665 results
Search Results
2. Is HealthPathways viewed as a useful and trustworthy source of information by health professionals?
- Author
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Tretheway, Rebecca, Visser, Victoria, and Mollard, Sarah
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CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,RESEARCH funding ,INFORMATION resources ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFLUENZA ,STAY-at-home orders ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,TRUST ,DATA analysis software ,ACCESS to information ,NATURAL disasters - Abstract
Objective: HealthPathways is a web-based platform designed for use during a consultation to offer health professionals locally agreed information to support clinical and referral decision making. This study aimed to investigate whether access to specific HealthPathways pages in the North Coast New South Wales (NSW) region increased during specific critical events. High pageviews is used as a proxy for platform usefulness, and/or trust as a source of up-to-date information. Methods: Data were extracted from Google Analytics from December 2015 to December 2021. Descriptive statistics were generated for the total number of pageviews for all pages by month and year (2015–2021); for the top 15 most viewed pages in 2019, February–March 2020 inclusive (early COVID-19 pandemic period), 10–24 March 2021 (North Coast NSW region local disaster declaration period) and 26 June–11 October 2021 (NSW COVID-19 lockdown period); and for monthly pageviews for the Influenza Immunisation pathway (2016–2021). Results: Access to specific pages in HealthPathways increased alongside the occurrence of critical events affecting the region. Spikes in access to specific pages were seen during COVID-19 lockdown periods, during natural disasters, as well as during the annual influenza season. Conclusions: HealthPathways is viewed as a useful and trusted source of information for health professionals in the North Coast NSW region. HealthPathways provides an opportunity for timely dissemination of information during critical events, including natural disasters and emergencies. What is known about the topic? Evidence from New Zealand suggests that HealthPathways is viewed as a useful and trusted source of information by health professionals during critical and emergency events, and when information needs are subject to frequent change. What does this paper add? This paper provides evidence in the Australian context that health professionals access specific pages in HealthPathways at higher rates during critical and emergency events. What are the implications for practitioners? HealthPathways has the capacity to provide timely and accurate information to health professionals during critical and emergency events, as well as to identify their emerging information needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Measuring clinician experience in value-based healthcare initiatives: a 10-item core clinician experience measure.
- Author
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Harrison, Reema, Ellis, Louise A, Sina, Maryam, Walsan, Ramya, Mitchell, Rebecca, Walpola, Ramesh, Maberly, Glen, Chan, Catherine, and Hay, Liz
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WORK ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,MEDICAL quality control ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,RESEARCH funding ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,VALUE-based healthcare ,RESEARCH evaluation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL safety ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,TEST validity ,DATA analysis software ,EXPERIENTIAL learning - Abstract
Objective: Clinician's experiences of providing care are identified as a key outcome associated with value-based healthcare (VBHC). In contrast to patient-reported experience measures, measurement tools to capture clinician's experiences in relation to VBHC initiatives have received limited attention to date. Progressing from an initial 18-item clinician experience measure (CEM), we sought to develop and evaluate the reliability of a set of 10 core clinician experience measure items in the CEM-10. Methods: A multi-method project was conducted using a consensus workshop with clinicians from a range of NSW Health local health districts to reduce the 18-item CEM to a short form 10-item core clinician experience measure (CEM-10). The CEM-10 was deployed with clinicians providing diabetes care, care for older adults and virtual care across all districts and care settings of New South Wales, Australia. Psychometric analysis was used to determine the internal consistency of the tool and its suitability for diverse clinical contexts. Results: Consensus building sessions led to a rationalised 10-item tool, retaining the four domains of psychological safety (two items), quality of care (three items), clinician engagement (three items) and interprofessional collaboration (two items). Data from four clinician cohorts (n = 1029) demonstrated that the CEM-10 four-factor model produced a good fit to the data and high levels of reliability, with factor loadings ranging from 0.77 to 0.92, with Cronbach's alpha (range: 0.79–0.90) and composite reliability (range: 0.80–0.92). Conclusions: The CEM-10 provides a core set of common clinician experience measurement items that can be used to compare clinician's experiences of providing care between and within cohorts. The CEM-10 may be supported by additional items relevant to particular initiatives when evaluating VBHC outcomes. What is known about the topic? Clinician experience of providing care is an outcome of interest for health systems and services internationally who are implementing value-based care initiatives. Review evidence indicates that measurement of clinician's experience of providing care should address experiences of being able to deliver quality care, collaborate with colleagues, experience psychological safety and engagement in decision-making in the workplace. What does this paper add? The paper reports the development of the short form clinician experience measure (CEM-10) and its initial validation in four value-based healthcare initiatives of NSW Health. What are the practical implications for practitioners? The CEM-10 can be used as a core set of items embedded within evaluations of value-based care initiatives to benchmark and examine experiences across clinician cohorts. This article belongs to the Special Issue: Value-based Healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Potential mental health-related harms associated with the universal screening of anxiety and depressive symptoms in Australian secondary schools.
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Braund, Taylor A., Baker, Simon T. E., Subotic-Kerry, Mirjana, Tillman, Gabriel, Evans, Nathan J., Mackinnon, Andrew, Christensen, Helen, and O'Dea, Bridianne
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DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,ANXIETY diagnosis ,HIGH schools ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,MEDICAL screening ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: Anxiety and depressive disorders typically emerge in adolescence and can be chronic and disabling if not identified and treated early. School-based universal mental health screening may identify young people in need of mental health support and facilitate access to treatment. However, few studies have assessed the potential harms of this approach. This paper examines some of the potential mental health-related harms associated with the universal screening of anxiety and depression administered in Australian secondary schools. Methods: A total of 1802 adolescent students from 22 secondary schools in New South Wales, Australia, were cluster randomised (at the school level) to receive either an intensive screening procedure (intervention) or a light touch screening procedure (control). Participants in the intensive screening condition received supervised self-report web-based screening questionnaires for anxiety, depression and suicidality with the follow-up care matched to their symptom severity. Participants in the light touch condition received unsupervised web-based screening for anxiety and depression only, followed by generalised advice on help-seeking. No other care was provided in this condition. Study outcomes included the increased risk of anxiety, depression, psychological distress, decreased risk of help-seeking, increased risk of mental health stigma, determined from measures assessed at baseline, 6 weeks post-baseline, and 12 weeks post-baseline. Differences between groups were analysed using mixed effect models. Results: Participants in the intensive screening group were not adversely affected when compared to the light touch screening condition across a range of potential harms. Rather, participants in the intensive screening group were found to have a decreased risk of inhibited help-seeking behaviour compared to the light touch screening condition. Conclusions: The intensive screening procedure did not appear to adversely impact adolescents' mental health relative to the light touch procedure. Future studies should examine other school-based approaches that may be more effective and efficient than universal screening for reducing mental health burden among students. Trial registration Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12618001539224) https://anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=375821. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Uncertainty in Breast Cancer Risk Prediction: A Conformal Prediction Study of Race Stratification.
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Millar, Alexander S., Arnn, John, Himes, Sam, and Facelli, Julio C.
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BREAST tumor risk factors ,RACISM ,MINORITIES ,UNCERTAINTY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MACHINE learning ,RISK assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
The use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in medicine has attracted a great deal of attention in the medical literature, but less is known about how to assess the uncertainty of individual predictions in clinical applications. This paper demonstrates the use of Conformal Prediction (CP) to provide insight on racial stratification of uncertainty quantification for breast cancer risk prediction. The results presented here show that CP methods provide important information about the diminished quality of predictions for individuals of minority racial backgrounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Demonstrating Digital Health Clinical Competence in Practice: A Method for Developing Entrustable Professional Activities.
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MEROLLI, Mark and GRAY, Kathleen
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PROFESSIONAL practice ,WORK ,PHYSICAL therapy ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,DIGITAL health ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CLINICAL competence ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL informatics ,THEMATIC analysis ,CONTENT analysis ,MEDICAL research ,CLINICAL education ,DELPHI method - Abstract
There is broad agreement regarding fundamental digital health competencies that clinical health professionals should possess. However, there is still no clear way to observe and assess their application, during the actual work practices undertaken in clinical settings. The present paper tackles this competencypractice gap. It describes a novel health workforce research process to evolve competency statements into entrustable professional activities (EPAs) for using digital health and informatics in a clinical profession. It illustrates the use of the EPA-DH-CP framework in the context of physiotherapy. This framework offers a systematic approach for any clinical profession to develop EPAs that set out their expectation of how practitioners will demonstrate relevant digital health competencies. It can inform pre-clinical education and continuing professional development in digital health, and implementation of changes in scopes and standards of digital health clinical practice. It can support interprofessional evaluation of digital health EPAs and other EPAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. A Post-Marketing Drug Evaluation Framework Based on Real-World Electronic Health Records Data.
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Yu WANG, Shuang MA, Hua RU, Hongyi NI, and Jingsong LI
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DATABASES ,CEFTRIAXONE ,CLINICAL drug trials ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RISK assessment ,RESEARCH funding ,ELECTRONIC health records ,DRUG utilization ,ALLERGIES ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Real-world data (RWD) could be a new way to evaluate the safety and efficacy of post-marketing drugs, while there is no common method for how to use RWD for drug evaluation. In this paper, we present a framework for real-world drug evaluation based on electronic medical record (EHR) data. We designed a data model customized for post-marketing drug evaluation and a unified post-marketing drug evaluation pipeline. The proposed framework can be applied to drug evaluations with different study paradigms for different purposes by flexible use of the proposed data model and pipeline. A prototype system has been developed according to the framework. Real-world EHRs in a tertiary hospital in China between 2010 and 2020 were converted to the proposed data model, and as a test case, we conducted a research on the risk of allergic reactions to cefodizime and ceftriaxone using the prototype system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on access and use of health services by middle-aged and older Australians.
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Ivancic, Lorraine, Bond, Diana M., and Nassar, Natasha
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HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care use ,CROSS-sectional method ,DENTAL care ,AUSTRALIANS ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,RESEARCH funding ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,PRIMARY health care ,MENTAL illness ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,AT-risk people ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EVALUATION of medical care ,TELEMEDICINE ,SURVEYS ,CHRONIC diseases ,ODDS ratio ,RURAL conditions ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
Objectives: To examine: the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on access to health services by middle-aged and older Australians; and the use of telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic and its ongoing usefulness. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted among participants who completed the COVID-19 supplement in the 45 and Up Study 2020 Survey. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to examine the association between socio-demographic characteristics and health conditions with missed/delayed access to health services, changes in health outcomes resulting from missed/delayed access, and use of telehealth services. Results: Data for 45 071 participants were analysed (56% female, 72% aged ≥65 years). Almost half (42.2%) reported they had missed/delayed access to health care due to COVID-19; mainly for dental services (26.1%), visits to a general practitioner (GP) (16.3%) and specialists (12.6%). Missed/delayed visits to GPs and specialists were more likely among females, participants from non-English-speaking backgrounds, with disability/illness, living in outer regional/remote areas or with chronic health conditions. People with a disability or high/very high psychological distress were twice as likely to report worse health as a result of missed/delayed care. Half (48.0%) the study participants used telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic and 81.9% indicated telehealth would be useful post-pandemic. Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic impacted access to healthcare services, particularly for people with a disability, and chronic or mental health issues who also reported worse health. This may account for their higher use of telehealth services as an alternate way of accessing health care. Ongoing evaluation of telehealth services for vulnerable groups post-pandemic is required. What is known about the topic ? The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on healthcare usage and access. What does this paper add? This paper identifies the impact of access to health care during the COVID-19 pandemic on vulnerable subgroups within middle-aged and older Australians, including those with chronic and mental health issues. Telehealth is an acceptable way to facilitate access to services for these groups. What are the implications for practitioners? Practitioners are strategically positioned to provide alternatives to face-to-face visits during times of limited access and identify those who are in most need of additional care by way of telehealth intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Guiding, sustaining and growing the public involvement of young people in an adolescent health research community of practice.
