18,602 results
Search Results
152. Asymmetry of the Antarctic Oscillation in Austral Autumn.
- Author
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Tang, Yuheng and Duan, Anmin
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ANTARCTIC oscillation ,AUTUMN ,OCEAN temperature ,ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,SELF-organizing maps ,SEA ice - Abstract
The annular structure of Antarctic oscillation (AAO) is a research hotpot, but its asymmetry receives less attention. In this paper, the self‐organizing map method is employed to cluster the AAO patterns into symmetric and asymmetric modes in austral autumn. The asymmetry is mainly reflected in the Pacific‐Atlantic sector, and the AAO evolves toward asymmetric positive polarity, with the most pronounced asymmetry in May. Originating from near Australia, the asymmetry indicates a zonal wave train in the Pacific‐Atlantic sector. Both modeled and observed results demonstrate that the sea surface temperature anomaly in the equatorial western Pacific stimulates a local meridional circulation anomaly and induces anomalous Rossby wave sources near Australia subsequently. An anomalous wave train propagating toward the Antarctic Peninsula is formed, and the associated geopotential anomaly enhances the asymmetry of AAO. Asymmetric AAO is conducive to the Antarctic dipole, which modulates the air temperature and sea ice anomalies around Antarctica. Plain Language Summary: The zonal symmetry of the Antarctic oscillation (AAO; also named southern annular mode) is well known to researchers, while the zonal asymmetry has received less attention. We use a clustering method to cluster the AAO modes in austral autumn into symmetric modes and asymmetric modes. The asymmetry of AAO is mainly reflected in the Pacific‐Atlantic sector. The results show that the AAO mode evolves to a positive asymmetric mode, and the asymmetry is most obvious in May. Both simulations and observations suggest that this asymmetry stems from sea surface temperature anomaly in the equatorial western Pacific that stimulates an anomalous local meridional circulation near Australia, and in turn triggers an anomalous wave train propagating toward the Antarctic Peninsula. The associated geopotential anomalies enhance the asymmetry of AAO. The asymmetric AAO favors the Antarctic dipole, regulating the air temperature and sea ice anomalies around Antarctica. Key Points: Via a cluster method, we obtained the zonal asymmetric Antarctic oscillation (AAO) mode, and analyzed its trend and preferred monthThe source of its asymmetry is from the sea surface temperature anomaly in the tropical western PacificThe asymmetric AAO mode has a vital influence on the Antarctic dipole [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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153. Tools and resources used to support implementation of workplace healthy food and drink policies: A scoping review of grey literature.
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Rosin, Magda, Mackay, Sally, and Ni Mhurchu, Cliona
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WORK environment ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ENGLISH language ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,NUTRITION ,HEALTH information systems ,COMMUNITY support ,HUMAN services programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,FOOD ,LITERATURE reviews ,NUTRITION policy ,GREY literature ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Aims: This study aimed to identify and evaluate tools and resources used to support the implementation of workplace healthy food and drink policies, primarily in Australia and New Zealand. Methods: A scoping grey literature review included searches of government agencies and non‐governmental organisations' websites in six English‐speaking countries, public health nutrition intervention databases and Google search engine queries. Paper‐based and digital tools were included if they were written in English, referred to within a policy or on a policy's website, and primarily targeting supply‐side stakeholders. Tools were evaluated on two domains: 'Features' (summarised descriptively) and 'Usability and Quality' (with inter‐rater reliability scores calculated using an intraclass correlation coefficient). Results: Twenty paper‐based tools were identified relating to Australian (n = 14) and New Zealand (n = 6) policies, and a further six digital tools were identified from Australia (n = 3) and Canada (n = 3). Target audiences included workplace managers, food providers and suppliers. The paper‐based tools focused on general implementation guidance. In contrast, digital tools tended to support specific elements of policy implementation. 'Usability and Quality' scores ranged from 2.9 to 4.5 (out of 5.0) for paper‐based tools, and 3.9 to 4.2 for digital tools, with a moderate agreement between reviewer scores (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.523, p = 0.010). Conclusions: A range of tools have been developed to support the implementation of workplace healthy food and drink policies. Understanding the strengths and limitations of current tools will assist in developing improved aids to support policy implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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154. The economics of drought: A review of impacts and costs.
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Fleming‐Muñoz, David A., Whitten, Stuart, and Bonnett, Graham D.
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DROUGHTS ,SOCIAL impact ,ECONOMIC impact ,COST estimates ,COST - Abstract
Although a growing body of literature studies drought impacts, papers providing a comprehensive review of drought's social and economic impacts are scarce. This paper fills this gap by exploring the consequences of drought on societies based on research findings in Australia—a large country used to experiencing severe droughts. To do this, we propose a framework to categorise drought impacts in three dimensions: individuals/households (including health), productive sectors and system (including economic and ecosystem) impacts. The framework then guides a systematic literature review and discussion of studies looking at diverse drought impacts and their related costs. By analysing and discussing the findings from this literature, we emphasise different policy considerations, empirical challenges and research needs to support robust analysis and estimates of the true cost of droughts. We conclude by proposing an expanded framework to identify drought impacts and a discussion of the implications of the review for policy development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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155. Disability workforce and the NDIS planning process in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia: Scoping review.
- Author
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Gilroy, John, Veli‐Gold, Sarah, Wright, Wayne, Dew, Angela, Jensen, Heather, Bulkeley, Kim, and Lincoln, Michelle
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CINAHL database ,HEALTH policy ,RURAL conditions ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DISABILITY insurance ,LABOR supply ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities ,RESEARCH funding ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,METROPOLITAN areas ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples - Abstract
Background: The Australian geographically rural and remote disability workforce has historically demonstrated difficulties to keep up with the demand for quality services and supports for people with disability. In 2013, the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) was launched to provide individualised disability support packages to meet people's needs. To receive funding, people with disability are required to develop a NDIS plan. That plan is then funded by the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA), the government agency responsible for managing the NDIS. Although the NDIS has been operating for almost 10 years, there is limited research into the planning experiences of the workforce in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia. This review aims to ascertain the level of scholarly investigation into workers' experiences of NDIS planning. Methodology: Research publication databases were searched using a specific search string to identify publications that included reference to the workforce's experiences of the NDIS planning process in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) was adopted to appraise the quality of the research publications. Research publications that focused on those working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were also appraised using the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Quality Appraisal Tool developed by the Centre for Excellence in Aboriginal Chronic Disease Knowledge Translation and Exchange. A thematic synthesis of the publications was undertaken to ascertain disability and health workforce experiences of the NDIS planning process. Results: Seven papers met the selection criteria. Two papers were policy reviews and reported the improvements of the NDIS planning process since its inception. These studies reported four reoccurring themes: (1) cultural/socioeconomic and geographical factors; (2) administrative burden and bureaucracy; (3) values, culture and geography; and (4) burden on allied health workers. Conclusion: The NDIS planning process has developed and progressed since its rollout in 2013. There are limited research papers available that describe the workforce's experience of the planning process in regional, rural and remote regions. More research in this area is needed to identify the experiences of the disability workforce in relation to the NDIS planning process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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156. The importance of understanding Indigenous employment in the Indigenous business sector.
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Eva, Christian, Bodle, Kerry, Foley, Dennis, Harris, Jessica, and Hunter, Boyd
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PRIVATE sector ,BLACK business enterprises ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,JOB involvement ,EMPLOYMENT statistics ,INDIGENOUS rights ,EMPLOYMENT ,INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
Indigenous employment has been the subject of numerous policies in Australia, with governments aiming to increase the workforce participation rate amongst Indigenous people in recent years. Indigenous‐owned businesses, formally defined as businesses that are at least 50% Indigenous‐owned, have been demonstrated in previous research to maintain substantially higher levels of proportional Indigenous employment than non‐Indigenous businesses. This suggests that Indigenous‐owned businesses maintain work environments that are more supportive of and conducive to Indigenous employment, meriting the influence of Indigenous‐owned businesses' workplace practices in future Indigenous employment policy design. Using administrative data from two Indigenous business registries (Black Business Finder and Supply Nation), this paper provides an updated empirical analysis of the Indigenous business sector. This paper demonstrates that Indigenous‐owned businesses of all sizes, industries, locations and profit statuses consistently average proportional Indigenous employment rates higher than the Indigenous proportional population. Of all the people employed in Supply Nation‐listed businesses, over 35% are Indigenous. The potential impact of the Indigenous Procurement Policy is illustrated by differentials in the size of businesses and their capacity to employ Indigenous staff. This paper provides analysis of the Indigenous business sector that can inform future policy direction for both Indigenous employment and Indigenous business policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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157. "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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158. 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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159. Design and co‐configuration for hybrid learning: Theorising the practices of learning space design.
