19,136 results
Search Results
102. TRAINEES' PROFFERED PAPER SESSION ABSTRACTS.
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CANCER , *MEDICAL care costs , *CANCER treatment , *COLON cancer , *BIOMARKERS , *CANCER chemotherapy ,ABSTRACTS - Abstract
The article presents trainees' proffered abstracts on cancer-related topics which include the rapidly escalating cost of treating cancer in Australia, demographic and pathological variables in stage IV colorectal cancer patients with resected primary tumour, and plasma biomarkers for early detection of chemotherapy response and toxicity in colorectal cancer.
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- 2009
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103. Cross-Disciplinarity in Australian Geography Presidential Address to the Institute of Australian Geographers’ Conference, Melbourne, July 2007.
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KIRKPATRICK, J. B.
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,GEOGRAPHY ,GEOGRAPHERS ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,POPULAR culture studies ,GEOMATICS ,EARTH sciences ,GEOMORPHOLOGY - Abstract
The disciplinary space that geographers conceive to be theirs has all been previously possessed, or latterly colonised, by other disciplines. Geographers defend their existence on the basis of their oft-asserted, but never tested, cross-disciplinarity. The journals in which refereed papers were published by members of the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) and the papers in Australian Geographical Studies were analysed for the period 1998–2002 to test the hypothesis of cross-disciplinarity in both subject and method. IAG members do strongly tend to publish in more than one disciplinary area, and a large proportion of papers in Australian Geographical Studies are integrative across subdisciplines in geography, with many using more than one methodological approach. However, transgression of the physical geography/human geography divide was sufficiently uncommon to create a statistical break between sets of subdisciplines. Based on the data used in the present paper, Australian geographers can make a case for being members of a vital, integrative discipline, likely to make substantial advances in the hybrid spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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104. Walking side‐by‐side: Supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians to lead the way in alcohol research.
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Lee, K. S. Kylie, Wilson, Scott, Stearne, Annalee E., Hayman, Noel, Conigrave, James H., Doyle, Michael, Bullen, Lynette, Weatherall, Teagan J., James, Doug, Reynolds, Taleah, Perry, Jimmy, and Conigrave, Katherine M.
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INDIGENOUS Australians ,TORRES Strait Islanders ,ALCOHOL - Abstract
Several initiatives have sought to increase the number of First Nations individuals with a higher degree in research (i.e., PhD or research masters)—in Australia and in similarly colonised countries. However, little has been written on day‐to‐day support structures and mechanisms that might help First Nations Australian candidates thrive in postgraduate research degrees and beyond. For sensitive research fields such as alcohol, emerging Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers must grapple with topics which are stigmatising and in some instances associated with traumatic associations. There is also a lack of studies internationally that describe optimal support for First Nations students undertaking a higher degree by research with a primary focus on alcohol. Here we discuss what we have learned from the support offered through the Centre of Research Excellence in Indigenous Health and Alcohol—from the perspective of academic staff, students, trainees and early career researchers. We consider what may be generalisable lessons from this experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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105. On the way out: Government revenues from fossil fuels in Australia.
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Burke, Paul J.
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GOVERNMENT revenue ,FOSSIL fuels ,CORPORATE taxes ,TAXATION of profits ,CARBON pricing ,ROAD maintenance ,FOSSIL fuel industries - Abstract
Australia is moving from a fossil fuel‐dominated energy mix to one that is increasingly powered by solar and wind. Fossil fuel exports are also likely to decline given their poor compatibility with the net zero emission targets of key trading partners. There is the potential for a variety of new exports of zero carbon energy and products to emerge. This paper reviews implications of the ongoing energy transition for government revenues from fossil fuel extraction and use and discusses policy options in response. It concludes that the transition heightens the need for efficient government revenue‐raising mechanisms across the economy. Among the possible reforms, this paper reviews the potential for Australia's corporate income tax to be reoriented towards the taxation of above‐normal profits via an allowance for corporate equity approach. Other revenue‐raising options that are discussed include carbon pricing, electronic road user pricing, wider use of progressive royalties, the use of industry levies as applied in Australia's agricultural sector, and the generation of revenue from government co‐investments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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106. Occupational Mobility in the ALife Data: How Reliable are Occupational Patterns from Administrative Australian Tax Records?
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Hathorne, Clara and Breunig, Robert
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OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,TAXATION ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to compare the distribution of occupation and rates of occupational mobility in the ATO Longitudinal Information Files (ALife) and the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) datasets. As tax is not occupation dependent, occupation data from tax records may not be reliable. We find that occupational mobility in the ALife data is less than half that in the nationally representative HILDA data. In contrast, the distribution of occupation and its relationship with most key socio‐economic characteristics appear relatively similar across the two datasets. However, occupation evolves differently over time in the two datasets and there are some differences between the sexes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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107. Co‐design with aboriginal and torres strait islander communities: A journey.
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Tamwoy, Nathaniel, Rosas, Sylvia, Davis, Scott, Farthing, Annie, Houghton, Caitlin, Johnston, Hannah, Maloney, Catherine, Samulkiewicz, Nicole, Seaton, Jack, Tuxworth, Gemma, and Bat, Melodie
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TORRES Strait Islanders ,RURAL health services ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,HUMAN services programs ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,POLICY sciences ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
Aim: This paper explores the principles of co‐design with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities by reflecting on the literature, learning from experiences of allied health professionals, and considering how co‐design can be applied in rural and remote allied health practice. Context: This paper has been authored by a working group from Services for Rural and Remote Allied Health (SARRAH). SARRAH is a member‐based allied health organisation, working to improve health outcomes for rural and remote Australians. SARRAH has been representing and supporting allied health professionals in rural and remote Australia for over 20 years, with a member base that includes students, practitioners, programme managers, policy makers and academics. As a non‐Indigenous organisation, SARRAH works in partnership and receives guidance from the peak organisation, Indigenous Allied Health Australia (IAHA). Approach: Over a period of 3 months, a group of eleven SARRAH members and staff came together to review available literature, seek member perspectives and share their experiences and understandings of co‐design. Working group discussions were grounded in the knowledge and experiences shared by two Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander group members. Conclusion: This paper proposes that successful co‐design with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities places legitimate value on different knowledge systems, is built on strong and trusting relationships, promotes inclusive involvement and requires authentic partnerships. Using these principles, SARRAH will engage with members and stakeholders to influence meaningful change in allied health practice in rural and remote Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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108. Starting with us: Imagining relational, co‐designed policy approaches to improve healthcare access for rural people with disability.