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Swist, Teresa, Collin, Philippa, Nguyen, Betty, Davies, Cristyn, Cullen, Patricia, Medlow, Sharon, Skinner, S. Rachel, Third, Amanda, and Steinbeck, Katharine
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PATIENT participation ,DISCUSSION ,COMMUNITY health services ,ADOLESCENT health ,MEDICAL care research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ACTION research ,RESEARCH funding ,JUDGMENT sampling ,ADULT education workshops - Abstract
Background: Public involvement in health research and its translation is well recognized to improve health interventions. However, this approach is insufficiently practised and evidenced in relation to young people. This paper presents an analysis of the process of co‐producing a framework, partnership model and a growing network of young people informing and guiding an adolescent health research community of practice. Methods: A Living Lab is a participatory research approach that brings together a broad range of stakeholders in iterative cycles of research, design, development, pilot‐testing, evaluation and delivery to implement effective responses to complex phenomena. The geographical setting for this study was Sydney, NSW, Australia, and involved both youth and adult stakeholders from this region. The study spanned three phases between July 2018 and January 2021, and data collection included a range of workshops, a roundtable discussion and an online survey. Results: The co‐production process resulted in three key outputs: first, an engagement framework to guide youth participation in health research; second, a partnership model to sustain youth and adult stakeholder collaboration; third, the growth of the public involvement of young people with a range of projects and partners. Conclusions: This study investigated the process of co‐producing knowledge with young people in an adolescent health community of practice. A reflexive process supported youth and adult stakeholders to collaboratively investigate, design and pilot‐test approaches that embed young people's engagement in adolescent health research. Shared values and iterative methods for co‐production can assist in advancing mutual learning, commitment and trust in specific adolescent health research contexts. Public Contribution: Young people guiding and informing an adolescent health research community of practice were involved in this study, and one of the participants is a paper co‐author. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Cultivating child and youth decision‐making: The principles and practices of the ReSPECT approach to professional development.
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Michail, Samia, Grace, Rebekah, Ng, Jonathan, and Shier, Harry
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CORPORATE culture , *SELF-efficacy , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *RESEARCH funding , *DECISION making , *HUMAN rights , *PROFESSIONS , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *DECISION making in children , *COMMITMENT (Psychology) , *PATIENT participation , *PROFESSIONAL competence , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Participatory approaches are important to ensuring that the involvement of children in decision‐making is normalised in service provision. Participation work requires that professionals have well‐developed engagement skills, and a commitment to the right of the child or young person to participate. Effective participatory approaches also require that organisations provide active support for child‐centred practice. The Reconceptualising Services from the Perspectives of Experienced Children and Teens (ReSPECT) approach is an Australian professional development (PD) program that addresses these key aspects of participation work. It offers professionals a way to:(1) increase their awareness of the complex issues, challenges and benefits surrounding participation; and (2) develop a sense of empowerment and competence in the 'doing' of participation work. The PD program encourages professionals to understand their own position in relation to participation work with children, develop bespoke strategies that account for their unique practice context and assemble support structures that can maintain their participation strategies beyond the training. The principles and practices of the ReSPECT PD program are outlined and positioned within the existing literature on theoretical and practice approaches. The paper contributes to critical debate on the mechanisms that can lead to changes in professional practice and organisational culture, for the meaningful engagement of children as stakeholders in decision‐making. It is shared as a way of supporting others designing professional development approaches for child and youth decision‐making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. The impact of an electronic nursing documentation system on efficiency of documentation by caregivers in a residential aged care facility.
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Munyisia, Esther N, Yu, Ping, and Hailey, David
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MEDICAL personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONTENT analysis ,GERIATRIC nursing ,INTERVIEWING ,LABOR productivity ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSING records ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOUND recordings ,TIME ,WORK sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESIDENTIAL care ,REPEATED measures design ,ELECTRONIC health records ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aims and objectives. To examine the effect of the introduction of an electronic nursing documentation system on the efficiency of documentation in a residential aged care facility. Background. Modern technology has the potential to free caregivers in residential aged care facilities from their burden of paper documentation and allow them more time to care for residents. To date, there is inadequate evidence to verify this assumption. Design. Longitudinal cohort study with work sampling method for data collection. Methods. This study was conducted between 2009-2011; two months before and 3, 6, 12 and 23 months after implementation of an electronic documentation system. A work classification tool was used by an observer to record documentation activities being performed on paper or on a computer by the caregivers. Results. When compared with the proportion of time caregivers spent on documentation in the preimplementation period, personal carers' proportion reduced at three months after implementation. The proportion increased from six months and then dropped at 23 months. Recreational activity officers' proportion increased at three months after implementation. It stabilised at six months and increased again at 12 months. At 23 months, the proportion returned to the preimplementation level. Less than half of the caregivers' time on documentation after implementation was associated with computer-related tasks. Conclusions. Introduction of an electronic documentation system may not necessarily lead to efficiency in documentation for the caregivers. Charting some information items on paper and others on a computer may hinder realization of documentation efficiency. Relevance to clinical practice. To optimise the efficiency benefit of electronic documentation in a residential aged care facility, it is not only necessary to automate all nursing forms but also to ensure that the system is aligned with caregivers' documentation practice. Continuous education and mentor support is essential to ensure caregivers' effective usage of the electronic system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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12. Preferences and end of life care for residents of aged care facilities: a mixed methods study.
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Sarah, Moberley, Jacqui, Hewitt, John, Attia, Janean, Cole, Joelle, Bevington, Christopher, Oldmeadow, Zach, Howard, and Rachel, Hughes
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MEDICAL quality control ,FOCUS groups ,TERMINAL care ,NURSING home residents ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH literacy ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,RESIDENTIAL care ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Residential aged care facilities is one of the most common places to deliver of end of life care. A lack of evidence regarding preferred place for end of life care for residents of aged care facilities impacts on delivery of care and prevents assessment of quality of care. This paper reports the preferences, current status of end of life care and enablers and barriers of care being delivered in line with the wishes of residents of participating aged care facilities. Methods: We collaborated with six equally sized aged care facilities from the Greater Newcastle area, New South Wales, Australia. An audit of the quality of end of life care for residents was conducted by retrospective medical record review (n = 234 deceased patients). A retrospective review of emergency department transfers was conducted to determine the rate of transfer and assign avoidable or not. Qualitative focus group and individual interviews were conducted and analysed for barriers and enablers to end of life care being delivered in accordance with residents' wishes. Results: Most residents (96.7%) wished to remain in their residential aged care facility if their health deteriorated in an expected way. Residents of facilities whose model of care integrated nurse practitioners had the lowest rates of emergency department transfers and timelier symptom management at end of life. Family decision making influenced location of death (either supporting or preventing care in place of patient preference). Conclusion(s): To better provide care in accordance with a person's wishes, aged care facilities need to be supported to enable end of life care insitu through integrated care with relevant palliative care providers, education and communication strategies. Family and community health and death literacy interventions should accompany clinical innovation to ensure delivery of care in accordance with residents' preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Incidence of adverse incidents in residential aged care.
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St Clair, Bella, Jorgensen, Mikaela, and Georgiou, Andrew
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RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICATION errors ,SEX distribution ,RESIDENTIAL care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ACCIDENTAL falls ,RESEARCH funding ,ADVERSE health care events ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,ELDER care - Abstract
Objective: Adverse incident research within residential aged care facilities (RACFs) is increasing and there is growing awareness of safety and quality issues. However, large-scale evidence identifying specific areas of need and at-risk residents is lacking. This study used routinely collected incident management system data to quantify the types and rates of adverse incidents experienced by residents of RACFs. Methods: A concurrent mixed-methods design was used to examine 3 years of incident management report data from 72 RACFs in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. Qualitative thematic analysis of free-text incident descriptions was undertaken to group adverse incidents into categories. The rates and types of adverse incidents based on these categories were calculated and then compared using incidence rate ratios (IRRs). Results: Deidentified records of 11 987 permanent residents (aged ≥65 years; mean (±s.d.) age 84 ± 8 years) from the facilities were included. Of the 60 268 adverse incidents, falls were the most common event (36%), followed by behaviour-related events (33%), other impacts and injuries (22%) and medication errors (9%). The number of adverse incidents per resident ranged from 0 (42%) to 171, with a median of 2. Women (IRR 0.804; P < 0.001) and residents with low care needs (IRR 0.652; P < 0.001) were significantly less likely to adverse incidents compared with men and residents with high care needs respectively. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that data already collected within electronic management systems can provide crucial baseline information about the risk levels that adverse incidents pose to older Australians living in RACFs. What is known about the topic?: To date, research into aged care adverse incidents has typically focused on single incident types in small studies involving mitigation strategies. Little has been published quantifying the multiple adverse incidents experienced by residents of aged care facilities or reporting organisation-wide rates of adverse incidents. What does this paper add?: This paper adds to the growing breadth of Australian aged care research by providing baseline information on the rates and types of adverse incidents in RACFs across a large and representative provider. What are the implications for practitioners?: This research demonstrates that the wealth of data captured by aged care facilities' incident management information systems can be used to provide insight into areas of commonly occurring adverse incidents. Better use of this information could greatly enhance strategic planning of quality improvement activities and the care provided to residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. An Australian National Survey of First Nations Careers in Health Services.
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Nathan, S., Meyer, L., Joseph, T., Blignault, I., Bailey, J., Demasi, K., Newman, J., Briggs, N., Williams, M., and Lew Fatt, E.