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Goodyear, Peter
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BLENDED learning ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems design ,DISTANCE education ,STUDENT activities ,TEENAGERS ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper draws on a series of studies of design teams working on the creation and evaluation of novel complex learning spaces: spaces in which students' activity is situated and supported by rich mixtures of material and digital tools and resources. In most of the cases observed, students also played a substantial role in co‐configuring the learning spaces and/or the learning tasks they were set and the ways they worked with other students. The complexity of the design challenges involved revealed the inadequacy of normative models for design for learning. In other words, the people creating new spaces for hybrid learning are often doing so in ways that go beyond the capacities of existing design models. The paper draws on analyses of real‐world design practice to advance and illustrate an argument for higher level, more abstract, descriptions of how such work is done, and how design lessons learnt might be more easily shared. In so doing, the paper contributes to the literature on educational technology and learning space design by drawing out some relations between the pragmatics of design practice and the role of students' co‐configurative activity in realising instances of hybrid learning. The empirical research informing the paper was mostly undertaken in university settings, but the practical implications are of wider relevance to people who are professionally involved in shaping novel learning spaces in other areas of education and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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160. Australian contribution to global otolaryngology research: 2008–2018.
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Seah, Yi Gim Jolyn, Bonnici, Aliyah, and Carney, A. Simon
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SURGEONS ,OTOLARYNGOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Obtaining research funding in Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery (ORL‐HNS) can be challenging. In this paper, an analysis of research output in ORL‐HNS in Australia and worldwide between 2008 and 2018 was conducted and then adjusted for the number of specialist surgeons in each country. Methods: Scopus by Elsevier was used to measure research output of Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) surgeons in Australia between 2008 and 2018. Each individual's career and 10‐year h‐index was identified and then repeated with self‐citations excluded. Total and 10‐year citations were also recorded. The top 15 countries in terms of research output in ORL‐HNS were also ranked based on the number of ENT articles published in the 10‐year period, and then adjusted by the number of actively practicing ENT surgeons per country. Results: Between 2008 and 2018, Australia published 1510 articles out of a total global output of 48 613 papers in ORL‐HNS with the top 10 authors having an h‐index placing them within the world's top 100. Whilst the USA made the greatest total contribution with 12 912 publications, when adjusted for the number of specialist ORL‐HNS clinicians in each country, Australia, Canada and India in order topped the rankings. Conclusion: Australia has established itself as a research leader in the global field of ORL‐HNS, publishing more articles per surgeon than any other country between 2008 and 2018. The Australian ORL‐HNS Academic Surgeons also rank highly on an individual basis when compared to global peers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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161. The questionnaire survey as more‐than‐human achievement.
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Wilkinson, Carrie, Gibbs, Leah, and Waitt, Gordon
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SURVEYS ,MONETARY incentives ,TERRITORIAL waters ,ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
Geography is fostering a diverse range of methodologies that engage the more‐than‐human dimensions of research. Debates surround the efficacy of both longstanding and emergent methodological approaches in grappling with how to do more‐than‐human geography. Much attention has been given to the methodological implications of theoretical debates that evoke distributed agency and calls to "enliven" research. To date, however, questionnaire surveys have not been considered as part of these deliberations. Survey response rates are normally reported as percentages, with scholarly attention focusing on how question design, financial incentives, and delivery format may influence human engagement with the questionnaire. Little attention has been paid to questionnaire survey methods in or for more‐than‐human research. Inversely, there is also little discussion of the agency of non‐human bodies, processes, and materials, and how they work for or against survey completion. This paper contributes to these deliberations by exploring more‐than‐human agency in the delivery and completion of a postal questionnaire, distributed to rural households that are self‐sufficient for water on the south coast of New South Wales, Australia. By focusing on the elements, infrastructure, and animals that work with and against survey delivery and completion, we show that questionnaire surveys are a more‐than‐human achievement. Consideration of the chewed and weathered survey, and the more‐than‐human processes that influence its delivery and completion, matters in challenging "human‐centred" notions of field research. We argue that what we know about the world through a survey is always a performative process, not only by considering how research design aligns with politics and knowledge practices, but also the more‐than‐human. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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162. Diagnostic Radiology Publication rates of abstracts presented at annual scientific meetings: How does the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists compare?
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Bydder, Sean A., Joseph, David J., and Spry, Nigel A.
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ABSTRACTS ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,MEDICAL radiology ,MEDICAL literature - Abstract
The abstract to publication ratio (APR) is a measure of the quality of scientific meetings. The aim of the present study was to determine the publication rate of abstracts presented at annual Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists (RANZCR) conferences, and to identify the publishing journals. All free paper research abstracts (oral or poster) presented by RANZCR radiologists, radiation oncologists and trainees at the four consecutive meetings between 1996 and 1999 were identified retrospectively from conference programmes. The PubMed database ( ) was searched to determine whether or not the abstract had been published as a full paper. Of the 480 free paper research abstracts, 168 (35%) had been published as full articles. The overall abstract to publication ratio for radiology was 29% and for radiation oncology was 41%. Papers were published in a variety of journals but Australasian Radiology accounted for 27%. The mean time between presentation and publication was 16.5 months (median 17 months). These overall abstract to publication ratios are lower than those reported for overseas-based meetings in each respective area. Guidelines to scientific committees could increase the APR by more rigorous selection of abstracts. Future research should look at barriers to the publication of research findings, and identify ways to assist the publication process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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163. Systematic review of sirolimus in dermatological conditions.
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Swarbrick, Andrew W, Frederiks, Aaron J, and Foster, Rachael S
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RAPAMYCIN ,MUCOSITIS ,TUBEROUS sclerosis ,DRUGS ,DRUG efficacy ,KIDNEY transplantation - Abstract
Sirolimus is a mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor (mTORI) with anti‐proliferative, antiangiogenic and immunosuppressive properties. While approved in Australia as an anti‐rejection medication for renal transplant patients, there is mounting evidence regarding the utility of oral and topical sirolimus in treating a plethora of dermatological conditions or conditions with cutaneous manifestations. Our aim was to present an overview of the evidence for current usage and breadth of the application of sirolimus in dermatology. We carried out a systematic review of all the literature published up to 31 August 2019 on oral and topical sirolimus with respect to dermatological conditions or conditions otherwise relevant to dermatology. While 3368 papers were initially produced in our search, 238 papers met our inclusion criteria and were examined in our review. The conditions examined were categorised into genodermatoses (9 conditions), infection (1 condition), inflammatory/autoimmune (10 conditions), neoplasm (3 conditions) and vascular (17 conditions). We extracted data on first author, publication year, journal, characteristics of the study and study patients, condition, drug modalities, drug efficacy, side effects, blood level of mTORI, co‐interventions and follow‐up. While there is level 1 evidence for the efficacy of sirolimus in conditions such as tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) and GVHD prophylaxis, for many other conditions, the evidence is limited to level 4 evidence. Regarding oral systemic therapy, dosing regimens varied with the most common for children 0.8mg/m2 twice daily and for adults 1 mg twice daily. Doses were often adjusted to reach a typical trough level of between 5 and 15 ng/mL, though targets often varied. In the overall majority of cases, side effects were minimal or tolerable, including mucositis, cytopenias, lipid abnormalities and nausea/vomiting, and only a few cases had to stop due to adverse effects. Regarding topical therapy, concentration of formulations varied from 0.1% to 1% and were compounded into creams, ointments or gels and administered typically once or twice per day. The most common side effect was skin irritation. There were a number of limitations to our study. In particular, many of the published studies were case reports or case series with no comparator arm, leading to susceptibility of bias in conclusions drawn, in particular a high likelihood of publication bias. Given the heterogeneity amongst studies, comparisons or aggregation of results was difficult. There continues to be growing use of oral and topical sirolimus in dermatological conditions. It provides new therapeutic options to patients where previous therapies have either failed or are limited due to toxicity. However, further studies are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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164. 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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165. Charting the policy development process of social housing bonds in Australia through an impact narrative approach.