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Quilliam, Claire, O'Shea, Amie, Holgate, Nadine, and Alston, Laura
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HEALTH policy ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RURAL conditions ,LABOR supply ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,POLICY sciences ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,COVID-19 pandemic ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Context: Access to healthcare for rural Australians is a wicked problem, particularly for rural people with disability. Contemporary healthcare access frameworks in Australia tend to overlook geography, use a 'one‐size‐fits‐all approach', and disregard the valuable relationships between key rural healthcare stakeholders, including rural people with disability, rural health services and health professionals. The United Nation's Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities requires the Australian Government to engage people with disability in the design of policies that will shape their day‐to‐day lives, including their access to healthcare. However, the nature and extent to which rural people with disability, rural health professionals and other key rural stakeholders are involved in the design of Australian policies impacting the health of rural people with disability are unknown. Aim: This paper examines approaches taken to engage rural people with disability and health professionals in the design of Australian disability policy impacting healthcare access, and reimagines future processes which can improve healthcare access for rural people with disability. Approach: Co‐design and ethics of care lenses are applied to policy design approaches in this paper. We approach this work as rural disability and health academics, rural health professionals, and as rural people with disability, neurodivergence and family members of people with disability. Conclusion: We argue future co‐designed policy approaches could focus on driving change towards equity in healthcare access for rural people with disability by harnessing the relational nature of rural healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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109. JobKeeper: The Australian Short‐Time Work Program.
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LABOR market ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,PART-time employment ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MONETARY incentives - Abstract
JobKeeper is a short‐time work subsidy implemented between March 2020 and March 2021 in Australia during the COVID‐19 pandemic to reinforce the resilience of the labour market. As a job retention (JR) program, JobKeeper supports businesses, protects jobs and employment relationships and secures income of Australian workers. Drawing on microeconomic and macroeconomic evaluations of the JR programs published in other countries in a pre‐pandemic period, this paper studies how the generosity, responsiveness, governance and eligibility criteria of JobKeeper may shape its efficiency and equity. We show that expected benefits of JobKeeper may be limited by some negative economic effects of short‐time work subsidies. Locking employees in their current position potentially crowds out more efficient matches on the labour market. These displacement effects may slow down economic recovery. As a wage subsidy, JobKeeper distorts the relative wage and employment prospects between eligible and non‐eligible workers. These substitution effects can increase the dualization of the Australian labour market and institutionalise lay‐offs inequities for workers holding a temporary visa. Finally, we argue that subsidies for part‐time work also generate incentives for working time reorganisations that should be evaluated. JobKeeper is a short‐time work subsidy to reinforce the resilience of the Australian labour market during the pandemic. This paper studies how the generosity, responsiveness, governance and eligibility criteria of JobKeeper may shape its efficiency and equity. We analyse how expected benefits of JobKeeper may be impacted by displacement, substitution, deadweight effects and work reorganisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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110. Critically Appraised Paper Splinting the hand in the functional position after acquired brain injury did not influence muscle length, hand function or pain.
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Walker, Marion
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BRAIN injuries , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *INDUSTRIAL psychology , *MEDICAL rehabilitation , *CLINICAL medicine research - Abstract
Focuses on the research about the effects of night resting splints on the length of the wrist and finger flexors, hand function, and on pain in adults with acquired brain injury in Australia. Application of routine therapy on the research participants; Results of the research; Commentary on the efficacy of splinting practices of the upper limb after acquired brain injury.
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- 2003
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111. Critically Appraised Paper While home-based therapy may be more convenient for patients with brain impairment, therapists need to be creative with space, equipment and practice.
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Jongbloed, Lyn
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OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *COMPARATIVE studies , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *HOSPITAL patients , *INDUSTRIAL psychology , *MEDICAL rehabilitation - Abstract
Focuses on the research related to occupational therapy in Australia. Investigation of the views of outpatients with acquired brain impairment; Comparison between home-delivered and hospital delivered therapy; Assessment of patients and therapists regarding the advantages and disdvantages of home-based therapy.
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- 2003
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112. Towards a sustainable integrated management approach to uncertainty surrounding COVID‐19.
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Nguyen, Tiep, Hallo, Leonie, Chileshe, Nicholas, and Nguyen, Nghia Hoai
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PROBLEM solving ,PROFESSIONS ,MANAGEMENT information systems ,RESEARCH methodology ,UNCERTAINTY ,PUBLIC administration ,PUBLIC health ,CRITICAL thinking ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEDICAL protocols ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,DECISION making ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PHILOSOPHY ,STATISTICAL models ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,MANAGEMENT styles ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) - Abstract
Traditional approaches to system management are not suited to highly uncertain conditions. Hard system approaches with a top‐down management approach are often used to manage well‐defined systems that are not easily able to cope with uncertainty. Soft system approaches of the with bottom‐up or participative style may cause a lack of conformance to industry standards. Few studies have investigated these approaches within the context of COVID‐19 pandemic. Therefore, this paper aims to use the philosophy of Total Systems Intervention to investigate the applicability of an integrated management approach to cope with the uncertainty of COVID‐19. Three different countries from Europe, Oceania and Asia are selected as typical case studies to clarify the strengths and weaknesses of differing management approaches. The case studies demonstrate that using an integrated management approach can potentially assist decision‐makers to deal with crises and conclusively reveal the superiority of the integrated approach, independent of cultural milieu. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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113. Communicating shared situational awareness in times of chaos: Social media and the COVID‐19 pandemic.
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Shahbazi, Maryam, Bunker, Deborah, and Sorrell, Tania C.
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MEDICINE information services ,COVID-19 ,SOCIAL media ,CHAOS theory ,COGNITION ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH information services ,ETHNOLOGY research ,INFORMATION literacy ,COMMUNICATION ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,ONLINE social networks ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FIELD notes (Science) ,HEALTH behavior ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DISEASE management ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
To effectively manage a crisis, most decisions made by governments, organizations, communities, and individuals are based on "shared situational awareness" (SSA) derived from multiple information sources. Developing SSA depends on the alignment of mental models, which "represent our shared version of truth and reality on which we can act." Social media has facilitated public sensemaking during a crisis; however, it has also encouraged mental model dissonance, resulting in the digital destruction of mental models and undermining adequate SSA. The study is concerned with the challenges of creating SSA during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Australia. This paper documents a netnography of Australian public health agencies' Facebook communication, exploring the initial impact of COVID‐19 on SSA creation. Chaos theory is used as a theoretical lens to examine information perception, meaning, and assumptions relating to SSA from pre to post‐pandemic periods. Our study highlights how the initial COVID‐19 "butterfly effect" swamped the public health communication channel, leaving little space for other important health issues. This research contributes to information systems, information science, and communications by illustrating how the emergence of a crisis impacts social media communication, the creation of SSA, and what this means for social media adoption for crisis communication purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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114. A review on common root rot of wheat and barley in Australia.