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INDIGENOUS Australians ,RACISM ,CULTURAL identity ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,SOCIAL support ,ROLE models ,TORRES Strait Islanders ,CROSS-sectional method ,RURAL conditions ,POPULATION geography ,MEDICAL care ,SATISFACTION ,PRIVATE sector ,TRANSCULTURAL medical care ,MENTORING ,SURVEYS ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PUBLIC sector ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,METROPOLITAN areas ,EMPLOYEE retention - Abstract
A strong First Nations health workforce is necessary to meet community needs, health rights, and health equity. This paper reports the findings from a national survey of Australia's First Nations people employed in health services to identify enablers and barriers to career development, including variations by geographic location and organisation type. A cross-sectional online survey was undertaken across professions, roles, and jurisdictions. The survey was developed collaboratively by Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal academics and Aboriginal leaders. To recruit participants, the survey was promoted by key professional organisations, First Nations peak bodies and affiliates, and national forums. In addition to descriptive statistics, logistic regression was used to identify predictors of satisfaction with career development and whether this varied by geographic location or organisation type. Of the 332 participants currently employed in health services, 50% worked in regional and remote areas and 15% in Aboriginal Community-Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) with the remainder in government and private health services. All enablers identified were associated with satisfaction with career development and did not vary by location or organisation type. "Racism from colleagues" and "lack of cultural awareness," "not feeling supported by their manager," "not having role models or mentors," and "inflexible human resource policies" predicted lower satisfaction with career development only for those employed in government/other services. First Nations people leading career development were strongly supported. The implications for all workplaces are that offering even a few career development opportunities, together with supporting leadership by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff, can make a major difference to satisfaction and retention. Concurrently, attention should be given to building managerial cultural capabilities and skills in supporting First Nations' staff career development, building cultural safety, providing formal mentors and addressing discriminatory and inflexible human resources policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Barriers and Enablers for Enhancing Engagement of Older People in Intergenerational Programs in Australia.
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Kirsnan, Lalitha, Kosiol, Jennifer, Golenko, Xanthe, Radford, Katrina, and Fitzgerald, Janna Anneke
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SOCIAL participation ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ACTIVE aging ,CHILD care ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,POPULATION geography ,HUMAN services programs ,ETHNOLOGY research ,LEARNING ,LONELINESS ,RESEARCH funding ,VIDEO recording ,OLD age - Abstract
Intergenerational programs that bring the young and old together are known to facilitate social connections. However, benefits of intergenerational programs cannot be achieved by simply bringing the two generations together. We need to understand the factors which enhance intergenerational engagement. This paper specifically explores barriers and enablers for improving engagement of older people in an intergenerational program conducted within four research sites in South East Queensland and New South Wales, Australia. Video ethnography was used to examine the intergenerational environment and observe patterns of engagement between older people and children. Findings reveal the type of activity, group structure and length of activity to increase engagement of older people in an intergenerational program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Data-Driven Interventions for an Emergency Preparedness System: A National Experience in Australia.
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ANDRADE, Andre Q., KERR, Mhairi, and Roughead, Elizabeth E.
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MENTAL illness prevention ,CIVIL defense ,DIGITAL technology ,CHRONIC diseases ,COMMUNITY health services ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MEDICAL care ,EMERGENCY management ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,MEDICAL emergencies ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PRIMARY health care ,COMMUNICATION ,NATURAL disasters ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AT-risk people ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Natural disasters and health emergencies disproportionally affect vulnerable populations causing disruptions to usual care and increasing chronic disease burden. Data and digital technologies are important tools to identify and mitigate indirect effects of emergencies. In this paper, we describe the methods used in the development of a series of digital emergency preparedness interventions to mitigate the direct and indirect consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic in the veteran community in Australia. The case studies demonstrate the use of data for surveillance, patient phenotyping, data-driven decision support and stakeholder communication in primary care. The intervention successfully increased appropriate healthcare use by vulnerable individuals and could be expanded to other populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Interpreting Laboratory Results with Complementary Health Information: A Human Factors Perspective.
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JOSEPH, Amanda L., MONKMAN, Helen, MACDONALD, Leah, and LAI, Claudia
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PATHOLOGICAL laboratories ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENT portals ,CONSUMER attitudes ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,ACCESS to information ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,CLINICAL medicine ,ELECTRONIC health records ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,TELEMEDICINE ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The desire to access personal and high-quality health information electronically is increasing, not only in Canada, but globally. With the advent of the COVID - 19 pandemic the desire and demand for telemedicine and timely access to personal health data such as online laboratory (lab) results has increased substantially. This study examines citizens' perspectives of being provided with high-quality information about a specific lab test (i.e., potassium) in the same display as a trend graph. Therefore, the objective of this study is to test how participants managed this additional information about the context of the test, understood, and applied it. The researchers analyzed the responses of semistructured interviews with Canadian participants (N=24) using conventional content analysis. This paper examined four themes related to providing complementary information concurrently with lab results in the same display: 1) Benefits of Collocated Information, 2) Information Overload, 3) Misinterpretation, 4) Confusion. This study provided examples of some of the difficulties that the participants faced accessing their lab values online, while navigating and discerning complimentary high-quality health information available in their patient portal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. MSPA-DLA++: A Multi-Scale Phase Attention Deep Layer Aggregation for Lesion Detection in Multi-Phase CT Images.
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KITRUNGROTSAKUL, Titinunt, Yingying XU, Qingqing CHEN, Jing LIU, Yinhao LI, Lanfen LIN, Hongjie HU, Ruofeng TONG, Jingsong LI, and Yen-Wei CHEN
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TRAUMATOLOGY diagnosis ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,ATTENTION ,RESEARCH funding ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
Object detection using convolutional neural networks (CNNs) has achieved high performance and achieved state-of-the-art results with natural images. Compared to natural images, medical images present several challenges for lesion detection. First, the sizes of lesions vary tremendously, from several millimeters to several centimeters. Scale variations significantly affect lesion detection accuracy, especially for the detection of small lesions. Moreover, the effective extraction of temporal and spatial features from multi-phase CT images is also an important issue. In this paper, we propose a group-based deep layer aggregation method with multiphase attention for liver lesion detection in multi-phase CT images. The method, which is called MSPA-DLA++, is a backbone feature extraction network for anchor-free liver lesion detection in multi-phase CT images that addresses scale variations and extracts hidden features from such images. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated on public datasets (LiTS2017) and our private multiphase dataset. The results of the experiments show that MSPA-DLA++ can improve upon the performance of state-of-the-art networks by approximately 3.7%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Physician-Centered EHR Data Utilization: A Pilot Study.
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Chengkai WU, Tianshu ZHOU, Yu TIAN, Huiyao SUN, Zhong LIU, and Jingsong LI
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PILOT projects ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,CROSS-sectional method ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DATABASE management ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,ELECTRONIC health records - Abstract
The utilization of vast amounts of EHR data is crucial to the studies in medical informatics. Physicians are medical participants who directly record clinical data into EHR with their personal expertise, making their roles essential in followup data utilization, which current studies have yet to recognize. This paper proposes a physician-centered perspective for EHR data utilization and emphasizes the feasibility and potentiality of digging into physicians' latent decision patterns in EHR. To support our proposal, we design a physician-centered CDS approach named PhyC and test it on a real-world EHR dataset. Experiments show that PhyC performs significantly better in the auxiliary diagnosis of multiple diseases than globally learned models. Discussions on experimental results suggest that physician-centered data utilization can help to derive more objective CDS models, while more means for utilization need further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Graph Neural Network Based Multi-Label Hierarchical Classification for Disease Predictions in General Practice.
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Shengqiang Chi, Yuqing Wang, Ying Zhang, Weiwei Zhu, and Jingsong Li
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DISEASE risk factors ,NOSOLOGY ,DEEP learning ,FAMILY medicine ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,RISK assessment ,THEORY ,RESEARCH funding ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,ELECTRONIC health records ,PREDICTION models - Abstract
General practitioners are supposed to be better diagnostics to detect patients with serious diseases earlier, and conduct early interventions and appropriate referrals of patients. However, in the current general practice, primary general practitioners lack sufficient clinical experiences, and the correct rate of general disease diagnosis is low. To assist general practitioners in diagnosis, this paper proposes a multi-label hierarchical classification method based on graph neural network, which integrates medical knowledge and electronic health record (EHR) data to build a disease prediction model. The experimental results based on data consist of 231,783 visits from EHR show that the proposed model outperforms all baseline models in the general disease prediction task with a top-3 recall of 0.865. The interpretable results of the model can effectively help clinicians understand the basis of the model's decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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21. Data Augmentation with Nearest Neighbor Classifier for Few-Shot Named Entity Recognition.
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Yao GE, AL-GARADI, Mohammed Ali, and SARKER, Abeed
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NATURAL language processing ,MACHINE learning ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,BIOINFORMATICS ,RESEARCH funding ,DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
Few-shot learning (FSL) is a category of machine learning models that are designed with the intent of solving problems that have small amounts of labeled data available for training. FSL research progress in natural language processing (NLP), particularly within the medical domain, has been notably slow, primarily due to greater difficulties posed by domain-specific characteristics and data sparsity problems. We explored the use of novel methods for text representation and encoding combined with distance-based measures for improving FSL entity detection. In this paper, we propose a data augmentation method to incorporate semantic information from medical texts into the learning process and combine it with a nearest-neighbor classification strategy for predicting entities. Experiments performed on five biomedical text datasets demonstrate that our proposed approach often outperforms other approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Digital Health for Myocardial Infarction: Research Topics and Trends.
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PELLY, Melissa, FATEHI, Farhad, SAMADBEIK, Mahnaz, LIEW, Danny, and VERDEJO-GARCIA, Antonio
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DEEP learning ,CONCEPT mapping ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,CHRONIC diseases ,DIGITAL health ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIAL network analysis ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
We aimed to map the topics and trends of research on digital health for myocardial infarction over the past ten years. This can inform future research directions and newly emerging topics for myocardial infarction care, diagnosis and monitoring. The Web of Science database was searched for papers related to digital health for myocardial infarction. 1,344 retrieved records were used for visualisation through bibliometrics and co-occurrence network analysis of keywords. Our mapping revealed several emerging topics in recent years, including artificial intelligence and deep learning. Higher emphasis on automated and artificially intelligent digital health systems in recent years can inform future clinical practice and research directions for myocardial infarction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Digital Therapeutics for COPD Patient Self-Management: Needs Analysis and Design Study.
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ABIDI, Samina Raza, RICKARDS, Tracey, Van WOENSEL, William, and ABIDI, Syed Sibte Raza
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OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment ,DIGITAL technology ,MOBILE apps ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,BEHAVIOR ,PATIENT-centered care ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,COGNITION ,QUALITATIVE research ,KNOWLEDGE base ,ENVIRONMENTAL health ,PREVENTIVE health services ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH behavior ,RESEARCH funding ,NEEDS assessment ,HEALTH self-care - Abstract
Timely management of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) exacerbations can improve recovery and reduce the risk of hospitalization. Digital therapeutics are digital interventions, based on best evidence, designed to provide home-based, patient-centered and pervasive self-management support to patients. Digital therapeutics can be effectively used to offer personalized and explainable self-management and behaviour modification resources to patients to reduce the burden of COPD, especially the prevention of acute COPD exacerbations. The functionalities of COPD specific digital therapeutics for self-management need to be grounded in clinical evidence and behavioral theories, in keeping with the selfmanagement needs of COPD patients and their care providers. In this paper, we report the functionalities of a COPD digital therapeutic mobile application based on a needs analysis qualitative study involving both COPD patients and physicians, and, based on the study's finding, we present a knowledge-driven digital therapeutic for COPD self-management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. Design of HL7 FHIR Profiles for Pathology Reports Integrated with Pathology Images.