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Fotheringham, Michael, Gorter, Tamlin, and Badenhorst, Anne
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HOUSING policy ,SOCIAL bonds ,HOUSING ,SOCIAL processes ,COMMUNITY housing ,URBAN research - Abstract
The Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute (AHURI) has, since its inception, prioritised policy relevance in its research. Drawing on an impact narrative approach, this paper presents a case study of the contribution of AHURI research to the development of a specific policy initiative: the Affordable Housing Bond Aggregator function of the National Housing and Finance Investment Corporation (NHFIC). The paper will explore the development of this policy initiative through a series of research projects and publications, and highlight processes of dissemination and engagement with the policy and practice community. This will reveal the value of a strong evidence‐base, and effective knowledge transfer mechanisms in the development and implementation of policy. It will also demonstrate the utility of a policy impact narrative approach in the evaluation of research impact, particularly in relation to policy development processes subject to the vagaries of politics. This policy impact narrative presents a case study of the contribution of the research and policy engagement practices of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute (AHURI) to the implementation of a policy initiative. AHURI research on institutional investment in social and affordable housing refined and tested this model for financing community housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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166. Behaviour and design of duplex stainless steel CHS stub columns at elevated temperature.
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Mohammed, Asif and Cashell, Katherine A.
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HIGH temperatures ,DUPLEX stainless steel ,CONCRETE-filled tubes ,NUMERICAL analysis - Abstract
This paper investigates the behaviour and design of duplex stainless steel stub columns with a circular hollow cross‐section (CHS) at elevated temperature. A numerical model is developed to supplement the limited number of test results available in the literature. Following validation, the numerical approach is employed to gain an understanding of the critical behavioural characteristics which have not previously been studied. In addition, the paper considers and extends the continuous strength method (CSM) to include duplex stainless steel for CHS stub columns in fire. This approach employs a base curve linking the cross‐sectional resistance to the deformation capacity and is implemented herein using an elastic, linear hardening material model. The cross‐sectional resistances obtained from the CSM are compared with those from the numerical analysis, as well as with the standardised procedures in the European, American and Australia/New Zealand design standards. It is demonstrated that the proposed design method can lead to more accurate and less scattered strength predictions compared with current design codes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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167. Digital policy to disability employment? An ecosystem perspective on China and Australia.
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Li, Bingqin, Fisher, Karen R., Farrant, Frances Quan, and Cheng, Zhiming
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DIGITAL technology ,DISABILITIES ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Globally, labour markets are encountering profound changes because of the digital revolution. Middle‐income countries such as China are leapfrogging high‐income countries to take advantage of the digital economy. The growing use of digital technologies is also reshaping the labour market in high‐income countries such as Australia. Potentially, new technologies may facilitate both employers and employees to overcome some of the barriers to disability employment. However, it seems that the opportunities and hopes have not yet translated into improved employment rate for people with disability. This paper uses an ecosystem framework to examine the state's role in improving the critical elements of disability employment: developing a national strategy, creating employment opportunities, building capacity and enhancing accessibility. This paper compares the historical development of disability employment and the policies introduced to take advantage of digital technologies across China and Australia. It studies the national policies, funded activities and the governing structure in China and Australia. The findings revealed distinctive approaches that have played to the strengths of each country. However, both countries need to address the weaker links to deliver a real paradigm shift. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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168. Bourdieu and position‐making in a changing field: Enactment of the national curriculum in Australia.
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Musofer, Reshma Parveen and Lingard, Bob
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NATIONAL curriculum ,EDUCATION policy ,DATA analysis ,HYSTERESIS - Abstract
This paper draws on Bourdieu's theorising (particularly habitus and field) to think about position‐making of teachers in respect of the early enactment of the Australian Curriculum. Position‐making, a concept developed from the analysis proffered, can be contrasted with the more common practice of position‐taking endemic in a relatively stable field. Position‐making is an ongoing phenomenon in a changing field when the habitus is out of place, here the field of the new Australian Curriculum, creating the effect of what Bourdieu sees as hysteresis. This paper explores the positioning and re‐positioning of agents (teachers and school leaders) due to an external change (the Australian curriculum) in the schooling field. Data for this study were collected from a middle‐class state high school in Brisbane Australia, which was an early adopter of the new Australian Curriculum. The initial enactment phase of curriculum change was an unsettling one that (re)positioned agents—hence, the concept of position‐making, which is a contribution to Bourdieu's theoretical resources and which complements the idea of policy enactment as opposed to policy implementation. Both allow some agency in mediation of mandated changes in the specific contexts of schools and teacher/leader habitus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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169. The Industrial Impact of Economic Uncertainty Shocks in Australia*.
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Burrell, Hamish and Vespignani, Joaquin
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ECONOMIC shock ,ECONOMIC impact ,FISCAL policy ,FINANCIAL services industry ,PUBLIC administration ,MONETARY policy - Abstract
Understanding the impact of economic uncertainty shocks at the industrial disaggregated level is critical for both fiscal and monetary policy response. We estimate an SVAR model using quarterly Australian data from 1987:2 to 2018:4. The results of this paper emphasise that individual industries have a unique response to an economic uncertainty shock and do not necessarily reflect the response of the broader aggregate macroeconomy. We found the following stylised facts: (i) The construction industry is the most negatively impacted industry by an economic uncertainty shock in terms of investment, output and employment in Australia, (ii) The financial and insurance services industry also endures a substantial decline to the shock, particularly on investment and employment indicators, and (iii) Economic uncertainty is shown to have less impact on the mining, health care and social assistance and public administration and safety industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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170. Forthcoming Papers.
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PERIODICALS ,STATISTICS - Abstract
Presents a list of research papers to be published in the succeeding issues of "Australian & New Zealand Journal of Statistics" after December 2003.
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- 2003
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171. Habla Mi Idioma? An Exploratory Review of Working Systemically with People from Diverse Cultures: An Australian Perspective.
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Amorin‐Woods, Deisy
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CINAHL database ,GROUNDED theory ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
This paper presents a review of the literature informed by both grounded theory and phenomenology, which explores how culture is addressed in the family therapy field with particular emphasis on Australia. The primary aim of the study is to identify the issues and relevant publications that can inform and guide Australian family therapists in working with clients from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. The secondary aim is to provide recommendations that may inform research directions and clinical practice. The results indicate that this challenge is not unique to Australia; indeed the issue is ubiquitous across the Western world. This paper attempts to provide an impetus for future dialogue and to precipitate discussion around the development of a culturally sensitive approach in the Australian family therapy field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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172. Bat ecology and conservation in semi‐arid and arid landscapes: a global systematic review.
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Lisón, Fulgencio, Jiménez‐Franco, María V., Altamirano, Adison, Haz, Ángeles, Calvo, José F., and Jones, Gareth
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MAMMAL conservation ,BAT ecology ,BAT conservation ,META-analysis ,ECOLOGY ,SURFACE of the earth - Abstract
Semi‐arid and arid landscapes (dry‐lands) cover 41% of the Earth's land surface over five continents. These areas are home to 55% of mammal species. Bats have the second highest species richness among mammals, and, although many species are adapted to arid conditions, they are particularly sensitive in these habitats and require conservation priority.Information on bats in arid and semi‐arid landscapes is scattered, patchy and focused on small‐scale studies; therefore, we undertook a systematic review using the PRISMA protocol to identify the current knowledge status, detect knowledge gaps and propose future research priorities.We analysed 346 published articles and evaluated 40 topics within five topic categories (taxa studied, methodologies used, biology, ecology and conservation). The most commonly studied topic categories were ecology and biology. However, we found a gap in the topic category conservation (including topics such as conservation status and roost conservation). Our network analysis of topics within the categories showed that most ecology papers were focused on distribution, species richness and habitat use.When we analysed keywords, we found that phylogeny, taxonomy and distribution demonstrated relatively high presence. Moreover, comparison of the percentage of studies conducted in dry‐lands and the percentage of land surface area covered by dry‐lands in the continents revealed that dry‐lands in Africa and Australia were especially under‐represented. Our review shows that knowledge of bats in semi‐arid and arid landscapes is biased towards new records of the distribution of species, as well as covering systematic/taxonomic and morphological aspects of bat biology.We suggest that research on conservation measures and guidelines to protect the bat species found in semi‐arid and arid landscapes should be prioritised, together with the sharing of knowledge with local practitioners and the development of citizen science programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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173. Barriers to finding and maintaining open employment for people with intellectual disability in Australia.