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Xiong, Yiyi, McCarthy, Cheryl, Humpal, Jacob, and Percy, Cassandra
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BARLEY ,WHEAT ,COST control ,ROOT rots ,PLANT diseases ,BIPOLARIS - Abstract
Common root rot (CRR) caused by the soilborne pathogen Bipolaris sorokiniana (teleomorph Cochliobolus sativus) is becoming increasingly prevalent worldwide. Identification of CRR is difficult and time‐consuming for human assessors due to the non‐distinctive above‐ground symptoms, with browning of subcrown internodes and roots the most distinguishing symptom of infection. CRR disease has been recognized as a significant disease for cereal crops in many countries. In 2009, CRR in Australia was estimated to cause $30 million average annual yield loss for wheat and $13 million for barley. Recent evidence indicates CRR may be more prevalent than expected in Australian wheat cropping areas due to lack of research on this disease. Low levels of B. sorokiniana survive in the soil for up to 10 years and attack plants at early stages of growth. Therefore, mitigating CRR in wheat and barley may not be practical at the late stages of infection due to lack of effective methods; however, early detection might be viable to alleviate the impact of this disease. A comprehensive overview of CRR caused by B. sorokiniana, including disease background, worldwide economic losses, management methods, potential CRR detection using multispectral and hyperspectral sensors and the research focus over the past 50 years is provided in this article. This review paper is expected to provide thorough supplemental information for current studies about CRR and proposes recommendations for whole‐of‐field disease scouting methods to farmers, enabling reduced time and cost for CRR management and increasing wheat and barley production worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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115. 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]
- Published
- 2023
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116. Celebrating 100 years of Immunology & Cell Biology – a special focus on the field of tumor immunology in Australia.
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Kumari, Snehlata, Zemek, Rachael M, Palendira, Umaimainthan, and Ebert, Lisa M
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CYTOLOGY ,IMMUNOLOGY ,TUMORS - Abstract
In this Commentary article, as part of the 100‐year celebrations of the journal, we reflect on the contribution of articles published in ICB in the field of tumor immunology. A highlight is a series of interviews conducted with three Australian‐based ICB authors who have contributed key papers over the years: Rajiv Khanna, Delia Nelson and Ian Frazer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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117. The Future Proofing Study: Design, methods and baseline characteristics of a prospective cohort study of the mental health of Australian adolescents.
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Werner‐Seidler, Aliza, Maston, Kate, Calear, Alison L., Batterham, Philip J., Larsen, Mark E., Torok, Michelle, O'Dea, Bridianne, Huckvale, Kit, Beames, Joanne R., Brown, Lyndsay, Fujimoto, Hiroko, Bartholomew, Alexandra, Bal, Debopriyo, Schweizer, Susanne, Skinner, S. Rachel, Steinbeck, Katharine, Ratcliffe, Julie, Oei, Ju‐Lee, Venkatesh, Svetha, and Lingam, Raghu
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MENTAL health ,AUSTRALIANS ,TORRES Strait Islanders ,ADOLESCENT health ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Objectives: The Future Proofing Study (FPS) was established to examine factors associated with the onset and course of mental health conditions during adolescence. This paper describes the design, methods, and baseline characteristics of the FPS cohort. Methods: The FPS is an Australian school‐based prospective cohort study with an embedded cluster‐randomized controlled trial examining the effects of digital prevention programs on mental health. Data sources include self‐report questionnaires, cognitive functioning, linkage to health and education records, and smartphone sensor data. Participants are assessed annually for 5 years. Results: The baseline cohort (N = 6388, M = 13.9 years) is broadly representative of the Australian adolescent population. The clinical profile of participants is comparable to other population estimates. Overall, 15.1% of the cohort met the clinical threshold for depression, 18.6% for anxiety, 31.6% for psychological distress, and 4.9% for suicidal ideation. These rates were significantly higher in adolescents who identified as female, gender diverse, sexuality diverse, or Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander (all ps < 0.05). Conclusions: This paper provides current and comprehensive data about the status of adolescent mental health in Australia. The FPS cohort is expected to provide significant insights into the risk, protective, and mediating factors associated with development of mental health conditions during adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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118. Market power and markups: Malign markers for the Australian macroeconomy.
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Leigh, Andrew
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INDUSTRIAL concentration ,NEW business enterprises ,MARKET power - Abstract
Research on markups by Hambur (Treasury Working Paper, 2021) shows that markups in Australia have increased since the turn of the century. This is consistent with findings for other advanced economies over the same period. Australia's most digitally intensive firms increased markups the most. Australian industries with the greatest increase in concentration also recorded the greatest increases in markups. This aligns with other economic evidence around declining dynamism. Over recent decades, market concentration has risen, the start‐up rate has dropped, and the share of workers starting a new job has declined. Evidence on markups is consistent with a lack of dynamism in the Australian economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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119. Decolonising Politics and International Relations Classrooms: Reflections from the "Field".
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Clapton, William
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DECOLONIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,PRAXIS (Process) ,PRACTICAL politics ,EUROCENTRISM ,CLASSROOMS ,CLASS politics ,HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
International Relations (IR) is a discipline founded upon and shaped by colonialism and Eurocentrism. Its Eurocentric tropes and myths distort the discipline's historiography and its perceptions of why and how it was founded, and for what purpose, such that race and colonialism are eliminated from mainstream discussions of disciplinary history and IR's main themes, concepts, and theories. This is reproduced in both the teaching and research of IR. Focusing on the former, this paper reflects on my experiences as the convenor of a course on colonialism. This is a second year, core course in the Politics and IR program at UNSW Sydney. The explicit purpose of the course is to contribute to decolonising UNSW's Politics and IR curriculum by centring Indigenous perspectives of colonialism and IR, critically interrogating the racism and Eurocentricity of Politics and IR, and exploring how colonialism shaped the world we live in and continues to inform our world and our lived, everyday experiences. This paper explores the concepts and theory informing the pedagogical praxis employed in the course, this praxis itself, and critically reflects on the achievements, challenges, and pitfalls of actively attempting to contribute to decolonising the IR classroom within Australia's settler colonial context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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120. "No Colonial Baggage": Imagining a Decolonised Australia‐Africa Relations.
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Dan Suleiman, Muhammad, Isike, Christopher, and Mickler, David
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ELECTION security measures ,BRITISH colonies ,HISTORY of colonies ,LUGGAGE ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOFT power (Social sciences) ,ANTI-communist movements - Abstract
As part of its strategy to win African votes for election to the UN Security Council (2008–12), Canberra sought to leverage its soft power potential by presenting Australia as having "no colonial baggage" in Africa while framing Australia as "a country from the Global North, located in the Global South," and one that would "work with other small and middle powers." Ultimately, the campaign was successful, including up to 50 of Africa's 54 countries voting for Australia. This paper considers this framing in the context of a shared but differentiated colonial history, including its contradictions, given that Australians fought several wars on African soil on behalf of the British Empire, supported white minority regimes and anti‐communist movements on the continent, and maintained the white Australia policy until the 1970s. The paper deploys decoloniality theory to engage Australia's lack of a neat fit within a historicised articulation of a "coloniser‐colonised" relationship between Europe and Africa. We show that, despite this lack of fit, Australia's relations with the countries of Africa reinforce long‐standing of patterns of knowledge, power, and being associated with colonialism. Accordingly, the paper makes three recommendations for cooperation and innovative thinking in foreign policy and diaspora diplomacy between Africa and a more independent and multicultural Australia based on the "equality of being." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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121. Weaving Evidence into Action for Veterans with dementia (WEAVE): Codesigning the implementation of nonpharmacological interventions for programme fidelity and sustainability.