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Chung-Yueh Lien, Tzu-Yun Ting, Li-Chun Kuo, Pau-Choo Chung, Yuan-Chia Chu, and Chen-Tsung Kuo
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CLINICAL pathology ,LUNG cancer ,NOSOLOGY ,ELECTRONIC data interchange ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOFTWARE architecture ,MEDICAL record linkage ,INFORMATION retrieval ,TERMS & phrases ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL informatics ,SYSTEMATIZED Nomenclature of Medicine - Abstract
This paper describes the development of Health Level Seven Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) profiles for pathology reports integrated with whole slide images and clinical data to create a pathology research database. A report template was designed to collect structured reports, enabling pathologists to select structured terms based on a checklist, allowing for the standardization of terms used to describe tumor features. We gathered and analyzed 190 non-small-cell lung cancer pathology reports in free text format, which were then structured by mapping the itemized vocabulary to FHIR observation resources, using international standard terminologies, such as the International Classification of Diseases, LOINC, and SNOMED CT. The resulting FHIR profiles were published as an implementation guide, which includes 25 profiles for essential data elements, value sets, and structured definitions for integrating clinical data and pathology images associated with the pathology report. These profiles enable the exchange of structured data between systems and facilitate the integration of pathology data into electronic health records, which can improve the quality of care for patients with cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. "We are competing with culture" the chasm between healthcare professionals and Australian Samoan women in the prevention and management of gestational diabetes mellitus.
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NDWIGA, DOROTHY W., MCBRIDE, KATE A., THOMPSON, RONDA, SIMMONS, DAVID, and MACMILLAN, FREYA
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HEALTH Belief Model , *COGNITION disorders , *CULTURE , *PATIENT aftercare , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SPIRITUALITY , *SOCIAL support , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL media , *EXTENDED families , *TIME , *MEDICAL personnel , *INTERVIEWING , *CLINICS , *RISK perception , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *TYPE 2 diabetes , *PREVENTIVE health services , *SEVERITY of illness index , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH attitudes , *HEALTH , *INFORMATION resources , *DISEASE susceptibility , *RESEARCH funding , *GESTATIONAL diabetes , *ETHNIC groups , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *PATIENT-professional relations , *JUDGMENT sampling , *FINANCIAL management , *BEHAVIOR modification , *CHURCH buildings - Abstract
Objective: The Samoan community has a disproportionately higher incidence of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). We explored consumer and healthcare providers' insight into perceptions of risk, attitudes to lifestyle behaviour change and experiences of GDM among Australian Samoan women in South Western Sydney. Methods: Semi-structured interviews and a focus group with Samoan women recruited through three churches, a diabetes and pregnancy clinic in South Western Sydney and via social media were conducted. Semi-structured interviews with healthcare providers' were also conducted. Main themes were thematically analysed to identify recurring patterns using Quirkos software. Identified themes were framed against the constructs of the Health Belief Model. Results: One focus group (n=4) and 12 one-to-one interviews were conducted among Samoan women. Eighteen semi-structured interviews with healthcare providers' were also conducted. There was a high concordance between Samoan women and healthcare providers' regarding perception of risk and barriers to maintaining a healthy lifestyle. However, Samoan women reported negative interactions with healthcare providers' that hindered their behaviour change, while healthcare providers' reported that normalisation of diabetes, confusion of GDM with type 2 diabetes and spiritual health beliefs were deterrents to behaviour change among Samoan women. Conclusion: Cross-cultural factors can influence the uptake of a healthy lifestyle. Future research should consider use of culturally tailored strategies when developing educational resources targeting Samoan women. Implications for research, policy and practice: The participants' viewpoints expressed in this study suggest a critical need for the development of culturally-tailored health promotion strategies for Samoan women and cultural training for healthcare providers', to improve GDM care and subsequent pregnancy outcomes. What is already known about the topic? * There is limited data and research on GDM particularly among the Australian-Samoan community though the available data highlight the significant morbidity and mortality due to diabetes in this population. * Samoan women are at an increased risk of gestational diabetes mellitus. What this paper adds: * This paper provides knowledge and understanding on ways to prevent and manage GDM by investigating the perception of risk and experiences of GDM among Australian Samoan women and healthcare professionals in Sydney. * It provides current evidence base for policy makers and researchers to develop health promotion strategies and interventions that are relevant to the Samoan and other culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. Four System Enablers of Large‐System Transformation in Health Care: A Mixed Methods Realist Evaluation.
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FRANCIS‐AUTON, EMILIE, LONG, JANET C., SARKIES, MITCHELL, ROBERTS, NATALIE, WESTBROOK, JOHANNA, LEVESQUE, JEAN‐FREDERIC, WATSON, DIANE E., HARDWICK, REBECCA, HIBBERT, PETER, POMARE, CHIARA, and BRAITHWAITE, JEFFREY
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- *
CORPORATE culture , *EMPLOYEE retention , *PUBLIC hospitals , *RESEARCH funding , *PATIENT safety , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *LEADERSHIP , *VALUE-based healthcare , *INTERVIEWING , *DECISION making , *LEARNING , *UNCERTAINTY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness , *HEALTH care reform , *COMMUNICATION , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEALTH facilities , *QUALITY assurance , *AUTHORITY - Abstract
Policy PointsThe implementation of large‐scale health care interventions relies on a shared vision, commitment to change, coordination across sites, and a spanning of siloed knowledge.Enablers of the system should include building an authorizing environment; providing relevant, meaningful, transparent, and timely data; designating and distributing leadership and decision making; and fostering the emergence of a learning culture.Attention to these four enablers can set up a positive feedback loop to foster positive change that can protect against the loss of key staff, the presence of lone disruptors, and the enervating effects of uncertainty. Context: Large‐scale transformative initiatives have the potential to improve the quality, efficiency, and safety of health care. However, change is expensive, complex, and difficult to implement and sustain. This paper advances system enablers, which will help to guide large‐scale transformation in health care systems. Methods: A realist study of the implementation of a value‐based health care program between 2017 and 2021 was undertaken in every public hospital (n = 221) in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Four data sources were used to elucidate initial program theories beginning with a set of literature reviews, a program document review, and informal discussions with key stakeholders. Semistructured interviews were then conducted with 56 stakeholders to confirm, refute, or refine the theories. A retroductive analysis produced a series of context‐mechanism‐outcome (CMO) statements. Next, the CMOs were validated with three health care quality expert panels (n = 51). Synthesized data were interrogated to distill the overarching system enablers. Findings: Forty‐two CMO statements from the eight initial program theory areas were developed, refined, and validated. Four system enablers were identified: (1) build an authorizing environment; (2) provide relevant, authentic, timely, and meaningful data; (3) designate and distribute leadership and decision making; and (4) support the emergence of a learning culture. The system enablers provide a nuanced understanding of large‐system transformation that illustrates when, for whom, and in what circumstances large‐system transformation worked well or worked poorly. Conclusions: System enablers offer nuanced guidance for the implementation of large‐scale health care interventions. The four enablers may be portable to similar contexts and provide the empirical basis for an implementation model of large‐system value‐based health care initiatives. With concerted application, these findings can pave the way not just for a better understanding of greater or lesser success in intervening in health care settings but ultimately to contribute higher quality, higher value, and safer care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Informing telehealth service delivery for cardiovascular disease management: exploring the perceptions of rural health professionals.
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Kocanda, Lucy, Fisher, Karin, Brown, Leanne J., May, Jennifer, Rollo, Megan E., Collins, Clare E., Boyle, Andrew, and Schumacher, Tracy L.
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CARDIOVASCULAR disease prevention ,RURAL health services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,RURAL conditions ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,COMMUNITIES ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL health ,TECHNOLOGY ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
Objective: To explore the perceptions of rural health professionals who use telehealth services for cardiovascular health care, including the potential role of telehealth in enhancing services for this patient group. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten rural health professionals across a range of disciplines, including medicine, nursing and allied health. All study participants were based in the same rural region in New South Wales, Australia. Results: Participant responses emphasised the importance of including rural communities in ongoing dialogue to enhance telehealth services for cardiovascular care. Divergent expectations about the purpose of telehealth and unresolved technology issues were identified as factors to be addressed. Rural health professionals highlighted the importance of all stakeholders coming together to overcome barriers and enhance telehealth services in a collaborative manner. Conclusion: This study contributes to an evolving understanding of how health professionals based in regional Australia experience telehealth services. Future telehealth research should proceed in collaboration with rural communities, supported by policy that actively facilitates the meaningful inclusion of rural stakeholders in telehealth dialogue. What is known about the topic?: Telehealth is frequently discussed as a potential solution to overcome aspects of rural health, such as poor outcomes and limited access to services compared with metropolitan areas. In the context of telehealth and cardiovascular disease (CVD), research that focuses on rural communities is limited, particularly regarding the experiences of these communities with telehealth. What does this paper add?: This paper offers insight into how telehealth is experienced by rural health professionals. The paper highlights divergent expectations of telehealth's purpose and unresolved technological issues as barriers to telehealth service delivery. It suggests telehealth services may be enhanced by collaborative approaches that engage multiple stakeholder groups. What are the implications for practitioners?: The use and development of telehealth in rural communities requires a collaborative approach that considers the views of rural stakeholders in their specific contexts. To improve telehealth services for people living with CVD in rural communities, it is important that rural stakeholders have opportunities to engage with non-rural clinicians, telehealth developers and policy makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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28. What place is there for shared housing with individualized disability support?
