, Nikolic, Slaven, Shetty, Amith, and Lai, Kevin
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMMUNICATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH care rationing ,HEALTH care teams ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LABOR supply ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PATIENTS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,TIME ,HUMAN services programs ,CROSS-sectional method ,HOSPITAL rounds ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives: To compare patient satisfaction levels, staff perspectives and the time required using Structured Interdisciplinary Bedside Rounds (SIBR; Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA) versus traditional medical ward rounds (TR) in the ED. Methods: We conducted an observational cross‐sectional study. Ward rounds were categorised into a modified SIBR and TR at a tertiary ED in Australia according to predefined criteria. We compared the duration of ward rounds, invited patients and staff to complete anonymous questionnaires to compare patient satisfaction and staff perspectives. Results: During the study period, SIBR group took significantly longer time than TR per patient (122 vs 88 s, P < 0.001). Patient questionnaires were completed for 320 encounters (101 SIBR, 219 TR). Patient satisfaction scores across all measured domains were significantly higher in SIBR than in the TR group. Patients often pointed out a lack of communication with medical staff during TR. Based on 131 completed staff questionnaires, nurses reported SIBR to be more useful than TR (nurses 78% vs doctors 44%, P = 0.001). The SIBR group had increased instances of staff introductions to patients (91% vs 66%, P < 0.001) and patients' involvement in discussion of management plans (98% vs 53%, P < 0.01). SIBR only weakly correlated with the overall positive experience in the ED (r = 0.19, P = 0.001). Organisational implementation issues raised through qualitative methods are reported in the paper. Conclusions: Our study highlights the benefits that could be gained through SIBR technique over the TR method. Better workforce and resource planning is needed to support the sustainable implementation of SIBR in ED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. It is more than sex and clothes: Culturally safe services for older lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people.
- Author
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Crameri, Pauline, Barrett, Catherine, Latham, JR, and Whyte, Carolyn
- Subjects
ELDER care -- Law & legislation ,ELDER care ,AGING ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,GENDER identity ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HISTORY ,LEADERSHIP ,MEDICAL care ,POWER (Social sciences) ,TRANSCULTURAL medical care ,LGBTQ+ people ,CULTURAL identity ,ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
This paper outlines the development of culturally safe services for older lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people. It draws on a framework for cultural safety, developed in New Zealand which incorporates an understanding of how history, culture and power imbalances influence the relationship between service providers and Maori people. This has been adapted to the needs of older lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex Australians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN METROPOLITAN AND COUNTRY PUBLIC HOSPITAL ALLIED HEALTH SERVICES.
- Author
-
Grimmer, Karen and Bowman, Paula
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
This paper compares patient and episode characteristics in allied health services delivered in country and metropolitan hospitals. Eight public hospitals (46 allied health services) participated in the study (three country and five metropolitan sites, situated in South Australia, Queensland and Tasmania). Standardised rates of patient throughput were similar for country and metropolitan allied health services, despite smaller numbers of country staff providing services to larger geographical areas. Although the differences were not significant, country patients were generally older and had more chronic conditions than metropolitan patients. Fewer country patients than metropolitan patients were eligible for rebates in the private sector. In addition, fewer alternative services were available in country communities, which heightened the role of the public hospital outpatients services within the community. This paper provides an argument for similar funding arrangements for country and metropolitan ambulatory allied health services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Disability policy in Australia: a triumph of the scriptio inferior on impotence and neediness?
- Author
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Hallahan, Lorna
- Subjects
DISABILITY insurance ,LABOR ,CITIZENS ,SOCIAL support ,MEDICAL care ,MANAGEMENT ,SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
From the time that development of a National Disability Insurance Scheme arrived on the agenda of the Australian Labor Government's 2008 Ideas Summit, the lives of disabled Australian citizens have been widely discussed, consulted on, planned for and acted on. This discourse analysis (Fairclough 2003; 2010) critiques the ways in which disabled lives have been framed in these high profile policy debates, with detailed focus on two key policy documents. The Shut Out Report: the Experiences of People with Disabilities in Australia (2009) (2009) and Disability Care and Support (Productivity Commission 2011) are both grounded in extensive national consultations and provide significant evidence about the ways that disabled Australians talk about the problems they face and the solutions they advocate. The paper employs the well-known recognition-redistribution debate of Nancy Fraser and Axel Honneth (2003) to interpret the findings that narratives of suffering, burden and marginalisation predominate in current policy conversations. This tends to push out discussions concerning the non-redistributive aspects of disability reform, potentially contributing to non-integrationist discourse entrenched over 150 years of policies of segregation. Minority voices advocating social integration are present but muted. At this stage, their influence is undetermined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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