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Meyer, Claudia, Golenko, Xanthe, Cyarto, Elizabeth V., O'Keefe, Fleur, Cooley, Josh, Bonney, Gwen, Min, Mina, and Lowthian, Judy
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EVIDENCE-based medicine ,HUMAN services programs ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT programs ,DEMENTIA ,RESEARCH funding ,VETERANS ,LONG-term health care - Abstract
Rationale: Challenges associated with translating evidence into practice are well recognised and calls for effective strategies to reduce the time lag and successfully embed evidence‐based practices into usual care are loud and clear. While a plethora of nonpharmacological interventions for people with dementia exist; few are based on strong evidence and there is little consideration for programme operationalisation in the complex environment of long‐term care. Aims and Objectives: This paper describes the preparation for the implementation of the Weaving Evidence into Action for Veterans with dementia project, incorporating the codesign of delivery of four evidence‐based, nonpharmacological interventions. Method: Implementation preparation for this type 2 hybrid effectiveness‐implementation project was underpinned by the Implementation Framework for Aged Care (IFAC). A sociocultural–political contextual scan was undertaken, and reflection on the IFAC question 'why change?' with key stakeholders. Delivery of the four interventions of music therapy, exercise, reminiscence therapy and sensory modulation was explored using codesign methodology. Preparation of both intervention delivery personnel and recipients was via training, establishment of a change team and promotional/awareness‐raising strategies. Results: The contextual scan revealed Australian government reforms and organisational imperatives facing long‐term care services, while reflections on 'why change' flagged best practice dementia care at the local care home level. Several codesign sessions involved veterans with dementia, family members, care home staff members and volunteers to ensure programme alignment with needs and preferences, accounting for existing activities. Training was designed and delivered before programme commencement. A change team was established and strategies to support behaviour change instigated. Implementation evaluation is reported elsewhere. Conclusion: The extended preparatory period for implementation, afforded by the COVID‐19 pandemic on programme commencement, enabled time for widespread understanding of the programme and necessary upskill of staff. Comprehensive codesign with all stakeholders of programme components identified core and flexible elements necessary for fidelity of implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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122. The Rise of Foreign Direct Investment Regulation in Investment‐recipient Countries.
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Ufimtseva, Anastasia
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FOREIGN investments ,COUNTRIES ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
This research paper seeks to explain why investment‐recipient countries, like Australia and Canada, reject certain investments in strategic industries and shield some domestic business from foreign acquisitions. Existing studies suggest that the decision to restrict FDI is driven by national security concerns, which are often conceptualized as a catch‐all concept. This paper develops a novel theoretical construct – 'FDI acceptability threshold' (a maximum point of political tolerance for any given foreign investment) – to provide a more nuanced understanding of government decisions to reject FDI. This theoretical construct is based on four factors – nature of the domestic firm/industry, nature of the acquirer, external opposition, and domestic backlash. Drawing on two cases of Chinese SOEs' investment in the energy sector in Australia and Canada, this paper demonstrates that investment‐recipient countries are more likely to protect a domestic business where foreign ownership threatens domestic industry by exceeding FDI acceptability thresholds. Given that these thresholds are often not directly identified in the host country's policies, this paper proposes that host countries should clarify these conditions to ensure that they continue to attract FDI. The theory of 'FDI acceptability thresholds', developed in this paper, can be used to explain which companies or industries may be eligible for protection from the home government. In broader terms, these thresholds explain the theoretical link between national security concerns and FDI protectionism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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123. Service users' and carers' experiences of engaging with early intervention services: A meta‐synthesis review.
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Loughlin, Matthew, Bucci, Sandra, Brooks, Joanna, and Berry, Katherine
- Subjects
THEMATIC analysis ,RELATIONSHIP quality ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact statements - Abstract
Aim: The provision and implementation of early intervention for psychosis services (early intervention services [EIS]) has received increasing attention over recent years. Maximizing engagement with EIS is of clinical and economic importance, and exploring the experiences of those who access EIS is vital. Although research has been conducted exploring the experiences of engaging with EIS from both a service user and carer/family member point of view, these data have not been systematically collated to generate new understanding. The primary aim of this study is to review, critically appraise and synthesize qualitative findings relating to the experiences of service users and/or carers and family members engaging with EIS. Methods: Four databases were systematically searched. Studies were analysed using an inductive thematic analysis approach, within a critical realist epistemological framework. Studies were critically appraised using the critical appraisal skills programme tool. Results: Fourteen papers were identified for inclusion. Three main themes were identified: the importance of a personal relationship with an EIS staff member, the impact of this relationship and consideration of life after EIS. The importance of a strong relationship with EIS staff was the most prominent theme throughout the papers reviewed. Conclusions: The quality of the therapeutic relationship with at least one EIS staff member was the single most important factor in determining whether the experience of accessing EIS was a positive or negative one. The majority of the studies reviewed were conducted in the United Kingdom or Australia. Therefore, more research across countries is needed to understand transferability of findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
124. Regional Economic Development in Australia: Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
-
Stoeckel, Andrew and Ong, Rachel
- Subjects
COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC change ,COST effectiveness ,INVESTMENT policy - Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
