Search

Showing total 15 results
15 results

Search Results

1. Barriers and facilitators: Clinicians' opinions and experiences of telehealth before and after their use of a telehealth platform for child language assessment.

2. Navigating the application of new innovations: Establishing an indocyanine green lymphography clinic in Australia.

3. Self‐managed aged home care in Australia – Insights from older people, family carers and service providers.

4. An Investigation of Barriers and Enablers for Genetics in Speech-Language Pathology Explored Through a Case Study of Childhood Apraxia of Speech.

5. Experiences of patients with advanced chronic diseases and their associates with a structured palliative care nurse visit followed by an interprofessional case conference in primary care – a deductive-inductive content analysis based on qualitative interviews (KOPAL-Study)

6. Developing the Australian Midwifery Workplace Culture instrument.

7. Public purse, private service: The perceptions of public funding models of Australian independent speech-language pathologists.

8. "Self-management has to be the way of the future": Exploring the perspectives of speech-language pathologists who work with people with aphasia.

9. A co‐designed health information system implementation into residential aged care: A mixed‐method evaluation.

10. Elucidating strategies used by clinical nurse leaders to facilitate fundamental care delivery: A qualitative study.

11. Scoping the needs, roles and implementation of bilingual community navigators in general practice settings.

12. Barriers and enablers to consumer and community involvement in research and healthcare improvement: Perspectives from consumer organisations, health services and researchers in Melbourne, Australia.

13. Managing post-stroke fatigue: A qualitative study to explore multifaceted clinical perspectives.

14. Speech pathologist perspectives on the acceptance versus rejection or abandonment of AAC systems for children with complex communication needs.

15. Help‐seeking and people with aphasia who have mood problems after stroke: perspectives of speech–language pathologists.