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Fisher, Karen R., Purcal, Christiane, Jones, Anna, Lutz, Deborah, Robinson, Sally, and Kayess, Rosemary
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CONTROL (Psychology) ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,ENDOWMENTS ,FOCUS groups ,HOUSING ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,LIBERTY ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL personnel ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,PSYCHOLOGY of People with disabilities ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENTS' rights ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL support ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,PATIENT decision making - Abstract
Individualized funding of disability support services has implications for people's choices about when to share their home. This paper examines how people with disabilities made choices about who to live with and the factors influencing these choices. This paper discusses data from interviews with 30 people with mostly intellectual disabilities using individualized support services, 21 interviews with family members, four interviews with service managers, and a focus group with five support workers. The data come from a large evaluation of individualized housing support programs in New South Wales, Australia. Only some people had the opportunity to choose whether to share and with whom. Their choices were constrained by the range of housing options and their limited experience of them, even when they had support to make choices about shared housing or living alone. In some cases, the choices reflected a conceptualization of people with disabilities as different to other citizens in their rights and expectations about their social arrangements. The results have implications for information sharing, housing stock, and the need to challenge the positioning of people with disabilities relative to other people regarding choices about where and with whom to live. Many people preferred not to live alone, so as to improve their economic and social circumstances, and their choice and control. The choices about shared housing that many people and their supporters made were constrained by their limited experience of housing options or their familiarity with the range of choices made by other people with disabilities. Being able to draw on the material, social, and information resources of family made a big difference to their housing choices. It raises questions for policy implementation about whether individualized support may lock some people into shared housing arrangements by failing to include housing costs in the individual package. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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29. Practice in a Time of Uncertainty: Practitioner Reflections on Working With Families Experiencing Intimate Partner Violence During the COVID-19 Global Pandemic.
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Heward-Belle, Susan, Lovell, Renee C., Jones, Jennifer, Tucker, Hayden, and Melander, Nina
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RESEARCH ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,HOME care services ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL workers ,INTERVIEWING ,FEAR ,UNCERTAINTY ,INTIMATE partner violence ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL worker attitudes ,RESEARCH funding ,NURSES ,THEMATIC analysis ,COVID-19 pandemic ,WOMEN employees - Abstract
This paper reports findings of a qualitative study examining the perceptions of 21 Australian women professionals who conduct home visiting with families experiencing intimate partner violence. There is scant evidence documenting how home visiting professionals adapted practice to address the safety concerns of women and their children within the context of the pandemic. Practitioners noted an increase in the risk level and complexity of intimate partner violence (IPV), including the ways that perpetrators weaponized the pandemic to exert power and control over women and children. Practitioners reported on their rapid adaptation of practices, to ensure the continuation of services which included moving to online delivery methods, wearing PPE, and negotiating practice from a distance. While responses to these changes were mixed, most reported their desire to continue to use online platforms post-pandemic, reporting increased safety, flexibility, and accessibility for the majority of clients. This research addresses a gap in respect of professionals' perceptions of the issues facing survivors of IPV and of their professional practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. As policies, practices, and protocols continue to adapt to the challenging environment posed by the pandemic the experiences of professionals and service users are critical to inform these changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. Improving access to drug and alcohol treatment in NSW Australia: The role of self‐determination and peer support.
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Bryant, Joanne, Horwitz, Robyn, Gray, Rebecca M., Lafferty, Lise, Jops, Paula, Blunden, Hazel, Hudson, Suzie, and Brener, Loren
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SOCIAL role ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CROSS-sectional method ,SOCIAL networks ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,SOUND recordings ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
One of the key issues in the alcohol and other drug (AOD) treatment sector concerns the reported difficulties that clients have in accessing treatment. This paper draws on qualitative interview data collected from clients undergoing treatment (n = 20) and stakeholders (n = 15) of five specialist non‐government AOD treatment services in New South Wales, Australia, to offer an in‐depth perspective about treatment entry experiences. We identified four key themes of positive treatment entry experiences: the presence of high‐quality online information which enabled clients to best match themselves to treatment; flexible and simple intake procedures with skilled and welcoming staff; the presence and quality of social and other resources (such as families, peers and private health insurance) which enabled quicker access; and prior experience in the treatment system which helped clients to gain important knowledge and skills to improve future access. We discuss implications of these findings, including that waiting lists significantly exacerbate inequity, but that this could be ameliorated by providing peer‐support to those trying to gain entry, especially clients who do not have family and friends for help during this period. The findings also point to the way that client self‐determination is central to all positive treatment entry experiences, and that supporting clients to find 'the right fit' in relation to treatment options improves their experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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31. Influential factor combinations leading to language outcomes following a home visiting intervention: A qualitative comparative analysis (QCA).
- Author
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Short, Kate, Eadie, Patricia, and Kemp, Lynn
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COMPARATIVE studies ,HOME care services ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUALITATIVE research ,SECONDARY analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,EARLY medical intervention ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Children who experience adversity are more vulnerable to language difficulties. Early interventions beginning antenatally, such as home visiting, are provided to help prevent these problems. To improve the precision of early interventions, the impact of combinations of risk and protective factors over time must be explored and understood. There is, however, limited research investigating how such factors interact with intervention to change language outcomes over time. Aim: To explore the different paths that lead to Good and Poor language in a cohort of children experiencing adversity whose mothers received an optimal dose of the Maternal Early Childhood Sustained Home visiting (MECSH) intervention over 2.5 years. Methods & Procedures: A total of 24 low socioeconomic status (SES) mothers experiencing adversity and their children who received more than half the scheduled dose of the MECSH intervention were followed over time: from before birth to school entry. Data were extracted from surveys and direct measurement over the study course. Child language outcome at school entry and the influence of seven key child, maternal and environmental factors, which have been shown in previous research to result in Good and Poor language outcomes, were explored through qualitative comparative analysis (QCA). QCA is a qualitative analytical technique that provides a deeper understanding of factor combinations influencing language development. Outcomes & Results: Multiple paths to Good (six paths) and Poor language (seven paths) were found. Paths with mostly protective factors resulted in Good language, except when maternal antenatal distress was present. Paths with two or more influential risks usually resulted in Poor language outcomes. When children experiencing adversity received the MECSH home visiting intervention, there was no one risk or protective factor necessary for Good or Poor language outcomes; however, there were clear patterns of factor combinations. Conclusions & Implications: Mothers' antenatal psychological resources were a flag for future language concerns which can be used to improve the precision of the MECSH intervention. They were highly influential to their children's Good and Poor language outcomes by 5 years, when over time they were combined with characteristics such as early childhood education, poor maternal responsivity and/or the number of children in the home. Knowledge of early conditions associated with later Poor language can help clinicians identify and respond in preventative and promoting ways to improve language skills. What this paper addsWhat is already known on the subjectChildren experiencing adversity are more vulnerable to language difficulties. Both risk for language difficulties and protection against them in this group are via a complex combination of factors. It is unknown how intervention works with these complex factors to result in Good and Poor language outcomes.What this paper adds to existing knowledgeThere are multiple paths to both Good and Poor language outcomes for children experiencing adversity. Mothers' psychological resources antenatally in combination with other key factors were particularly influential to Good and Poor language outcomes.What are the clinical implications of this work?In this study, maternal antenatal distress together with poor maternal responsivity were present in children's paths to Poor language outcomes at school entry. An extra focus on responsivity is required in antenatally distressed mothers of children experiencing adversity in early interventions. Children of mothers with good psychological resources antenatally who received home visiting intervention had Good language outcomes at 5 years when combined with 3 years or more of early childhood education and if there were one to two children in the home. Knowledge of these influences on language development can improve the precision of home visiting interventions and help clinicians tailor their visits to individual families' needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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32. The Rohingya Little Local: exploring innovative models of refugee engagement in Sydney, Australia.
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Bestman, Amy, Lloyd, Jane, Hawkshaw, Barbara, Kabir, Jawat, and Harris, Elizabeth
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COMMUNITY health services ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,ETHNIC groups ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH risk assessment ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,REFUGEES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL participation ,THEORY ,SOCIAL constructionism ,THEMATIC analysis ,CULTURAL competence ,FIELD notes (Science) - Abstract
The Rohingya community living in the City of Canterbury-Bankstown in Sydney have been identified as a priority population with complex health needs. As part of ongoing work, AU$10 000 was provided to the community to address important, self-determined, health priorities through the Can Get Health in Canterbury program. Program staff worked with community members to support the planning and implementation of two community-led events: a soccer (football) tournament and a picnic day. This paper explores the potential for this funding model and the effect of the project on both the community and health services. Data were qualitatively analysed using a range of data sources within the project. These included, attendance sheets, meeting minutes, qualitative field notes, staff reflections and transcripts of focus group and individual discussions. This analysis identified that the project: (1) enabled community empowerment and collective control over funding decisions relating to their health; (2) supported social connection among the Australian Rohingya community; (3) built capacity in the community welfare organisation –Burmese Rohingya Community Australia; and (4) enabled reflective practice and learnings. This paper presents an innovative model for engaging with refugee communities. Although this project was a pilot in the Canterbury community, it provides knowledge and learnings on the engagement of refugee communities with the health system in Australia. The Rohingya Little Local provides an innovative model for engaging with marginalised communities. Although this project was a pilot, it provides knowledge and learnings on the engagement of refugee communities with the health system in Australia. This model is a promising and pragmatic approach to support community-led projects within place-based interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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33. Risk factors for non-participation in a universal developmental surveillance program in a population in Australia.
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Ayer, Chandra, Eapen, Valsamma, Overs, Bronwyn, Descallar, Joseph, Jalaludin, Bin, Eastwood, John Graeme, Dissanayake, Cheryl, Williams, Katrina, Murphy, Elisabeth, and Woolfenden, Susan
- Subjects
CHILD development deviations -- Risk factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FATHERS ,INFANT development ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL records ,MOTHERS ,NATIONAL health insurance ,PARENTS ,PATIENT compliance ,CULTURAL pluralism ,PREVENTIVE health services ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,ECONOMIC status ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objectives: This study examined the risk factors for non-participation in a developmental surveillance program in a population in south-west Sydney with a high proportion of culturally diverse and socioeconomically disadvantaged people. Methods: Data from 850 and 625 12- and 18-month-old children respectively from the Watch Me Grow (WMG) birth cohort were used for this study. Logistic regression models were used to assess risk factors for 12- and 18-month non-attendance at Well Child Visits, as well as non-completion of the developmental surveillance questionnaire Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status (PEDS) in the child's personal health record (PHR). Results: Independent risk factors for non-attendance at Well Child Visits were female sex of the child (odds ratio (OR) 12 months 1.5; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0–2.3), mother's country of birth Australia (OR 18 months 1.8; 95% CI 1.2–2.7), annual household income less than A$25 001 (OR 12 months 1.8; 95% CI 1.0–3.2) and residing in a socioeconomically disadvantaged neighbourhood (OR 12 months 1.7; 95% CI 1.1–2.5). Independent risk factors for non-completion of PEDS in those who did not attend the Well Child Visit compared with those who did attend and did complete PEDS were household annual income at birth less than A$25 001 (OR 12 months 3.9; 95% CI 1.9–8.1) and residing in a socioeconomically disadvantaged neighbourhood (OR 12 months 2.1 (95% CI 1.2–3.7) and OR 18 months 2.0 (95% CI 1.2–3.6)). Conclusions: In this population, children exposed to socioeconomic disadvantage are less likely to have attended a Well Child Visit and to have a completed PEDS in their PHR at 12 and/or 18 months of age. What is known about the topic?: Developmental problems are common in early childhood, and children from socioeconomically disadvantaged households are at higher risk. Universal developmental surveillance programs may be effective at early identification of children at risk of developmental problems. Early childhood interventions, when accessed, can lessen the effects of developmental problems in later years. What does this paper add?: This paper highlights that children exposed to socioeconomic disadvantage in early childhood who are at higher risk of having developmental problems are also at higher risk of missing out on early identification by non-participation in universal developmental surveillance. What are the implications for practitioners?: A more equitable model of developmental surveillance should include a framework of proportionate universalism to ensure optimal engagement of high-risk population groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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34. Disease and economic burden of infections in hospitalised children in New South Wales, Australia.