125. The Wagiman Landscape: Mental Maps and Prototypes.
- Author
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Harvey, Mark
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHICAL perception ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,PROTOTYPES ,AUSTRALIAN literature ,FACTOR analysis - Abstract
This paper examines the classification of the landscape, both biota and terrain, in Wagiman, a language of northern Australia. There is considerable debate as to the comparative roles of cognitive and cultural factors in the analysis of landscape terminologies. Any analysis of terminologies necessarily involves consideration of meaning. There are many approaches to the analysis of meaning and analysis of Wagiman landscape classification requires at least two approaches. One approach involves necessary and sufficient conditions for connotation, and the other involves prototypes. The comparative roles of cognitive and cultural factors vary depending upon the approach to meaning, with cognitive factors playing a greater role in connotation and cultural factors playing a greater role in prototypes. The current research literature on Australian languages examines behavioural and morphological oppositions, material make‐up, shape, size as cognitive factors and affordance and human usage as cultural factors. This paper provides evidence that there is another cultural factor which plays a central role in prototype classification, mental maps of the landscape involving zonal oppositions. Prototypes for many terms do not have an individuated reference but rather have an unindividuated reference to typical zones of occurrence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
126. Are social isolation, lack of social support or loneliness risk factors for cardiovascular disease in Australia and New Zealand? A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Freak‐Poli, Rosanne, Phyo, Aung Zaw Zaw, Hu, Jessie, and Barker, S. Fiona
- Subjects
SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL support ,DISEASE risk factors ,LONELINESS ,CORONARY disease ,STROKE ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases - Abstract
Background: An international systematic review concluded that individuals with poor social health (social isolation, lack of social support or loneliness) are 30% more likely to develop coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. Notably, the two included Australian papers reported no association between social health and CHD or stroke. Objective: We undertook a systematic review and meta‐analysis to investigate the association between social isolation, lack of social support and loneliness and cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence among people living in Australia and New Zealand. Methods: Four electronic databases were systematically searched for longitudinal studies published until June 2020. Two reviewers undertook title/abstract screen and one reviewer undertook full‐text screen and data extraction. Quality was assessed using the Newcastle – Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale. Results: Of the 725 unique records retrieved, five papers met our inclusion criteria. These papers reported data from three Australian longitudinal datasets, with a total of 2137 CHD and 590 stroke events recorded over follow‐up periods ranging from 3 to 16 years. Reports of two CHD and two stroke outcomes were suitable for meta‐analysis. The included papers reported no association between social health and incidence of CVD in all fully adjusted models and most unadjusted models. Conclusions: Our systematic review is inconclusive as it identified only a few studies, which relied heavily on self‐reported CVD. Further studies using medical diagnosis of CVD, and assessing the potential influence of residential remoteness, are needed to better understand the relationship between social health and CVD incidence in Australia and New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
127. Motility, viscosity and field: A portrayal of migrant teachers' professional mobility and ethical conflicts in American and Australian faith‐based schools.
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,CHURCH schools ,MIGRANT labor ,TEACHERS ,ADULTS - Abstract
International migration is attaining new records, diversifying nations' cultural–social landscapes. The number of international migrants is estimated to be about 272 million globally, with nearly two‐thirds being labour migrants, surpassing historic projections. Concomitantly, migrant teachers are becoming more prevalent in educational markets; spaces that may serve as institutional vehicles promoting social cohesion and tolerance. Acknowledging that such spaces have an increasing share of faith‐based schools—settings that foreground particular groups' cultural and social values—this critical analysis seeks to identify how migrant teachers' aspirations are shaped and ethically negotiated in seemingly exclusive educational sites. Drawing upon migrant teacher interviews from American and Australian faith‐based schools, and utilising concepts of motility and institutional viscosity, this paper captures the schools' 'viscous' conditions and complex facilitation through which educators professionally move and ethically navigate their practice. Bourdieu's thinking tools of field, habitus, capital and symbolic violence provided a supplementary theoretical framework that draws attention to the evolving discourse of the subordinate 'invisible foreign educator' in the faith‐based educational setting. The paper portrays strategies of initial institutional welcoming; enabling migrant educators a smooth spatial mobility into the field but challenging them to work against their social mobility aspirations. It illustrates the educators' failed attempts to negotiate intra‐institutional transitions; experiencing feelings of trepidation about future professional moves and ethical conflicts between their obligation to adhere to institutional procedures and commitment to operate from an ethic of care. The paper argues for education policies that enable motility over time and empower ethical skilled migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
128. From the Editor.
- Author
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Smith, Tom
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING periodicals ,ACCOUNTING ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
Abstract: Report from the Editor as I start a second term. I outline success and otherwise in the first term and encourage authors to engage in the local research conversation when they are writing their papers. I point out that all methodological approaches are welcome including qualitative, survey, systematic literature reviews and experiments. I point out the hot points that Editors now are looking for so that you can pay particular attention to them in advance of submission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
129. Introduction to the Special Issue on Big Data and Social Policy in Australia.
- Author
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Curchin, Katherine and Edwards, Ben
- Subjects
BIG data ,SOCIAL policy ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,COLLECTING of accounts ,CHILD welfare - Abstract
This Special Issue addresses the use of linked data for research purposes and to carry out government functions such as child protection, allocation of resources, and debt recovery. Government investment in big data has the potential to change citizens' experience of the welfare state in a broad range of areas in both positive and negative ways. It is therefore important that the Australian social policy community understands and engages with the potential benefits and risks involved in the linkage and analysis of government datasets. Papers in this Special Issue discuss the technical challenges and institutional barriers involved in the construction and governance of linked government data assets and showcase the promise of big data for generating policy relevant insights. This Special Issue also features papers critically interrogating the potential for big data to produce social harms. We contextualise this collection of papers with a brief history of recent policy developments in regards to access to government held data. We also discuss ways of improving public trust and social licence for the use of big data and argue that the voices of First Nations and disadvantaged Australians must be given greater weight in discussions of how their data will be used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
130. Beyond the frame, beyond critique: Reframing place through more‐than visual participant‐photography.
- Author
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Kelly, David
- Subjects
OFFSHORE wind power plants ,SMALL cities ,HUMAN geography ,POSTCARDS ,MINERAL industries ,SERVICE economy ,BEACHES - Abstract
There is an abundance of critique in tourism studies, human geography, and the social sciences that takes tourism‐driven depictions of place as its object. Indeed, the problematics of touristic imaginaries tend to fix, obscure, and exclude object‐subjects that more‐or‐less sit familiarly within/out frames of representation. Beyond the frame, beyond critique, there are practices that are less observed – practices that radically challenge the potency of ubiquitous "good life" narratives. This paper draws on visual ethnographic research methods in a frequently photographed but narrowly experienced place. Broome, in the remote Kimberley region of Australia, is an idyllic small urban town with a large tourism economy and operates as a service hub for extractive resource industries inland and offshore. Through the use of picture postcards and participant‐driven photography, this paper presents a narrative of "the beach" that demonstrates the fragility of normative "good life" tropes. By amplifying practices of inhabiting the beach that exceed representational critique and stimulate other ways of authoring place, this paper looks for an activism that resists settling on colonial ways of knowing place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
131. Optimal farm management responses to emerging soil salinisation in a dryland catchment in eastern Australia (The research presented in this paper was conducted during the author's association with the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia)
- Author
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R. Greiner
- Subjects
FARM management ,SOIL salinization ,ARID regions - Abstract
Secondary salinisation of soil and water resources is an acute management issue over large parts of Australia. This paper focusses on the situation in the Liverpool Plains, where secondary soil salinity is on the increase due to rising saline groundwater tables. The Liverpool Plains are famous for the vast alluvial floodplains where self-mulching black clays provide the production basis for an extensive dryland cropping industry. The farmers there are asking how best to manage their resources under the present hydrological conditions, and are concerned whether their businesses will remain viable in the future. A multi-period programming model is applied to a model farm situation. The objective function reflects the economic paradigm of farming. The model includes a simulation sub-routine which links land use, rainfall and lateral groundwater flow into a point water balance and estimates the salt-affected area. A feedback relationship applies between soil salinity and land productivity. The results of the model suggest that the prevailing cropping practices that rely on long fallowing for soil moisture retention are sub-optimal. Increased cropping frequency increases farm income and reduces on-farm recharge to groundwater. Diversification into lucerne is favourable for the same reasons. Unless trees have commercial value, tree planting is not a favoured option except on salt-affected land. The farm achieves complete on-farm recharge control. However, assuming that the groundwater table rises at a rate of 10 cm per year independent of on-farm recharge, salinisation continues despite these land management changes. The subsequent land productivity losses render the model farm financially unviable in the medium term. Sustaining the productivity of the Liverpool Plains is an issue of reducing recharge to the groundwater system by changing land-use practices throughout the entire catchment. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
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132. Public service renewal: Clues from the commonwealth.