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Meltzer, Ariella, Robinson, Sally, and Fisher, Karen R.
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EMPLOYMENT of people with intellectual disabilities ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,EMPLOYEE rights ,LABOR market - Abstract
Everyone has the right to employment. Work is important for health, well‐being, and social, economic, and financial inclusion. However, it is often difficult for people with intellectual disability to find and maintain work, especially in the open labour market. Policy challenges remain about who can access open employment (also sometimes called competitive or supported employment) and how often people with intellectual disability do so. Greater understanding about the barriers that people with intellectual disability encounter when they try to find and keep work in open employment is needed. Drawing on research with 51 people with intellectual disability in Australia, this paper examines the systemic barriers they report to finding and maintaining work in open employment. The findings highlight that the barriers they experience stem from narrow, dismissive, and discouraging attitudes to their work in open employment and from a spectrum of experiences of stigma and discrimination in open workplaces. The paper thus provides new knowledge about reasons that people with intellectual disability may either reject or not continue in open employment and take up less inclusive work options. The paper discusses the implications of the findings, including the need for policy development for attitudinal change, designing more varied roles for employees with intellectual disability, ensuring access to industrial relations protections, and increasing and better regulating and funding requirements on support to people with intellectual disability who are seeking work in open employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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174. Experience, represent, apply (ERA): A heuristic for digital engagement in the early years.
- Author
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Lowrie, Tom and Larkin, Kevin
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STEM education ,DIGITAL technology ,STUDENT engagement ,TABLET computers in education ,CONTEXTUAL learning ,HEURISTIC ,TEACHING - Abstract
This paper presents an heuristic that underpinned the development of a range of early years applications (apps) as part of the Early Learning Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Australia (ELSA) project (2016–19). The heuristic was developed to address a range of challenges that accompany the use of digital technologies in the year before formal schooling. These include the role of digital technologies in play‐based learning environments, screen time and the importance of agency when young children are using digital technologies. In an increasingly digital world, the issue of screen time looms large as a particularly contested aspect of technology use by young children. The ELSA project responded to this challenge by developing a pedagogical framework that embedded digital technologies into context‐rich, play‐based STEM learning. The Experience, Represent, Apply (ERA) heuristic discussed in this paper is a component of the project's overall pedagogical framework and provides early years educators with the opportunity, and the know‐how, to integrate digital technologies into STEM activities through intentional teaching and play‐based engagement. It was evident from educator feedback at the four days of workshops we delivered, and in other comments throughout the year long trial, that the educators were able to embrace the cyclic nature of the ERA heuristic and ensure that the time spent on the tablet (Represent) was connected to contextualised learning opportunities (Experience and Apply). Importantly, the tablets provided affordances for the children to utilise User Generated Content (UGC) to support active engagement when using the tablets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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175. Effects of an electronic medication management system on pharmacists' work in a paediatric hospital.
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Baysari, Melissa T., Hardie, Rae‐Anne, Barclay, Peter, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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CHILDREN'S hospitals ,DRUG delivery systems ,HEALTH ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSES' attitudes ,ONCOLOGISTS ,PHARMACISTS ,INFORMATION resources ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,WORKFLOW ,SYSTEMS development ,SOCIAL support ,TASK performance ,MEDICATION therapy management ,ELECTRONIC health records ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel - Abstract
Background: Many studies have explored the effect of electronic medication management systems (EMMS) on doctors' and nurses' work, but few have focused specifically on pharmacists' work. Aim: This study examined how implementation of a commercial EMMS affected the work of pharmacists in an Australian paediatric hospital. In particular, the study investigated whether any pharmacy tasks changed or were eliminated, or whether new tasks emerged following EMMS introduction. Methods: Two rounds of semistructured interviews with pharmacists, one 4 months and the other 1 year after EMMS implementation, were conducted. In total, 17 pharmacists were interviewed, comprising inpatient, outpatient and oncology pharmacists, as well as pharmacy managers. Results: EMMS implementation eliminated a small number of tasks, changed some tasks and created many new work tasks for pharmacists. These new tasks included helping doctors and nurses to use the EMMS, duplicated data entry and the review of additional information. Pharmacists held the view that their workload had increased and that additional pharmacists were necessary to cope with the new work requirements associated with the EMMS. Some problems were perceived to be the result of implementation of a US‐designed EMMS that did not fully support Australian pharmacy workflows. Conclusion: Implementation of an EMMS in a paediatric hospital affected pharmacists' work in a variety of ways, predominately by introducing new tasks. Anticipating how workflows will change with EMMS implementation is challenging. Undertaking regular reviews of workflow and planning for an increased burden on pharmacy staff is likely to improve the transition from paper to electronic medication management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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176. Modelling electrical conductivity variation using a travel time distribution approach in the Duck River catchment, Australia.
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Riazi, Zahra, Western, Andrew W., and Bende‐Michl, Ulrike
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TRAVEL time (Traffic engineering) ,ELECTRIC conductivity ,STREAM salinity ,TIME management ,AGE distribution ,WATERSHEDS ,SOIL salinity - Abstract
Solute dynamics depend strongly on hydrologic flow paths and transit times within catchments. In this paper, we use a travel time tracking method to simulate stream salinity (as measured by electrical conductivity) in the Duck River catchment, NW Tasmania, Australia. The study couples storage selection function transit time modelling with two alternate approaches to model electrical conductivity (EC). The first approach assumes the catchment has a cyclic salt balance (i.e., rainfall source, stream flow sink) that is in dynamic equilibrium and evapoconcentration of salt is the only process changing concentration. The second approach assumes that the salinity of water in catchment storages is a function of water age in those stores, without explicitly simulating salt mass balance processes. The paper compares these alternate approaches in terms of EC simulation performance, simulated stream water age distributions, and simulated storage age distributions. A split sample calibration‐validation analysis was conducted using the 2008 and 2009 water years. Both EC simulation approaches reproduced stream EC variations very well under both calibration and validation. The simulations using the age‐related EC simulation approach produced less biased results and, consequently, higher model coefficient of efficiency for validation periods. This approach also produced more consistent model parameter estimates between periods. There were systematic differences in the resultant age distributions between models, particularly for the solute balance‐based simulations where parameters (catchment storage size) changed more between the two calibration periods. The effect of time varying versus static storage selection functions were compared, with clear evidence that time varying storage selection functions with parameters linked to catchment conditions (flow) are essential for adequate simulation of EC dynamics during flow events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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177. 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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178. A Comprehensive Assessment of Floodwater Depth Estimation Models in Semiarid Regions.
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Teng, J., Penton, D. J., Ticehurst, C., Sengupta, A., Freebairn, A., Marvanek, S., Vaze, J., Gibbs, M., Streeton, N., Karim, F., and Morton, S.