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McMullan, Brendan J., Valentine, Jake C., Hall, Lisa, and Thursky, Karin
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LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL care costs ,INFECTION ,HOSPITAL care ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,DATA analysis software ,HOSPITAL care of children - Abstract
Objectives: To describe the burden of disease and hospitalisation costs in children with common infections using statewide administrative data. Methods: We analysed hospitalisation prevalence and costs for 10 infections: appendicitis, cellulitis, cervical lymphadenitis, meningitis, osteomyelitis, pneumonia, pyelonephritis, sepsis, septic arthritis, and urinary tract infections in children aged <18 years admitted to hospital within New South Wales, Australia, using an activity-based management administrative dataset over three financial years (1 July 2016–30 June 2019). Results: Among 339 077 admissions, 28 748 (8.48%) were coded with one of the 10 infections, associated with a total hospitalisation cost of AUD230 905 190 and a per episode median length-of-stay of 3 bed-days. Pneumonia was the most prevalent coded infection (3.1% [ n = 10 524] of all admissions), followed by appendicitis (1.61%; n = 5460), cellulitis (1.22%; n = 4126) and urinary tract infections (0.94%; n = 3193). Eighty per cent of children (n = 22 529) were admitted to a non-paediatric hospital. Mean costs were increased 1.18-fold per additional bed-day, 2.14-fold with paediatric hospital admissions, and 5.49-fold with intensive care unit admissions, which were both also associated with greater total bed-day occupancy. Indigenous children comprised 9.7% of children admitted with these infections, and mean per episode costs, and median bed-days were reduced compared with non-Indigenous children (0.84 [95% CI 0.78, 0.89] and 3 (IQR: 2,5) vs 2 (IQR: 2,4), respectively. Conclusions: Infections in children requiring hospitalisation contribute a substantial burden of disease and cost to the community. This varies by infection, facility type, and patient demographics, and this information should be used to inform and prioritise programs to improve care for children. What is known about the topic? Infections contribute an important source of paediatric hospital admissions, but the population burden of these infections and nature of associated hospitalisations are not well understood. What does this paper add? Ten infectious conditions contributed to almost 10% of all paediatric hospitalisations, and costs were increased with additional bed-days, paediatric hospital admission, and intensive care use. What are the implications for practitioners? This information should be used to prioritise areas of care for hospitalised children, with potential for benchmarking and focusing resources within areas of need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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35. Feasibility and outcomes of a general practice and specialist alcohol and other drug collaborative care program in Sydney, Australia.
- Author
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Wilson, H. H. K., Schulz, M., Mills, L., and Lintzeris, N.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,ALCOHOLISM treatment ,WELL-being ,STATISTICS ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DRUG abstinence ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PRIMARY health care ,TEMPERANCE ,MEDICAL care use ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,T-test (Statistics) ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,DATA analysis software ,DATA analysis ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Alcohol and other drug (AoD) use is an important health and community issue and may be positively affected by collaborative care programs between specialist AoD services and general practice. This paper describes the feasibility, model of care and patient outcomes of a pilot general practice and specialist AoD (GP-AoD) collaborative care program, in Sydney, Australia, based on usual care data, the minimum data set, service utilisation information and the Australian Treatment Outcome Profile (ATOP), a patient-reported outcome measure. There were 367 referrals to the collaborative care program. GPs referred 210 patients, whereas the AoD service referred 157 patients. Most GP referrals (91.9%) were for AoD problems, whereas nearly half the AoD service referrals were for other issues. The primary drugs of concern in the GP group were either opioids or non-opioids (mostly alcohol). The AoD service-referred patients were primarily using opioids. An ATOP was completed for 152 patients. At the time of referral, those in the GP-referred non-opioid group were significantly less likely to be abstinent, used their primary drug of concern more days and were more likely to be employed (all P < 0.001). A second ATOP was completed for 93 patients. These data showed a significant improvement in the number of days the primary drug of concern was used (P = 0.026) and trends towards abstinence, improved quality of life and physical and psychological well-being for patients in the program. There are few studies of GP-AoD collaborative care programs and nothing in the Australian context. This study suggests that GP-AoD collaborative care programs in Australia are feasible and improve drug use. Alcohol and other drug use is common in Australia and causes serious health and well-being issues. Collaborative care between GPs and specialist alcohol and other drug services may improve this. This is the first Australian study to address collaborative care between GPs and alcohol and other drug services. The study shows that collaborative care is feasible in the Australian setting and suggests that it could help people who use alcohol and other drugs to access care and improve their health and well-being outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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36. Disclosure of adverse events: a data linkage study reporting patient experiences among Australian adults aged ≥45 years.
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Walton, Merrilyn, Harrison, Reema, Smith-Merry, Jennifer, Kelly, Patrick, Manias, Elizabeth, Jorm, Christine, and Iedema, Rick
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CHI-squared test ,STATISTICAL correlation ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DISCLOSURE ,THEMATIC analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,ADVERSE health care events ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: Since Australia initiated national open disclosure standards in 2002, open disclosure policies have been adopted in all Australian states and territories. Yet, research evidence regarding their adoption is limited. The aim of the present study was to determine the frequency with which patients who report an adverse event had information disclosed to them about the incident, including whether they participated in a formal open disclosure process, their experiences of the process and the extent to which these align with the current New South Wales (NSW) policy. Methods: A cross-sectional survey about patient experiences of disclosure associated with an adverse event was administered to a random sample of 20 000 participants in the 45 and Up Study who were hospitalised in NSW, Australia, between January and June 2014. Results: Of the 18 993 eligible potential participants, completed surveys were obtained from 7661 (40% response rate), with 474 (7%) patients reporting an adverse event. Of those who reported an adverse event, a significant majority reported an informal or bedside disclosure (91%; 430/474). Only 79 patients (17%) participated in a formal open disclosure meeting. Most informal disclosures were provided by nurses, with only 25% provided by medical practitioners. Conclusions: Experiences of open disclosure may be enhanced by informing patients of their right to full disclosure in advance of or upon admission to hospital, and recognition of and support for informal or bedside disclosure for appropriate types of incidents. A review of the open disclosure guidelines in relation to the types of adverse events that require formal open disclosure and those more suitable to informal bedside disclosure is indicated. Guidelines for bedside disclosure should be drafted to assist medical practitioners and other health professionals facilitate and improve their communications about adverse events. Alignment of formal disclosure with policy requirements may also be enhanced by training multidisciplinary teams in the process. What is known about the topic?: While open disclosure is required in all cases of serious adverse events, patients' experiences are variable, and lack of, or poor quality disclosures are all too common. What does this paper add?: This paper presents experiences reported by patients across New South Wales in a large cross-sectional survey. Unlike previous studies of open disclosure, recently hospitalised patients were identified and invited using data linkage with medical records. Findings suggest that most patients receive informal disclosures rather than a process that aligns with the current policy guidance. What are the implications for practitioners?: Experiences of open disclosure may be enhanced by informing patients of their right to full disclosure in advance of or upon admission to hospital, and recognition of and support for informal or bedside disclosure for appropriate types of incidents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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37. The Unbreakable Bond: The Mental Health Benefits and Challenges of Pet Ownership for People Experiencing Homelessness.
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Cleary, Michelle, West, Sancia, Visentin, Denis, Phipps, Monique, Westman, Mark, Vesk, Kristina, and Kornhaber, Rachel
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GRIEF ,RESEARCH methodology ,PETS ,MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,HUMAN-animal relationships ,SOCIAL isolation ,PUBLIC housing ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,RESEARCH funding ,HOMELESS persons ,HOMELESSNESS ,ANXIETY ,EMOTIONS ,THEMATIC analysis ,BEHAVIOR modification ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Pet ownership provides a unique relationship that is beneficial to many aspects of the pet owner's life, including mental health and companionship. Mental health and social isolation are negatively impacted by homelessness, increasing the importance of the owner-pet bond during this time. However, this relationship is complicated by the need for pet owners to urgently find accommodation for themselves while still caring for their pets. This paper explores two firsthand narratives of the relationship between a person and their pets during a period of homelessness and subsequent search for accommodation. Both narratives highlight important aspects of the emotional bond between owner and pet: the concept of choosing pet over place; improved mental health and changed behaviours; and stressors or negative emotions of parental concern, separation anxiety and grief. These narratives emphasise the importance of supporting, expanding and creating new pet-friendly crisis and permanent accommodation options for pet owners experiencing homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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38. First Nations Peoples in the forensic mental health system in New South Wales: Characteristics and rates of criminal charges post-release.
- Author
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Dean, Kimberlie, Lyons, Georgia, Johnson, Anina, and McEntyre, Elizabeth
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- *
INDIGENOUS Australians , *STATISTICS , *PRISON psychology , *MENTAL health , *CRIME , *RESEARCH funding , *FORENSIC medicine , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CRIMINAL justice system , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: It is well established that First Nations Peoples in Australia are overrepresented within the criminal justice system. However, First Nations Peoples appear to be comparatively underrepresented in the forensic mental health system, and little is known about their outcomes once released from secure care. Objective: To compare the characteristics and rates of repeat criminal justice contact for a criminal charge of First Nations and non-First Nations forensic patients in New South Wales. Methods: Data on the sample were extracted from the New South Wales Mental Health Review Tribunal paper and electronic files matched to the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research Reoffending Database. Characteristics of First Nations and non-First Nations patients were compared using univariate logistic regression analysis. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression was used to determine predictors of post-release criminal charges. Results: Key differences in the sociodemographic, clinical and forensic characteristics of First Nations compared with non-First Nations forensic patients were identified. The time to first criminal justice contact following release was significantly shorter for First Nations forensic patients (p < 0.01). Conclusion: The findings of this study confirm that First Nations forensic patients have distinct and complex needs that are apparent at entry to the forensic mental health system and that their poorer criminal justice contact rates following release from secure care indicate that these needs are not being adequately met either during treatment or once in the community. Responses to these study findings must consider the complex and continuing impact of colonisation on First Nations Peoples, as well as the need for solutions to be culturally safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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39. The impact of using an academic electronic medical record program on first-year nursing students' confidence and skills in using E-documentation: a quasi-experimental study.