- Author
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Uhr, John
- Subjects
CIVIL service - Abstract
Reviews the discussion paper `Towards a Best Practice Australian Public Service,' by the Minister for Industrial Relations and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for the Public Service.
- Published
- 1997
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- View/download PDF
133. 'A Mixed Bag': A Comment on the Green Paper by the Committee on Employment Opportunities.
- Author
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Dawkins, Peter
- Subjects
FULL employment policies ,JOB vacancies ,WORK sharing - Abstract
Comments on the Australian Green Paper entitled 'Restoring Full Employment,' released by the Committee on Employment Opportunities in December 1983. Relationship between unemployment and job vacancies; Concept of training wages; Types of worksharing; Modification of the income test to encourage part-time and casual work.
- Published
- 1994
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134. An Assessment of the Green Paper: Restoring Full Employment.
- Author
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Borland, Jeff
- Subjects
FULL employment policies ,EMPLOYMENT policy ,AUSTRALIAN economy, 1945- - Abstract
Assesses the Australian Green Paper entitled 'Restoring Full Employment,' released by the Australian Committee on Employment Opportunities in December 1983. Determinants of the economic growth rate; Relation between economic growth and unemployment rates; Use of the Access Economics Model to predict changes in the unemployment rates.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
135. The Green Paper on Employment Opportunities, or Don't You Worry About That.
- Author
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Wooden, Mark
- Subjects
FULL employment policies ,EMPLOYMENT policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Examines the key propositions and recommendations of the Australian Green Paper entitled 'Restoring Full Employment,' released by the Committee on Employment Opportunities in December 1993. Expansion in labor market program spendings; Use of wage subsidies to be implemented by public sector job creation programs; Economic growth maximization.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
136. Australian and New Zealand Working Papers.
- Author
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Mead, Margaret
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,RESEARCH ,AUSTRALIAN economy - Abstract
Lists Australian and New Zealand working papers and research reports in the field of economics as of September 1988. Topics, Authors, Manner of obtaining copies.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
137. SUBSTITUTION AND COMPLEMENTARITY IN THE CREATION AND COMMUNICATION OF AUSTRALIAN UNIVERSITY RESEARCH.
- Author
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Burgio-Ficca, Claudia and Doucouliagos, Hristos
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,PERIODICALS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONFERENCE proceedings (Publications) ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
The generation of research is one of the major functions of the university sector. In most disciplines, journal articles continue to be the main outlet for the communication of research findings. However, in Australia, government induced distortions have rewarded refereed conference papers an equal status to refereed journal papers. The aim of this paper is to explore the association between research published in journals and research published in conference proceedings. We use a panel dataset of the research output of 36 Australian universities, for the period 1995–2004. Cobb-Douglas research production functions are estimated, as well as a system of research production functions that allows for simultaneity. The results indicate that journals and conferences are contemporaneous substitutes – an expansion in conference publications displaces journal publications. There is also a ‘DEST effect’. On average, conference papers are not converted into subsequent journal papers. The DEST effect is found also through analysis of the publication histories of 152 business and law academics. Postgraduate enrolments are shown to contribute only to conferences and have no effect on journal publications. Research income has a positive effect on both conferences and journal publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
138. Some cross-border issues under the Australian voluntary administration procedure<FNR></FNR><FN>The author is grateful for the helpful comments of Dr Rosalind Mason, of the University of Southern Queensland in the preparation of this paper. Responsibility for errors and omissions remain with the author. </FN>
- Author
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Anderson, Colin
- Subjects
LEGISLATION ,CORPORATION law ,PARLIAMENTARY practice ,COMMERCIAL law - Abstract
Focuses on the corporate rescue legislation implemented in Australia. Brief outline of the legislative procedure; Difficulties with a voluntary administration of the provision involving cross-border issues; Definition of company.
- Published
- 2004
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139. The impact of unions on the Australian enterprise bargaining framework.
- Author
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Morton, William
- Subjects
NEGOTIATION ,LABOR market - Abstract
This paper explores the effects of union involvement in enterprise bargaining agreements (EBAs) on non‐wage outcomes. My research is carried out through using a dataset of all federal EBAs in Australia from 1997 to 2021 and utilises fixed effects regressions. An index was constructed of 10 variables to capture a comprehensive overview of non‐wage outcomes. This paper finds that union involvement in an EBA, on average, is associated with a 0.494 unit increase in the index, or a 13.5% increase on the average index score. Overall, these results provide further insight into union impacts on the labour market within the enterprise bargaining framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
140. Crisis coordination in complex intergovernmental systems: The case of Australia.
- Author
-
Kapucu, Naim, Parkin, Andrew, Lumb, Miriam, and Dippy, Russell
- Subjects
NETWORK governance ,SHARED leadership ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CRISES ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL networks ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
As the scale and intensity of disasters and crises continue to increase, planning and managing crises have become a critical policy and governance issue. Of particular importance to this topic is crisis coordination, as effective response and recovery support the continuity of operations of governments and businesses, and are essential to the economy, health, and public safety. This paper applies a network governance perspective to explore the practical application of intergovernmental crisis coordination in Australia with reference to the COVID‐19 crisis contributing to a better understanding of the role of governing bodies in dealing with major crises in a coordinated manner. This paper also highlights the need to leverage collaborative leadership, organizational capacity, and a culture of collaboration to develop robust and connected networks in addressing crisis coordination within Australia's complex federal system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
141. Increasing Trust in New Data Sources: Crowdsourcing Image Classification for Ecology.
- Author
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Santos‐Fernandez, Edgar, Vercelloni, Julie, Price, Aiden, Heron, Grace, Christensen, Bryce, Peterson, Erin E., and Mengersen, Kerrie
- Subjects
- *
IMAGE recognition (Computer vision) , *CROWDSOURCING , *TRUST , *MAJORITIES , *CITIZEN science , *CORAL bleaching - Abstract
Summary: Crowdsourcing methods facilitate the production of scientific information by non‐experts. This form of citizen science (CS) is becoming a key source of complementary data in many fields to inform data‐driven decisions and study challenging problems. However, concerns about the validity of these data often constrain their utility. In this paper, we focus on the use of citizen science data in addressing complex challenges in environmental conservation. We consider this issue from three perspectives. First, we present a literature scan of papers that have employed Bayesian models with citizen science in ecology. Second, we compare several popular majority vote algorithms and introduce a Bayesian item response model that estimates and accounts for participants' abilities after adjusting for the difficulty of the images they have classified. The model also enables participants to be clustered into groups based on ability. Third, we apply the model in a case study involving the classification of corals from underwater images from the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. We show that the model achieved superior results in general and, for difficult tasks, a weighted consensus method that uses only groups of experts and experienced participants produced better performance measures. Moreover, we found that participants learn as they have more classification opportunities, which substantially increases their abilities over time. Overall, the paper demonstrates the feasibility of CS for answering complex and challenging ecological questions when these data are appropriately analysed. This serves as motivation for future work to increase the efficacy and trustworthiness of this emerging source of data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