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ARID regions ,DIGITAL elevation models ,FLOODS ,REMOTE sensing ,WATER depth - Abstract
Simple models continue to be important for continental‐scale floodwater depth mapping due to the prohibitively expensive cost of calibrating and applying hydrodynamic models. This paper investigates the accuracy of three simple models for floodwater depth estimation from remote sensing derived water extent and/or Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) in semiarid regions. The three models are Height Above Nearest Drainage (HAND; Nobre et al., 2011, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2011.03.051), Teng Vaze Dutta (TVD; Teng et al., 2013, http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/97033?index=1), and Floodwater Depth Estimation Tool (FwDET; Cohen, Brakenridge, et al., 2018, https://doi.org/10.1111/1752-1688.12609). The model accuracy and nature of errors are established using industry's best practice hydrodynamic models as benchmarks in three regions in eastern Australia. The overall results show that FwDET tends to underestimate (by 0.32 m at 50th percentile) while HAND and TVD overestimate floodwater depth for almost all floods (by 0.97 and 0.98 m, respectively). We quantify how switching DEM from 5 m LiDAR to national or global data sets DEM‐H (Gallant et al., 2011, https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/72759), MERIT (Yamazaki et al., 2019, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019WR024873), or FABDEM (Hawker et al., 2022, https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac4d4f) can affect different models differently; and we evaluate model performance against reach geomorphology and magnitude of flood events. The findings emphasize the importance of choosing a model that is fit for the intended application. By describing the applicability, advantages, and limitations of these models, this paper assists practitioners to choose the most appropriate model based on characteristics of their study area, type of problems they try to solve, and data availability. Plain Language Summary: We have assessed the performance of three simple models for estimating floodwater depth by evaluating their accuracy against different Digital Elevation Model inputs, characteristics of study area, and magnitude of flood events. Our results emphasize that selection of an appropriate model depends on the circumstances. This study provides recommendations for future studies that enhance remote sensing‐based flood maps with water depth, making use of the growing number of publicly available remote sensing water extent and digital elevation data sets globally. All the methods have been coded in Python and are freely available at https://github.com/csiro-hydroinformatics/water-depth-estimation. Key Points: We assessed three simple models for estimating floodwater depth by comparing their results with those of hydrodynamic modelsThe model performance was evaluated against reach geomorphology, magnitude of flood events, and different Digital Elevation Model inputsThe results emphasize that a model should be chosen for the intended application. Guidelines provided for possible applications [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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179. Australia's Fiscal Space: The Role of Public Investment.
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Domínguez, Begoña and Quiggin, John
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PUBLIC investments ,PUBLIC spaces ,DEBT-to-GDP ratio ,PUBLIC finance ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
How large is Australia's fiscal space? Blanchard (2019) shows that as long as the real interest rate R $R$ is below the real growth rate G $G$, a government can sustain a positive primary deficit with a constant (or even declining) ratio of public debt to GDP. In this article, we explain the neutral real interest rate and the reasons for its decline. Then, we discuss the results of a companion paper, Domínguez and Quiggin (2022), in which we quantify the fiscal space for Australia and find that a permanent increase in the primary deficit can be afforded up to reaching a debt to GDP ratio of 79 per cent. Furthermore, this so‐called 'free lunch' in the fiscal space can be expanded if debt is used to finance public investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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180. Ethics and consent in more‐than‐human research: Some considerations from/with/as Gumbaynggirr Country, Australia.
- Author
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Smith, Aunty Shaa, Marshall, Uncle Bud, Smith, Neeyan, Wright, Sarah, Daley, Lara, and Hodge, Paul
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INDIGENOUS Australians ,HUMAN geography ,RESEARCH ethics - Abstract
A considerable body of recent work within the social sciences has attempted to engage more deeply with place, place‐based knowledge, and more‐than‐human agency. Yet what this might look like in relation to ethical research practice, especially in the case of research proceeding on unceded Indigenous lands, is unclear. Taking more‐than‐human agency seriously means ethical research practice must be extended beyond a human‐centric approach. As a Gumbaynggirr and non‐Gumbaynggirr research collective researching on, with, and as Gumbaynggirr Country in so‐called Australia, we offer a contribution to discussions of research ethics and protocols that centres the consent of Country: the lands, waters, and skies of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander homelands, and the human and more‐than‐human beings that co‐become there. In this paper, we share some of our learnings and discuss how we have tried not just to listen to Country but also to honour its agencies, knowledges, and sovereignties. As part of this honouring, we prioritise in particular the deeply placed Gumbaynggirr knowledges of Aunty Shaa Smith and Uncle Bud Marshall to explore what being guided by Gumbaynggirr Law/Lore and sovereignty means in practice and the challenges and possibilities of gaining consent of Country in ways underpinned by Indigenous Law/Lore. We propose a more expansive understanding of consent that includes attention to more‐than‐human sovereignties and draw on our collective's learning to reframe the need for limits on research as openings rather than closures. In sharing our Gumbaynggirr‐led and Country‐led perspectives, we aim to deepen decolonising research praxis within human geography and the social sciences more broadly. What do ethics and consent look like in the context of more‐than‐human research? Writing as Yandaarra, a collective of Gumbaynggirr Elders, Gumbaynggirr and non‐Gumbaynggirr family members, and geographers, this paper centres Gumbaynggirr Country, Australia, to engage questions around responsibilities and obligations to honour Indigenous ways of knowing/being/doing. In doing so we challenge human‐centric notions of consent to take seriously more‐than‐human agencies and their rights to give or refuse consent in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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181. Evaluation of the implementation of a speech and language therapist‐led referring model for VFSS using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).
- Author
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Taubert, Shana T., Burns, Clare L., Ward, Elizabeth C., and Bassett, Lynell
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EVALUATION of human services programs ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,FLUOROSCOPY ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,THEORY ,RESEARCH funding ,COMMUNICATION ,CONTENT analysis ,SPEECH therapists ,MEDICAL research ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Background: Speech and language therapists (SLTs) use videofluoroscopic swallow study (VFSS) results to manage dysphagia. Yet, in some services only doctors can directly request a VFSS, potentially creating workflow inefficiencies and delaying patient access to VFSS. An alternative model, where SLTs directly refer patients for VFSS, is used in many services in the UK and Australia. However, processes for implementing and sustaining this model have not been reported. Aims: To evaluate the implementation of an SLT‐led inpatient VFSS referring model using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to ascertain implementation barriers, facilitators and critical sustainability factors. Methods & Procedures: This implementation evaluation examined stakeholder perceptions of implementing the SLT‐led VFSS referring model via interviews of (1) SLTs who treat and refer inpatients for VFSS; (2) doctors who manage and refer inpatients for VFSS; (3) radiologists; and (4) trained VFSS referring SLTs. The CFIR was used to prospectively guide implementation planning, evaluation and outcome reporting, regarding barriers, facilitators and sustainability factors. Outcomes & Results: Implementation facilitators were (1) the advantage of SLT‐led VFSS referring over the standard model (doctors referring), in promoting high‐quality VFSS referrals; (2) compatibility of the model with the SLT skill set; (3) supportive communication networks between staff groups; and (4) engaging stakeholders throughout implementation. Adequate availability of trained VFSS referring SLTs was both a barrier and a facilitator of implementation. It was also a critical sustainability factor, along with ongoing staff education and outcome monitoring. Conclusions & Implications: The CFIR supported systematic evaluation of implementation facilitators and barriers, and adjustment of factors critical for implementing and sustaining the new model. Findings may assist other organizations to establish the SLT‐led VFSS referring model. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: Models where SLTs directly refer patients for VFSS have been described in the literature, with evidence of appropriate referrals and adherence to radiation safety standards. However, the process for establishing and sustaining this referring model has not been published. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study describes the process and outcomes of implementing an SLT‐led VFSS referring model, using the CFIR. A key advantage of the new model that facilitated implementation was the improved quality of VFSS referrals compared with the standard referring model. Important facilitating factors in the environment were the compatibility of the model with SLTs' skillset and supportive communication network between doctors and SLTs. Initially, an implementation barrier was the inadequate availability of trained SLT referrers. Using proactive implementation strategies, more referrers were trained (which was a facilitating factor for implementing and sustaining the model). What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: This study highlights that successful implementation requires more than just an effective model. Features of the environment require consideration to minimize barriers and optimize facilitating factors, supported by proactive implementation strategies. Planning and evaluating implementation processes and outcomes using a standardized implementation framework such as CFIR aided understanding of barriers and facilitators for introducing the SLT‐led VFSS referring model. This process may assist other services to implement the model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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182. A Framework for Identifying and Managing New Operational Requirements during Naval Vessel Batch‐Building Programs.