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MOLLART, LYNDALL, NOBLE, DANIELLE, MERELES, ADRIAN, MALLYON, JENNIFER, and IRWIN, PAULETTA
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- *
COMPUTER simulation , *MEMORY , *SCHOOL environment , *COMPUTER software , *CONFIDENCE , *CLINICAL trials , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEALTH occupations students , *ACQUISITION of data , *INTERNSHIP programs , *NURSING education , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *SURVEYS , *NURSING practice , *QUALITATIVE research , *DOCUMENTATION , *CLINICAL competence , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *MEDICAL records , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *RESEARCH funding , *ELECTRONIC health records , *NURSING students , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STUDENT attitudes , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of using an academic electronic medical record program on first-year nursing students' confidence and skill in E-documentation after their hospital clinical placement. Background: Registered nurses are the largest user group of health information technology systems such as patient electronic medical records (eMR). As such, nurse undergraduate programs need to reflect contemporary practices and respond to emerging trends including digital technology, however integration of eMR learning has not occurred in many countries. To address this gap, a fit-for-purpose academic eMR simulation program was developed by nursing academics and a university Learning Design Department member. Study Design and Methods: A quasi-experimental study design, with self-administered pre-test, post-test surveys, was used with a convenience sample of all first-year nursing students at one regional university in NSW Australia in 2019 and 2021. Results: A total of 105 students completed the surveys (9.7% pre, and 7.4% post-test survey). Only 23% of respondents received training during hospital clinical placement on eMR and electronic observation charts. There was a significant increase in participant confidence and knowledge in documenting in electronic adult observational charts and notes after using the academic eMR program and attending clinical placement. Three themes emerged from the qualitative data: preparation for practice; more exposure increases confidence; and we can't forget the patient. Conclusion: Students acknowledged the need for repeated practice using an academic eMR program in university learning environments to ensure they would be work-ready. The identified challenge was the communication barrier (computer on wheels) and the potential negative impact on person-centred care and therapeutic communication. Implications for research, policy and practice: Further research is required to determine whether repeated practice with electronic documentation is best placed within a curriculum to increase learner confidence. Simulations that incorporate workstations on wheels should be tested to determine best practice for therapeutic communication. What is already known about this topic? • Registered nurses are the largest user group of health information technology systems. • Nursing undergraduate program needs to reflect contemporary practices including digital technologies. • Integration of eMR education in undergraduate nursing programs has not occurred in many countries. What this paper adds: • Evaluation of a fit-for-purpose academic electronic medical record program integrated into an undergraduate nursing student's curriculum. • There was a significant increase in participant confidence and knowledge in documenting in electronic adult observational charts and notes after using the academic eMR program. • Digital technology education tailored for students of different age groups may be required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Using World Cafés to engage an Australian culturally and linguistically diverse community around human papillomavirus vaccination.
- Author
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Prokopovich, Kathleen, Phillipson, Lyn, West, Leissa, Stanoevska, Biljana, Street, Jackie, and Braunack‐Mayer, Annette
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CULTURAL pluralism ,QUALITATIVE research ,PAPILLOMAVIRUS diseases ,HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines ,ACTION research ,DECISION making ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,GROUP process ,ADULT education workshops ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Introduction: Internationally, cultural factors are associated with vaccine uptake and completion in ethnic minority communities. Whilst Australia has achieved high human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination, little is known about how culture or ethnicity influences HPV vaccination engagement. To address these gaps, we partnered with our Local Health District to explore how one culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) community engages with school and HPV vaccination. Methods: We adapted a participatory research method (the World Café) to engage one local CALD community—the Macedonian community (Our bi‐cultural researcher and participants preferred the term 'Macedonia' rather than The Republic of North Macedonia as outlined in the 2018 Prespa agreement) in New South Wales (Australia)—to discuss HPV and school vaccination. Our qualitative analysis combined deductive codes taken from the Tailoring Immunization Programme framework, inductive codes guided by narrative inquiry (temporality, sociality and place) and previously known vaccination 'trust' frameworks. Results: In late 2019, 31 local Macedonian community members were purposely recruited for two World Cafés (n = 15 mothers/grandmothers and n = 16 young adults). Our themes reveal a community narrative grounded in historical vaccine experiences, family views on vaccination and a general trust in schools. Participants collectively discussed how 'increasing knowledge' and 'tailoring health communications' could strengthen community vaccine decision‐making. Conclusion: This study demonstrates how research partnerships and participatory methods can be applied in CALD community settings to research engagement with school and HPV vaccination. Our World Café dialogues highlight a positive narrative about vaccines, where community vaccination behaviours were built on multilayer trust relationships despite low vaccine knowledge. Our findings further knowledge around 'public trust' in school vaccination, highlighting the importance of existing (or missing) trust relationships when tailoring vaccine communication to local CALD communities. Patient or Public Contribution: Participants who took part in the World Cafes were all local Macedonian community parents or young adults who have been or will be exposed to the health services offered by school‐based HPV vaccination. Thus, all the data collected came from their personal experiences with the school vaccination programme, or how they expect to participate in the programme. To ensure our study design was culturally appropriate and tailored to the Macedonian community, we engaged with the relevant local health stakeholders (the bi‐cultural Multicultural Health Officer and Multicultural Health Service Manager Programme Director) to adapt and refine the World Café method for this context and setting. Our local health stakeholders also reviewed our preliminary findings, assisted with data interpretation and participated in manuscript editing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. LGBT people's knowledge of and preparedness to discuss end-of-life care planning options.
- Author
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Hughes, Mark and Cartwright, Colleen
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,DECISION making ,PATIENT-family relations ,CASE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,LGBTQ+ people ,HEALTH literacy ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Despite the devastating impact of HIV/AIDS, end-of-life care planning among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities is relatively under-researched, especially in Australia. This paper reports findings of a survey of 305 LGBT people living in New South Wales, which examined their knowledge of and attitudes towards end-of-life care. The focus of this paper is their preparedness to discuss with healthcare providers any end-of-life care plans. The results highlight that while the majority of respondents were aware of three of the four key end-of-life care planning options available in New South Wales -- enduring powers of attorney, enduring guardians and person responsible (only a minority had heard of advance healthcare directives) -- a much smaller number of people had actually taken up these options. Only a minority of respondents were able to identify correctly who had the legal right to make treatment decisions for a person who is unconscious following a car accident. A small proportion of people had discussed end-of-life care options with general practitioners or another main healthcare provider, and only in very few cases were these issues raised by the practitioners themselves. Those most likely to not feel comfortable discussing these issues with practitioners included younger people, those not fully open about their sexuality to family members, and transgender people and others who do not define their gender as male or female. The paper highlights the importance of education strategies to raise awareness of the end-of-life care planning options among LGBT people, as well as strategies for increasing health providers' preparedness to discuss these issues with LGBT patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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42. Personalized Prediction of Parkinson's Disease Progression Based on Deep Gaussian Processes.
- Author
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Changrong PAN, Yu TIAN, Tianshu ZHOU, and Jingsong LI
- Subjects
DISEASE progression ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,HUMAN multitasking ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,LEARNING ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PARKINSON'S disease ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PREDICTION models ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,PROBABILITY theory ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Parkinson's disease is a chronic progressive neurodegenerative disease with highly heterogeneous symptoms and progression. It is helpful for patient management to establish a personalized model that integrates heterogeneous interpretation methods to predict disease progression. In the study, we propose a novel approach based on a multi-task learning framework to divide Parkinson's disease progression modeling into an unsupervised clustering task and a disease progression prediction task. On the one hand, the method can cluster patients with different progression trajectories and discover new progression patterns of Parkinson's disease. On the other hand, the discovery of new progression patterns helps to predict the future progression of Parkinson's disease markers more accurately through parameter sharing among multiple tasks. We discovered three different Parkinson's disease progression patterns and achieved better prediction performance (MAE=5.015, RMSE=7.284, r2=0.727) than previously proposed methods on Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative datasets, which is a longitudinal cohort study with newly diagnosed Parkinson's disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Multi-Resolution Denoising Method for Low-Dose CT Based on the Reconstruction of Wavelet High-Frequency Channel.
- Author
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Jinnan HU, Peijun HU, Yiwei GAO, Yanxia ZHAO, and Jingsong LI
- Subjects
PLASTIC surgery ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SIGNAL processing ,RESEARCH funding ,COMPUTED tomography ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Computed tomography (CT) is widely applied in contemporary clinic. Due to the radiation risks carried by X-rays, the imaging and post-processing methods of low-dose CT (LDCT) become popular topics in academia and industrial community. Generally, LDCT presents strong noise and artifacts, while existing algorithms cannot completely overcome the blurring effects and meantime reduce the noise. The proposed method enables CT extend to independent frequency channels by wavelet transformation, then two separate networks are established for low-frequency denoising and high-frequency reconstruction. The clean signals from high-frequency channel are reconstructed through channel translation, which is essentially effective in preserving detailed structures. The public dataset from Mayo Clinic was used for model training and testing. The experiments showed that the proposed method achieves a better quantitative result (PSNR: 37.42dB, SSIM: 0.8990) and details recovery visually, which demonstrates our framework can better restore the detailed features while significantly suppressing the noise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
44. Leaving the door open for 'tune ups': Challenging notions of ending working relationships in family work.
- Author
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Reimer, Elizabeth Claire
- Subjects
PREVENTION of child abuse ,FAMILY health ,FAMILY services ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH funding ,SUPERVISION of employees ,TRUST ,DISEASE relapse ,QUALITATIVE research ,CLIENT relations ,TERMINATION of treatment ,THEMATIC analysis ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PARENT attitudes ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL worker attitudes - Abstract
The working relationship is considered a central feature of direct practice with human services clients. There are many challenges when it comes time to end a working relationship, yet limited guidance for workers on successful relationship ending. This paper aims to increase understanding of the process of the ending phase of the working relationship for parents and workers working with families where child neglect is an issue. The paper draws on data from a small-scale qualitative Australian study of perceptions of parents, family workers, and supervisors involved in eight parent-worker relationships. Using semistructured interviews, participants were asked to explore how they experienced the relationship. The findings illuminate important aspects about the ending phase of the relationship; in particular, challenging the idea that parents' returning to services for support is a sign that the service has not provided a successful intervention. The paper challenges social workers to consider recurring parent-worker relationships similar to other professional relationships where there are episodes of service but the relationship is there to be reactivated where needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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45. What is the place of reflective learning in researching farming couples’ retirement decision making?