142. Options on temporary water allocation rights and their pricing.
- Author
-
Lee, Geoff, Dong, Wenfeng, and Zhu, Zili
- Subjects
WATER rights ,PRICES ,RIGHT to water ,WATER management ,MARKET prices ,SPOT prices - Abstract
This paper presents a methodology for defining the spot price of temporary water allocation rights for trading zones within the water market in the southern Murray–Darling Basin situated in Australia. The historical spot price is then used to calibrate a stochastic process depicting the dynamics of the water price, allowing the computation of prices of options on the underlying water price with the aim of producing reference prices to catalyse an options trading market. The most suitable stochastic model representing the water price dynamics is selected through comparing the option prices generated from four different models. Using the selected stochastic model, the most liquid trading zone in the Murray–Darling Basin water market (Zone 7) is used to demonstrate how the methodologies developed in the paper are used to calibrate the log‐mean stochastic model representing the stochastic spot price dynamics and compute prices for call and put options on the underlying water spot prices. Sensitivities of the water options prices to market input data can be calculated from the formulae provided in the paper. The results presented in this work can serve as a reference tool by industry practitioners and the farming community in using options for effective risk management of water resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
143. On stable solutions of a weighted elliptic equation involving the fractional Laplacian.
- Author
-
Quynh Nguyen, Thi and Tuan Duong, Anh
- Subjects
- *
ELLIPTIC equations , *LAPLACIAN operator , *LIOUVILLE'S theorem , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the following fractional Choquard equation with weight (−Δ)su=1|x|N−α∗h(x)|u|ph(x)|u|p−2uinℝN,$$ {\left(-\Delta \right)}^su=\left(\frac{1}{{\left|x\right|}^{N-\alpha }}\ast h(x){\left|u\right|}^p\right)h(x){\left|u\right|}^{p-2}u\kern0.5em \mathrm{in}\kern0.5em {\mathrm{\mathbb{R}}}^N, $$where 0
2s,p>2,α>0$$ 02s,p>2,\alpha >0 $$ and h$$ h $$ is a positive weight function satisfying h(x)≥C|x|a$$ h(x)\ge C{\left|x\right|}^a $$ at infinity, for some a≥0$$ a\ge 0 $$. We establish, in this paper, a Liouville type theorem saying that if maxN−4s−2a,0<α- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
144. The impact of COVID‐19 on the well‐being of Australian visual artists and arts workers.
- Author
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Lye, Jenny, Hirschberg, Joe, McQuilten, Grace, Powell, Chloë, MacNeill, Kate, and Badham, Marnie
- Subjects
- *
WELL-being , *COVID-19 , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ART materials , *MEDIA art - Abstract
In this paper, we assess the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on the Australian visual arts sector. We base our analysis on the responses of over 1500 visual artists and arts workers to a survey conducted by the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA), the national peak body for the visual and media arts, craft and design sector in September 2021. NAVA employed this online survey to study the relationship between the pandemic and both the incomes and mental health of artists and arts workers. Using regression analysis, we find that there has been a significant impact for both artists and arts workers, with the severity of the impacts varying by gender, age and the availability of state‐based and Australian Government support programmes. Reduced hours and loss of contracted work and commissions due to the pandemic were both related to declines in income and mental health outcomes for artists and for arts workers. Housing stress was associated with a higher likelihood of a significant or extreme mental health impact for artists and arts workers. In addition, artists' incomes and mental health outcomes were impacted when faced with a reduced ability to sell, although some artists were able to increase their online profiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
145. A qualitative exploration of speech–language pathologists' approaches in treating spoken discourse post‐traumatic brain injury.
- Author
-
Hoffman, Rhianne, Spencer, Elizabeth, and Steel, Joanne
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH therapy , *MEDICAL logic , *MEDICAL protocols , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *CONTENT analysis , *JUDGMENT sampling , *PHYSICIAN practice patterns , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL skills , *BRAIN injuries , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Spoken discourse impairments post‐traumatic brain injury (TBI) are well‐documented and heterogeneous in nature. These impairments have chronic implications for adults in terms of employment, socializing and community involvement. Intervention delivered by a speech–language pathologist (SLP) is recommended for adults with discourse impairments post‐TBI, with an emphasis on context‐sensitive treatment. The developing evidence base indicates a wide array of treatment components for SLPs to evaluate and implement within their clinical practice. However, there is limited insight into how SLPs are currently treating discourse impairments and the rationales informing clinical practice. Aims: To explore the under‐researched area of clinical practice for spoken discourse interventions with adults post‐TBI, including treatment components and clinician rationales, and to contribute towards a shared knowledge base. Methods & Procedures: Participants were recruited via purposeful sampling strategies. Six SLPs participated from Australia, the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (US). Semi‐structured interviews were conducted via Zoom. Interviews were manually transcribed, coded and analysed via a qualitative content analysis approach. Outcomes & Results: :Participants described discourse treatment practices across various settings and TBI recovery stages. Results indicated that SLPs used numerous treatment activities, resources and outcome measures. Intervention approaches primarily targeted social communication skills, strategy development/utilization and insight‐building. Clinical practice conformed to available guidelines where possible, reflected best practice and incorporated components of the research literature. Participants reported using individualized treatment activities aimed at addressing client‐specific factors and rationales prioritized tailored, context‐sensitive and goal‐directed treatment. Conclusions & Implications: This study provided insight into a previously under‐researched area. It highlighted a wide range of treatment activities and factors informing current SLPs' treatment of spoken discourse impairment post‐TBI. Overall, clinical practice and rationales discussed in this study were aligned with best practice and emphasized a contextualized, individualized approach to discourse treatment across service settings and stages of recovery. Participants identified areas requiring further support, including access to training, resources and research, and the challenge of finding suitable outcome measures. Further investigation into discourse management post‐TBI, from initial assessment to outcome measurement, may help inform clinical decision‐making and the transfer of research to practice. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Spoken discourse impairments occur in dialogic and monologic productions post‐TBI. Interventions targeting both genres are detailed within the research literature; however, studies exploring clinical practice and decision‐making for discourse interventions post‐TBI are limited. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study provides new insight into the current treatment targets, activities, resources and outcome measures employed by clinicians supporting adults with discourse impairment post‐TBI. It details the factors that influence clinical decision‐making for this caseload and identifies an emphasis on client priorities and the value of clinician experience. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: This study identifies the broad and complex considerations required to deliver context‐sensitive discourse intervention post‐TBI. It indicates the need for an in‐depth review from assessment to treatment outcomes to better understand and support this area of practice and to direct future research. This study also highlighted the role of clinician experience in discourse intervention and the value of sharing clinical knowledge and resources within and across the profession to support all levels of clinician experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
146. '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.
