About 14,000 cases of bowel cancer occur annually in Australia despite the availability of life-saving screening. Most people do not receive recommended screening colonoscopy. We will look at why people at high-risk avoid screening and why people at average risk seek unnecessary screening. We will analyse family history and contacts with the healthcare system that impact screening decisions. We will determine the impact of screening on reducing the number of new cases and deaths.
An Interdisciplinary Model Of Care For Early Detection Of Lung Damage, Smoking Cessation Support, And A Home-based Exercise/self-management Program
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$448,381.00
Summary
An interdisciplinary model of care comprising screening of long-term smokers for early detection of lung damage, smoking cessation support, and a home-based exercise/self-management program will be implemented and evaluated. This model could potentially reduce the burden of smoking, improve lung health and maintain health-related quality of life.
Point-of-care HPV-DNA Testing For Cervical Cancer Screening In High-burden, Low-resource Settings
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$891,184.00
Summary
We will undertake the first field evaluation of a novel, newly-available, easy to use, and highly accurate point-of-care (POC) test for high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) infection that will allow trained health staff to identify women at increased risk of cervical cancer and to provide same-day cervical cryotherapy for pre-cancer lesions identified on clinical examination.