- Author
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Downey, Heather, Threlkeld, Guinever, and Warburton, Jeni
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AGRICULTURAL laborers ,AGRICULTURE ,DECISION making ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH funding ,RETIREMENT ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SPOUSES ,REFLEXIVITY ,NARRATIVES ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
The large body of literature concerning couples’ decision making highlights the complexities faced by couples, and the potential challenges for social work practitioners. With population ageing, more people are living longer, many in long-term relationships, thus facing a range of critical later life decisions together. Yet, little is known about the challenges of interviewing couples together. This paper seeks to address this gap by reporting on a reflection on the process of conducting a constructionist narrative study of older farming couples’ retirement decision making. Drawing on Ruch’s (2000) model of reflective learning, this article considers research into couples’ decision making in a reflective cycle, including reflection on the supervisory relationship enabling transition from practitioner to researcher. This paper highlights the value of a reflective and reflexive supervision model when examining contexts dominated by a powerful discourse, such as the generational family farming narrative. The collection of data across two time phases permits exploration of change concerning rapport building and trust, relationships, decision making and participants’ construction of the interviewer. Findings from this study have implications for practitioners and researchers seeking to understand the process of interviewing older couples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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46. Duty and dilemma: Perioperative nurses hiding an objection to participate in organ procurement surgery.
- Author
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Smith, Zaneta
- Subjects
CORPORATE culture ,DECISION making ,ORGAN donation ,GROUNDED theory ,WORKING hours ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,JOB stress ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSING practice ,NURSING ethics ,OPERATING room nursing ,OPERATING rooms ,PARTICIPATION ,PERSONNEL management ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,UNCERTAINTY ,THEORY ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis ,PEER relations ,DIARY (Literary form) ,WORK experience (Employment) ,HOSPITAL nursing staff - Abstract
Perioperative nurses assist in organ procurement surgery; however, there is a dearth of information of how they encounter making conscientious objection requests or refusals to participate in organ procurement surgery. Organ procurement surgical procedures can present to the operating room ad hoc and can catch a nurse who may not desire to participate by surprise with little opportunity to refuse as a result of staffing, skill mix or organizational work demands. This paper that stems from a larger doctoral research study exploring the experiences of perioperative nurses participating in multi-organ procurement surgery used a grounded theory method to develop a substantive theory of the nurses' experiences. This current paper aimed to highlight the experiences of perioperative nurses when confronted with expressing a conscientious objection towards their participation in these procedures. A number of organizational and cultural barriers within the healthcare organization were seen to hamper their ability in expressing a conscience-based refusal, which lead to their reluctant participation. Perioperative nurses must feel safe to express a conscientious objection towards these types of surgical procedures and feel supported in doing so by their respective hospital organizations and not be forced to participate unwillingly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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47. Motivational Interviewing: Reconciling Recovery-Focused Care and Mental Health Nursing Practice.
- Author
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Mullen, Antony, Isobel, Sophie, Flanagan, Karen, Key, Kylie, Dunbar, Anna, Bell, Alison, and Lewin, Terry J.
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NURSING education ,CHI-squared test ,CLINICAL competence ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONFIDENCE ,CONVALESCENCE ,NURSING ,NURSING practice ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,SUPERVISION of employees ,ADULT education workshops ,MOTIVATIONAL interviewing ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,PATIENT-centered care ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Motivational interviewing (MI) is a long-established evidenced-based intervention aimed at guiding people to implement change. Originally developed by William Miller from the United States and Stephen Rollnick from the United Kingdom, a strong emphasis for MI is the underlying 'spirit', rather than merely the specific techniques within the model. The 'spirit' of MI consists of four key components: acceptance, partnership, evocation and compassion. These have direct overlap with concepts within the personal recovery model recognised as a critical framework in delivery of contemporary mental health services for consumers. Despite this recognition, recovery concepts have struggled to gain consistent traction, particularly within inpatient mental health units. This paper proposes that MI presents one strategy for integrating recovery-focused principles within routine mental health nursing (MHN) practice. An overview of MI and its relationship with recovery principles is discussed in the context of contemporary MHN practice. Evaluation results of a locally developed MI workshop for MHNs within a regional area of New South Wales (NSW) in Australia are presented to highlight the emerging evidence for this potential. Following the workshop, MHN participants showed key improvements in knowledge and confidence scores, as well as in understanding of key MI processes and strategies. The consolidation of these skills through training and a supervision framework is outlined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Scale-up of the Physical Activity 4 Everyone (PA4E1) intervention in secondary schools: 12-month implementation outcomes from a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Sutherland, Rachel, Campbell, Elizabeth, McLaughlin, Matthew, Nathan, Nicole, Wolfenden, Luke, Lubans, David R., Morgan, Philip J., Gillham, Karen, Oldmeadow, Chris, Searles, Andrew, Reeves, Penny, Williams, Mandy, Kajons, Nicole, Bailey, Andrew, Boyer, James, Lecathelinais, Christophe, Davies, Lynda, McKenzie, Tom, Hollis, Jenna, and Wiggers, John
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EVALUATION of human services programs ,HEALTH promotion ,HIGH schools ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SURVEYS ,TEACHERS ,ADOLESCENT health ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CLUSTER sampling - Abstract
Background: 'Physical Activity 4 Everyone' (PA4E1) was an efficacious multi-component school-based physical activity (PA) program targeting adolescents. PA4E1 has seven PA practices. It is essential to scale-up, evaluate effectiveness and assess implementation of such programs. Therefore, the aim is to assess the impact of implementation support on school practice uptake of the PA4E1 program at 12 and 24 months. Methods: A cluster randomised controlled trial, utilising a type III hybrid implementation-effectiveness design, was conducted in 49 randomly selected disadvantaged Australian Government and Catholic secondary schools. A blinded statistician randomly allocated schools to a usual practice control (n = 25) or the PA4E1 program group (n = 24), with the latter receiving seven implementation support strategies to support school PA practice uptake of the seven practices retained from the efficacy trial. The primary outcome was the proportion of schools adopting at least four of the seven practices, assessed via telephone surveys with Head Physical Education Teachers and analysed using exact logistic regression modelling. This paper reports the 12-month outcomes. Results: Schools were recruited from May to November 2017. At baseline, no schools implemented four of the seven practices. At 12 months significantly more schools in the program group had implemented four of the seven practices (16/24, 66.7%) than the control group (1/25, 4%) (OR = 33.0[4.15–1556.4], p < 0.001). The program group implemented on average 3.2 (2.5–3.9) more practices than the control group (p < 0.001, mean 3.9 (SD 1.5) vs 0.7 (1.0)). Fidelity and reach of the implementation support intervention were high (both > 80%). Conclusions: Through the application of multiple implementation support strategies, secondary schools were able to overcome commonly known barriers to implement evidence based school PA practices. As such practices have been shown to result in an increase in adolescent PA and improvements in weight status, policy makers and practitioners responsible for advocating PA in schools should consider this implementation approach more broadly when working with schools. Follow-up is required to determine whether practice implementation is sustained. Trial registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12617000681358 registered 12th May 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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49. Gap in funding for specialist hospitals treating patients with traumatic spinal cord injury under an activity-based funding model in New South Wales, Australia.
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Vaikuntam, Bharat Phani, Middleton, James W., McElduff, Patrick, Walsh, John, Pearse, Jim, Connelly, Luke, and Sharwood, Lisa N.
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,CRITICAL care medicine ,DO-not-resuscitate orders ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care costs ,NOSOLOGY ,PUBLIC hospitals ,RESEARCH funding ,SPINAL cord injuries ,WOUNDS & injuries ,GOVERNMENT aid ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to estimate the difference between treatment costs in acute care settings and the level of funding public hospitals would receive under the activity-based funding model. Methods: Patients aged ≥16 years who had sustained an incident traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) between June 2013 and June 2016 in New South Wales were included in the study. Patients were identified from record-linked health data. Costs were estimated using two approaches: (1) using District Network Return (DNR) data; and (2) based on national weighted activity units (NWAU) assigned to activity-based funding activity. The funding gap in acute care treatment costs for TSCI patients was determined as the difference in cost estimates between the two approaches. Results: Over the study period, 534 patients sustained an acute incident TSCI, accounting for 811 acute care hospital separations within index episodes. The total acute care treatment cost was estimated at A$40.5 million and A$29.9 million using the DNR- and NWAU-based methods respectively. The funding gap in total costs was greatest for the specialist spinal cord injury unit (SCIU) colocated with a major trauma service (MTS), at A$4.4 million over the study period. Conclusions: The findings of this study suggest a substantial gap in funding for resource-intensive patients with TSCI in specialist hospitals under current DRG-based funding methods. What is known about the topic?: DRG-based funding methods underestimate the treatment costs at the hospital level for patients with complex resource-intensive needs. This underestimation of true direct costs can lead to under-resourcing of those hospitals providing specialist services. What does this paper add?: This study provides evidence of a difference between true direct costs in acute care settings and the level of funding hospitals would receive if funded according to the National Efficient Price and NWAU for patients with TSCI. The findings provide evidence of a shortfall in the casemix funding to public hospitals under the activity-based funding for resource-intensive care, such as patients with TSCI. Specifically, depending on the classification system, the principal referral hospitals, the SCIU colocated with an MTS and stand-alone SCIU were underfunded, whereas other non-specialist hospitals were overfunded for the acute care treatment of patients with TSCI. What are the implications for practitioners?: Although health care financing mechanisms may vary internationally, the results of this study are applicable to other hospital payment systems based on diagnosis-related groups that describe patients of similar clinical characteristics and resource use. Such evidence is believed to be useful in understanding the adequacy of hospital payments and informing payment reform efforts. These findings may have service redesign policy implications and provide evidence for additional loadings for specialist hospitals treating low-volume, resource-intensive patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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50. Menu planning practices in early childhood education and care - factors associated with menu compliance with sector dietary guidelines.
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Grady, Alice, Stacey, Fiona, Seward, Kirsty, Finch, Meghan, Jones, Jannah, and Yoong, Sze Lin
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MENU planning ,EARLY childhood education ,FOOD portions ,POISSON regression ,MENUS ,CHILD care ,MEDICAL protocols ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,RESEARCH funding ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,FOOD service ,NUTRITION policy ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Issue Addressed: Despite recommendations, early childhood education and care services do not plan menus in accordance with sector dietary guidelines. This study aimed to examine the following among Australian long day care services: (a) menu planning practices; (b) prevalence of menu compliance with sector dietary guidelines; and (c) menu planning practices associated with higher menu compliance with sector dietary guidelines.Methods: Long day care services within Hunter New England, NSW participated in a pen and paper survey assessing menu planning practices and socio-demographic and service characteristics. Two-week menus were assessed for compliance with sector dietary guidelines, based on the number of servings of food groups and discretionary foods provided per child, per day.Results: Staff from 72 services completed the survey and 69 provided their menu. Results indicated the service cook was fully responsible for planning the menu in 43% of services, and 57% had received written support to assist with menu planning. Service menus were compliant with an average of 0.68 out of six food groups and discretionary foods. In poisson regression models, a shorter menu cycle length (P = .04) and the receipt of training opportunities to support menu planning (P < .01) were significantly associated with higher menu compliance.Conclusions: Menu compliance with sector dietary guidelines is low among participating long day care services. SO WHAT?: The implementation of practices such as shortening of the menu cycle and the provision of training opportunities may assist in the planning of menus that are more compliant with dietary guidelines in this setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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