- Author
-
Brunner, Melissa, Rietdijk, Rachael, Summers, Kayla, Southwell, Kylie, Avramovic, Petra, Power, Emma, Miao, Melissa, Rushworth, Nick, MacLean, Liza, Brookes, Anne‐Maree, and Togher, Leanne
- Subjects
- *
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]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
147. A 'fair go' values framework for public policy.
- Author
-
Howard, Cosmo, Petter, Pandanus, and Pietsch, Juliet
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,PROCEDURAL justice ,TIME pressure ,FAIR value - Abstract
There is a growing interest in how policy processes can better incorporate the values of the communities they serve, yet policymakers face numerous challenges when they seek to embed values into policies. This paper builds on existing values research to develop a bespoke policy values framework for Australia, based on the popular notion of a 'fair go'. While the fair go is often associated with a narrow set of equality and procedural justice values, we show that it has a much wider range of historical and contemporary meanings, which taken together provide a useful starting point for understanding policy values important to Australians. We apply our framework to two policy domains—housing and immigration—to show that it offers an effective heuristic to help policymakers understand key value priorities and conflicts in these policy areas. The paper provides theoretical insights regarding the role of values in policymaking and offers a practical tool for use when designing, implementing, and evaluating policies. Points for practitioners: Community values should inform public policy decision‐making in a democracy. However, incorporating values into policy is difficult because of the wide range of different values to consider, the need to manage tensions and conflicts between values, and the time pressures often faced by policymakers.The popular and enduring notion of the 'fair go' embodies multiple value positions, which cover a range of different values that matter to Australians, making it a good basis for an Australian policy values framework.Our fair go values framework is designed to serve as a heuristic for policymakers when designing and evaluating public policies. It is not intended as a comprehensive guide to value debates in all policy areas, but offers a starting point for quickly appreciating the key value priorities and conflicts in relation to a policy issue. Policymakers should wherever possible follow up with detailed research to understand the complex value debates of different policy issue areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. Sustaining the Australian respiratory workforce through the COVID‐19 pandemic: a scoping literature review.
- Author
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Stone, Emily, Irving, Louis B., Tonga, Katrina O., and Thompson, Bruce
- Subjects
ONLINE information services ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LABOR supply ,EMERGENCY management ,QUALITY assurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The outbreak of the COVID‐19 pandemic in late 2019 and in 2020 presented challenges to healthcare workers (HCW) around the world that were unexpected and dramatic. The relentless progress of infection, starting in China and rapidly spreading to Europe, North America and elsewhere gave more remote countries, like Australia, time to prepare but also time for unease. HCW everywhere had to readjust and change their work practices to cope. Further waves of infection and transmission with newer variants pose challenges to HCW and health systems, even after mass vaccination. Respiratory medicine HCW found themselves at the frontline, developing critical care services to support intensive care units and grappling with unanticipated concerns about safety, risk and the need to retrain. Several studies have addressed the need for rapid changes in the healthcare workforce for COVID‐19 and the impact of this preparation on HCW themselves. In this paper, we present a scoping review of the literature on preparing HCW for the pandemic, explore the Australian experience of building the respiratory workforce and propose evidence‐based recommendations to sustain this workforce in an unprecedented high‐risk environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Lasting legacies: Meeting the housing needs of Forgotten Australians from mid‐life to older age.
- Author
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Coram, Veronica, Tually, Selina, Cornell, Victoria, Zufferey, Carole, and Lovell, Fran
- Subjects
INSTITUTIONAL care of children ,SENIOR housing ,HOMELESSNESS ,MIDDLE age ,LOW-income housing ,RENTAL housing ,HOUSING stability - Abstract
"Forgotten Australians" are the estimated half a million children who were placed in institutional care in Australia from the 1920s to the 1980s. Increasing numbers are entering older age but many are poorly positioned to age well and with the supports they need. This is often because the lasting effects of childhood institutional care have contributed to poor housing outcomes, including housing insecurity, reliance on social housing, prevalence of rental stress and experiences of homelessness. This paper presents a review of the evidence on the housing experiences and outcomes of people who spent time in childhood institutional care. The evidence review was complemented by qualitative interviews with community service practitioners and representatives of advocacy groups. Based on the prior evidence and fieldwork, we identify data and service gaps that are likely to undermine the capacity of the housing and aged care sectors to improve the care and supports available for Forgotten Australians. We suggest potential improvements to service delivery for people who experienced institutional care as children and directions for further research. This paper contributes to a stronger evidence base around the housing and care needs of Forgotten Australians in mid‐ and later life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Exploring the effectiveness of a regional nurse practitioner led, long‐acting injectable buprenorphine‐based model of care for opioid use disorder.
- Author
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Strike, Teresa, D'Angelo‐Kemp, Dante, and Searby, Adam
- Subjects
DRUG addiction ,NARCOTICS ,NEEDLE exchange programs ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,AUDITING ,STATISTICS ,INJECTIONS ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,NURSE administrators ,BUPRENORPHINE ,RURAL conditions ,AMBULANCES ,DRUG overdose ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,REGRESSION analysis ,OUTPATIENT medical care management ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,CONTROLLED release preparations ,COMMUNITY mental health personnel ,STATISTICAL models ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,PAIN management ,OPIOID abuse ,HEROIN - Abstract
The introduction of long‐acting injectable buprenorphine preparations for opioid use disorder has been widely heralded as a breakthrough treatment, with several studies indicating positive results when using these medications. In many locations, nurse practitioners prescribe, administer, and monitor long‐acting injectable preparations. The objective of this paper is to explore whether a reduction in dispensed needles and syringes is attributable to increased nurse practitioner prescribing of LAIB. We used a retrospective audit of needles dispensed through the health service needle and syringe program vending machine, and individuals treated with long‐acting injectable buprenorphine by the nurse practitioner led model. In addition, we examined potential factors that may influence changes in the number of needles dispensed. Linear regression found that each individual with opioid dependence treated with long‐acting injectable buprenorphine was associated with 90 fewer needles dispensed each month (p < 0.001). The nurse practitioner led model of care for individuals with opioid dependence appears to have influenced the number of needles dispensed at the needle and syringe program. Although all confounding factors could not be discounted entirely, such as substance availability, affordability, and individuals obtaining injecting equipment elsewhere, our research indicates that a nurse practitioner led model of treating individuals with opioid use disorder influenced needle and syringe dispensing in the study setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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