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SYSTEMS development ,OPERATIONAL definitions ,LITERATURE reviews ,BATCH processing - Abstract
One approach to building a class of naval vessels that has recently been adopted in Australia is to fix a design for a subset of the total number of vessels to be built. These subsets can be termed batches, or flights of vessels. The batch‐building approach allows incremental changes to be made to the design for the follow‐on batches and is analogous to evolutionary systems development. These design changes will be a response to updated operational requirements that typically result from the maturation of technology that needs to be integrated into the design or shifting geo‐political circumstances that change the capability needs. A third key driver of new operational requirements that is not currently managed in a robust, traceable manner is the need to adapt the design of the vessel to account for how it is actually being used in‐service. This need arises due to the potential mismatch between the operational scenarios and operational profiles developed during requirements definition activities and the operational profile the crew adopts when actually using the vessel in operations. Such a mismatch between the owner's original operational requirements and the in‐service operational profile can result in sub‐optimal outcomes for the vessel's performance. This paper investigates the research question: "how can new operational requirements be identified, managed and integrated to the design of follow‐on batches of vessels in a naval vessel batch‐building program?" The paper begins with an introduction into the effect a mismatched design and in‐service operational profile can have on vessel performance. It is followed by a review of the open literature covering naval vessel batch‐building and evolutionary system development. From this review, a high‐level framework for incorporating updated operational requirements based on in‐service operational data, new technology, or changes in strategic circumstances into the design of follow‐on batches in naval vessel batch‐building programs is synthesized. The paper concludes with some initial observations on how the framework's implementation could be supported by digital engineering and outlines key aspects that are required to support its implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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183. Context and Implications Document for: From resilience to wellbeing: Identity‐building as an alternative framework for schools' role in promoting children's mental health.
- Author
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Brown, Ceri and Shay, Marnee
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MENTAL health ,GROUP identity - Published
- 2021
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184. Dilemmas, decision‐making, and disasters: Emotions of parenting, safety, and rebuilding in bushfire recovery.
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de Vet, Eliza, Eriksen, Christine, and McKinnon, Scott
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EMERGENCY management ,DISASTER resilience ,WILDFIRES ,PARENTING ,DISASTERS ,WORKING parents - Abstract
Increasing numbers of households are impacted by disasters due to population growth, increasing development in higher risk areas, and climate change. While emergency management in Australia aims to reduce quantifiable losses, lived disaster and recovery experiences are relatively mute, with implications for mitigation and post‐disaster support. This paper draws on findings from a research project that set out to examine the role of insurance in household recovery after the 2013 Blue Mountains bushfires in New South Wales. Among the 19 interview participants, prioritisation of the needs of children was found to hinder personal recovery. Drawing on this key finding, this paper focuses on parents' emotion work and emotions surrounding home. Innate desires to provide good care monopolised parents' emotions and emotional outlets, as they worked to conceal threats and (re)establish a sense of normalcy. Emotion work drained parents, as did threats to, and the loss of, "home" created through "dwelling." When homes burnt, so too did memories of children embodied in that home – memories that had permeated the material space. This sense of loss intensified when informing children about losses – an act that breached parents' protective instincts and necessitated additional emotional care. Emotions escalated as capacities for care were challenged or eroded in the absence of home contents that normally would have anchored daily routines and provided stability. Replacing such items dominated parents' recovery efforts – efforts encumbered by competing recovery demands, yet facilitated to some degree by insurance safety‐nets. These emotions impacted parents' mental and physical wellbeing in the four years that separated the bushfires and the interviews. While there is considerable literature outlining parents' role in lessening disaster impacts on children, few studies examine parents' capacity to do so. In addressing this gap, this paper highlights avenues to improve psychosocial aspects of disaster recovery. Parenting is challenging at the best of times, let alone in disasters. Focusing on the 2013 Blue Mountains bushfires in Australia, this paper explores the emotions involved in caring for children while surviving and recovering from a disaster. Insights from "emotion work" and the loss of "home" – structures bound with memories and resources for good care – highlight both demands on parents and avenues to improve post‐disaster wellbeing for families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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185. Addressing Australia's collaboration 'problem': Is there a Brave New World of innovation policy post COVID‐19?
- Author
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George, AJ and Tarr, Julie‐Anne
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COVID-19 ,POLICY sciences ,HIGHER education ,HIGHER education research ,DELIBERATIVE democracy - Abstract
In a post‐COVID‐19 world, innovation stimuli and well‐aligned policies will assume even greater importance as various sectors seek to recover lost ground and to generate new opportunities. Collaborative partnering in innovation research and development (R&D) between private industry and higher education has increasingly emerged over the last decade as a leading key performance indicator for government policy development, and higher education research funding allocations. Recalibration of R&D‐related policies and incentivisation will require careful consideration, with constructive lessons to be learned from outcomes over the last four decades. This paper presents findings from a new study of stakeholder perceptions as to the National Innovation and Science Agenda's impact on innovation partnerships, and synthesises outcomes from two prior studies. It then examines a newly proposed innovation policy framework, Stimulating Business Investment in Innovation (SBII), set against a background of the shifting mix of paradigms that have comprised Australian innovation policy over the last 40 years. It argues that, following the SBII, any proposed change of policy direction will face significant challenges in its implementation, requiring a fully committed and comprehensive embrace by Government of the new APS engagement framework and greater levels of deliberative democracy. Industry–research partnering is a key performance indicator for government policy and research funding. This Paper synthesizes three studies on innovation, set against the shifting mix of paradigms in innovation policy over the last 40 years. Policymakers must embrace the new engagement framework, and deliberative democracy, when adopting new innovation policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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186. Ground‐Rent and Capital Accumulation in Australia.
- Author
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Grinberg, Nicolás
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IRON ores ,LAND mines ,LAND use ,COAL - Abstract
This paper presents an original estimation of the size of the ground‐rent appropriated by competing social subjects in the Australian economy over the long term, and of several economic variables necessary to accomplish that measurement. The paper also assesses the relative importance of ground‐rent in total surplus‐value and the Australian process of capital accumulation, finding that it constitutes a significant portion. Finally, the paper estimates the determinants of the ground‐rent yielded by mining lands used to produced iron ore and mineral coal during the recent 'commodities price boom', stressing the importance of the location factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
187. Effective Marginal Tax or Benefit? The Medicare Levy and Australian Defence Personnel.
- Author
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Manning, Elizabeth
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TAX benefits ,MEDICARE ,TAX rates ,AUSTRALIANS - Abstract
Does the phase‐in of the Australian Medicare levy as family income increases always contribute to a high effective marginal tax rate (EMTR)? Or are there circumstances in which the targeted nature of the Medicare levy in Australia can result in an effective marginal benefit (EMB) to family income as the income of the secondary income earner increases? This paper explains the concept of an EMB, providing examples and estimating the impact across different income ranges. The paper concludes that the existence of EMBs may lessen the impact of high EMTRs to some extent for the families affected. This is of particular importance to Australian Defence Force families in which the secondary income earner moves in and out of employment as the family relocates due to the defence posting cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
188. Pre‐arrival temporalities of displacement in refugee migration: The case of resettled Ethiopian refugees in Australia.
- Author
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Tefera, Goshu Wolde
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REFUGEES ,ETHIOPIANS ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
For refugees, displacement involves a reconfiguration of both space and time. Yet the temporal aspect receives less emphasis in existing geographic research. Paying attention to the temporal dimension can generate conceptually innovative insights into how temporality shapes refugees' experiences of displacement. Based on empirical research conducted with Ethiopian refugees in Melbourne, the paper considers how the participants experienced time throughout their migration journeys until their arrival in Australia. The participants' accounts suggest that their pre‐arrival displacement experiences were characterised by four novel distinct temporal features: spontaneity,disorientation, transposition, and incessancy. Recounting their stories, the participants pointed out that they were excluded from time and space, while simultaneously being engaged in temporary place‐making endeavours, navigating through multiple temporalities. Being displaced has altered their connections not only to places but also to times of which they are a part. The paper expands the growing theme of time and temporalities in geographic and migration research while showing how refugee experiences are dictated and controlled by time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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189. Co‐designing community‐focused rural placements for collaborative practice.
- Author
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Hyde, Sarah, Smith, Brent, Lawrence, Jayne, Barry, Rebecca, Carey, Alicia, and Rogers, Cathy
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EVALUATION of human services programs ,SOCIAL support ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,ALLIED health education ,SOCIAL stigma ,INTERNSHIP programs ,HUMAN services programs ,LEARNING strategies ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,AT-risk people ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL health ,INTERDISCIPLINARY education ,SOCIAL responsibility - Abstract
Aims and Context: As a University Department of Rural Health, we have identified recurrent areas of service need among vulnerable rural populations, specifically the need for allied health. Concurrently, we have also identified missed opportunities for deliberate collaborative practice in rural clinical placements. This paper provides a commentary on our work in progress as we work to leverage available opportunities to provide both service from and education for health profession students on rural clinical placements. Approach: We developed a transdisciplinary placement model, informed by practice theory, which encompasses pre‐placement preparation, student support, host sites and clinicians, and a structured evaluation strategy. This model aims to facilitate service provision alongside of student learning about community and collaborative practice. In particular, the co‐design of the model is expected to facilitate student's sense of social accountability and reduce stigma in working with vulnerable population groups. Conclusion: This paper highlights the need for greater alignment between rural health education and practice, describes a placement model that is working towards this and showcases how this has been enacted in a remote community in New South Wales. More cross‐sector discussion and evaluation is needed to determine the implications of adopting this model more widely if service and learning opportunities are to be equally achieved, and to determine the ways in which training and service provision can be aligned with community need, as recommended in the recent Rural Health Commissioner Report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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190. The political economy of Australian regulatory reform.
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Allen, Darcy W. E., Berg, Chris, Lane, Aaron M., and McLaughlin, Patrick A.
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REGULATORY reform ,RED tape ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The problem of regulatory accumulation has increasingly been recognised as a policy problem in its own right. Governments have then devised and implemented regulatory reform policies that directly seek to ameliorate the burdens of regulatory accumulation (e.g. red tape reduction targets). In this paper we examine regulatory reform approaches in Australia through the lens of policy innovation. Our contributions are twofold. We first examine the evolutionary discovery process of regulatory reform policies in Australia (at the federal, intergovernmental, and state levels). This demonstrates a process of policy innovation in regulatory mechanisms and measurements. We then analyse a new measurement of regulatory burden based on text analytics, RegData: Australia. RegData: Australia uses textual analysis to count 'restrictiveness clauses' in regulation – such as 'must', 'cannot' and 'shall' – thereby developing a new database (RDAU1.0). We place this 'restrictiveness clauses' measurement within the context of regulatory policy innovation, and examine the potential for further innovation in regulatory reform mechanisms. This paper examines the political economy of regulatory reform in Australia. We analyse regulatory reduction mechanisms and measurements as a process of policy innovation. We introduce RegData: Australia – a new project aimed at quantifying regulation using textual analytics – as an input into further regulatory reform innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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191. 'Walking in two worlds': A qualitative review of income management in Cape York.
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Scott, John, Staines, Zoe, Higginson, Angela, Lauchs, Mark, Ryan, Vanessa, and Zhen, Liuissa
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SOCIAL norms ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIAL support ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
The Cape York Welfare Reform (CYWR) initiative aims to reduce 'passive dependence' on welfare and restore 'positive social norms' to revitalise cultural and social networks and support economic engagement in Indigenous communities in the Cape York Region of Australia. Critics of the initiative and, in particular, its income management (IM) policies have associated it with a broader neoliberal reform agenda that delineates social 'problems' from their historical and structural context. This paper discusses key qualitative findings from a strategic review of CYWR, paying particular attention to the ways in which Cape York IM (CYIM) straddles both Indigenous and settler social norms, while perpetuating neoliberal conceptualisations of welfare 'dependency'. We situate these findings within the existing literature on Australia's other IM models and also consider them in relation to subsequent government responses to the review and associated policies. We argue that CYIM represents a unique initiative, the subtle nuances of which have been largely ignored or misunderstood by critics. Further, we conclude that any extension or revision of this initiative should be considered with respect to deep and wide‐ranging consultation of the Indigenous communities subject to CYWR. However, such consultation has not been the standard practice in Australian contexts. The paper presents the qualitative findings of a Federal Government review of Cape York Income Management (CYIM). We argue that although CYIM shares a common ideological foundation with Australia's other IM policies, it is also distinct from these alternative forms of IM, particularly in terms of its evolution, high‐level of targeting, and delivery mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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192. Governance of patient‐centred care: A systemic approach to cancer treatment.
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Gorod, Alex, Hallo, Leonie, and Merchant, Susan
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TUMOR treatment ,ONCOLOGY nursing ,HEALTH policy ,CLINICAL governance ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENT-centered care ,INTERVIEWING ,EXECUTIVES ,SYSTEM analysis ,DECISION making ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
Currently, policymaking in cancer treatment is based on a reductionist approach and does not consider the differing views of multiple stakeholders in a systemic fashion. Non‐integrated views are not representative of the totality of the real‐life treatment context, and policymakers need to capture that holistic representation in their decision making. This paper uses a 'systems thinking' approach to propose a holistic way of capturing different stakeholders' views and integrating these into optimal treatment. Key stakeholders operate within their own system, as well as within the overarching complex system of cancer treatment care. An integrated view will enable policymakers to better understand the various issues involved and invoke a more holistic governance approach that encourages greater integration and emergence. Subject matter experts in Australia were consulted to provide narratives that were used to construct individual systemic views (systemigrams) to represent the constructivist perspectives of two key stakeholder groups: patients and oncology nurses. Semi‐structured interviews were conducted to validate the representativeness of the systemigrams created. The systemigrams that captured the perceptions and objectives of patients and nurses were found to be significantly different from each other. Understanding that individual views are only a part of the complex system can lead to a better appreciation of failures within cancer treatment and how to address these through optimal governance. Dynamic integration of differing perspectives in the cancer treatment journey is important. Recognizing and encouraging emergent behaviour among key stakeholders will enable effective governance. Management in cancer care is currently largely undertaken through individual silos with little interaction between those silos. This paper presents a new way of visualizing and conceptualizing governance of cancer treatment that will make governance more holistic and will improve patient‐centred care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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193. "Great and Powerful Friends of Yesteryear": Australia's Dilemma with "East of Suez", 1967–71.
- Author
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Seddelmeyer, Laura
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DOCUMENTARY evidence ,DILEMMA ,DECOLONIZATION ,NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Great Britain's decision to withdraw its forces from Southeast Asia by the mid‐1970s created uncertainty for those living in the region. The potential loss of British presence led Australia to attempt to discourage Britain from leaving, while also recsognising recognising the decision as an opportunity to re‐evaluate Australia's strategic outlook in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Scholars have treated Asia and the Pacific as two regions with distinct experiences related to withdrawal. Some address changing Anglo‐Australian relations but include little, or no, mention of the Pacific territories. Others, writing about the Pacific, focused more the individual paths taken by each island than on connecting the larger process of decolonisation in the Pacific to the one in Asia. This article pairs Australia's Strategic Basis of Defence papers with documentary evidence across multiple departments in Canberra to understand how British withdrawal from east of Suez connected Australian concerns about security in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands. By connecting the two areas through Australian interests, the withdrawal from east of Suez can be understood as a catalyst for Australia's pursuit of a distinctive role within its neighbourhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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194. Looked after children's right to contact with birth parents: An Australian study.
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Healy, Karen, Walsh, Tamara, Venables, Jemma, and Thompson, Kate
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HUMAN rights ,FAMILY reunification ,THEORY of knowledge ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGY of foster children ,PARENT-child relationships ,THEMATIC analysis ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
In Australia, there are more than 46 000 children in out‐of‐home care (OOHC). Most of these children have been in OOHC for more than 2 years. Similarly, there are more than 407 000 children in the United States and over 80 800 in England who are 'looked after' with approximately one third of these children being in OOHC for more than 2 years. This paper concerns 'looked after' children's rights to contact with their birth parents. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) requires child protection systems to recognize the rights of children to maintain contact with their families except where this is not in the child's 'best interests'. In this paper, we report on a qualitative study conducted in Australia exploring legal and family support practitioners' perceptions of barriers to contact between children in OOHC and their birth parents. The thematic analysis identified four themes: These were as follows: a focus on systems driven responses; lack of cultural recognition and responsiveness; carers' disconnection from birth parents; and parents' exclusion. We discuss the implications of these findings for understanding and recognizing children's right to contact with birth parents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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195. The experiences of people with disability and their families/carers navigating the NDIS planning process in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia: Scoping review.
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Veli‐Gold, Sarah, Gilroy, John, Wright, Wayne, Bulkeley, Kim, Jensen, Heather, Dew, Angela, and Lincoln, Michelle
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CAREGIVER attitudes ,HEALTH policy ,CINAHL database ,PATIENT aftercare ,RURAL conditions ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DISABILITY insurance ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HUMAN services programs ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,METROPOLITAN areas ,LITERATURE reviews ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDLINE ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
Background: Australia's National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) was launched in 2013 to provide financial support packages for people with disability to purchase supports and services to enhance independence. People with disability are required to develop a plan with the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA), the government department responsible for managing the NDIS. This scoping review aims to ascertain the level of research into people's experience of the NDIS planning process in these geographic areas. Methodology: Research publication databases were searched using a specific search string to identify research about people with disability and their families/carer's experiences of the NDIS planning process in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) was adopted to appraise the quality of the research publications. Research publications focused on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were additionally appraised using the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Quality Appraisal Tool developed by the Centre for Excellence in Aboriginal Chronic Disease Knowledge Translation and Exchange. A thematic synthesis of the publications' contents was undertaken to ascertain people with disabilities and carers experience of the NDIS planning process. Results: Ten (N = 10) research papers were found that met the inclusion criteria. Two papers were policy reviews and reported on the improvements of the NDIS planning process since its conception. The analysis found the research archive focused on five themes: (1) healthcare workforce and NDIA staff; (2) NDIS package holders and carers lack of awareness of the NDIS; (3) cultural/socio‐economic barriers; (4) travel funding; and (5) emotional burden of the NDIS planning process. Conclusion: There are limited papers available that explore people's experiences of the NDIS planning process in regional, rural and remote regions of Australia. This systematic review illuminates the difficulties, barriers and concerns of people with disability and their carers about the planning process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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196. How rational are voters when expecting government parties to fulfil pledges? A cross‐national survey experiment.
- Author
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HEINISCH, REINHARD and WERNER, ANNIKA
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POLITICAL parties ,CAMPAIGN promises ,VOTER attitudes ,POLITICAL attitudes ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL systems - Abstract
That parties fulfil their pre‐election pledges once they are in government is a fundamental idea of many democracy models. This paper addresses the question of whether the government/opposition status of their party affects how much citizens want governments to fulfil their promises. We hypothesize that interest‐driven, rational voters are more likely to prefer their own party to keep its promises and investigate whether this rationale is impacted by public opinion and expert views. The analysis is based on a survey experiment conducted in Australia and Austria. It finds that voters broadly adhere to the democratic principle of expecting pledge fulfilment but, at the same time, some take a rational approach to government promises. The opinions of the public and experts mitigate but do not change this effect. Another key finding is the significant difference in the preference for promise keeping versus promise breaking between government and opposition voters in the Austrian case, the country with the more heterogeneous and polarized political system. This paper contributes to the literature on voters' attitudes on democracy and pledge fulfilment by showing that voters are normatively driven but a significant number of voters deviate and instead follow the rational voter logic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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197. Short‐term load forecasting based on a generalized regression neural network optimized by an improved sparrow search algorithm using the empirical wavelet decomposition method.
- Author
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Fan, Guo‐Feng, Li, Yun, Zhang, Xin‐Yan, Yeh, Yi‐Hsuan, and Hong, Wei‐Chiang
- Subjects
SEARCH algorithms ,DECOMPOSITION method ,SPARROWS ,FORECASTING ,ELECTRIC power consumption - Abstract
With the development of the electric market, electric load forecasting has been increasingly pursued by many scholars. Because the electric load is affected by many factors, it is characterized by volatility and uncertainty, and it cannot be forecasted accurately only by a single model. In the research, a short‐term load forecasting integrated model is proposed to solve the problem of inaccurate forecasting of a single model. The key point of using the integrated model to forecast is to optimize the decomposed sequence to improve the accuracy of the forecast. empirical wavelet decomposition (EWT) is used to decompose the sequence into stationary sequences and avoid modal aliasing; the sparrow search algorithm (SSA) simulates the forecasting and anti‐forecasting behavior of the sparrow population, which is very similar to the electricity consumption behavior of various industries and has good optimization effect; generalized regression neural network (GRNN) is used for forecast and reconstruction; This is the EWT‐SSA‐GRNN model. This paper studies and analyzes the power load of a city in southern Australia. The results show that the integrated model reduces volatility through decomposition and optimization, and can improve forecast accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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198. Associations between responsive parental behaviours in infancy and toddlerhood, and language outcomes at age 7 years in a population‐based sample.
- Author
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Levickis, Penny, Eadie, Patricia, Mensah, Fiona, McKean, Cristina, Bavin, Edith L., and Reilly, Sheena
- Subjects
EVALUATION of medical care ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,SPEECH therapy ,SELF-evaluation ,BIRTH order ,REGRESSION analysis ,MENTAL health ,PARENTING ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,SEX distribution ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,BIRTH weight ,VOCABULARY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PARENT-child relationships ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background: A wealth of evidence supports the important role high‐quality parent–child interactions play in children's early language acquisition. However, the impact on later language outcomes remains unclear. Aims: To examine the associations between responsive parental behaviours across the early years and child language outcomes at age 7 years with families from an Australian longitudinal cohort study (N = 1148, 50% female). Methods & Procedures: At child ages 12, 24 and 36 months, parents completed a self‐report measure of responsive parental behaviours. Child language was directly assessed at age 7 using the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals, 4th edition (CELF‐4), Australian Standardisation. Linear regression was used to examine associations between responsive parental behaviours from 12 to 36 months (consistently high, inconsistent and consistently low responsive parental behaviours at the three time points) and language scores at age 7 years. Adjusted models were run, including the following potential confounders: child sex; birth weight; birth order; maternal education; socio‐economic disadvantage; non‐English‐speaking background; family history of speech–language problems; mother's vocabulary score; maternal mental health score; and mother's age at birth of child. A final adjusted model was run, including the potential confounder variables as well as adjusting for children's earlier language skills. Outcomes & Results: Linear regression results showed children with parents who rated high on responsive parental behaviours at all three time points had higher mean language scores at age 7 than children whose parents reported low responsive parental behaviours across early childhood. This association attenuated after adjusting for earlier child language skills. Conclusions & Implications: Findings support the consistent use of responsive parental behaviours across the very early years of childhood to support long‐term language outcomes. Findings also suggest that models of surveillance and support which monitor and assist families at multiple time‐points over the early years are likely to be most effective for preventing ongoing language difficulties. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: There is extensive evidence consistently demonstrating the important contribution of aspects of parent–child interaction, specifically responsive parental behaviours, to children's language development. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: Understanding the cumulative benefit of responsive parent–child interactions across the very early years may help to inform preventive interventions and service delivery models for supporting young children's language development. This study demonstrates in a large, population‐based cohort the contribution of consistency of responsive parental behaviours during infancy and toddlerhood to school‐age language outcomes, accounting for other child, family and environmental factors. Capturing regular parent behaviours via self‐report during the early years may be a more efficient and less costly method than parent–child interaction observations to monitor the home language‐learning environment during routine developmental checks. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Findings support the need for surveillance of children and families in the early years, ensuring that intervention occurs when families need it most, that is, support is responsive to changing needs and that nuanced advice and support strategies are provided to activate positive developmental cascades. Capturing both parent behaviours and child language may assist clinicians to identify those families who may benefit from parent–child interaction intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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199. Tracking farmland investment in Australia: Institutional finance and the politics of data mapping.
- Author
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Smith, Kiah, Langford, Alexandra, and Lawrence, Geoffrey
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INSTITUTIONAL investments ,DATA mapping ,VALUATION of farms ,FARM ownership ,FOREIGN investments ,LAND tenure - Abstract
Tracking farmland purchases is central to interpreting transnational finance's growing power in agrarian restructuring. Australia's public Register of foreign land ownership reveals little about agrarian change, however. In presenting the first comprehensive mapping of farmland purchases made between 2008 and 2020, this paper examines the ways that financial investments are altering farm ownership patterns in Australia. First, we show that most foreign owned land has been purchased by only 10 pastoral companies, which are implicated in speculative development activities. Second, foreign investment in cropping and horticulture is more significant than it appears in the Register, with investments in agricultural infrastructure increasingly driving land use change. Third, we illustrate the deepening entrenchment of institutional finance. By engaging with the findings from our dataset as well as with the politics of data that have shaped the availability of information, the paper progresses understandings of the financialization of farmland in both its material and ideational aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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200. Walk‐in Together: A pilot study of a walk‐in online family therapy intervention.
- Author
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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]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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