Optimizing Evidence Translation In The High-risk Time-critical Environment Of The Emergency Management For Suspected Cardiac Chest Pain (RAPIDx)
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,230,191.00
Summary
Few clinical processes are purposefully redesigned to optimally incorporate new diagnostic test into routine practice. Using artificial intelligence to enhance the interpretation of newly identified troponin elevation with high sensitivity troponin assays, we will implement a myocardial injury registry in practice. It will also form a platform to explore the clinical impact of artificial intelligence, through a cluster randomized trial evaluating decision-support on 12-month outcomes.
The Limit Of Detection In The Emergency Department Trial: A Stepped-wedge Cluster Randomised Trial For Rapid Assessment Of Patients With Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome In The Emergency Department
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$532,120.00
Summary
Over 450,000 patients present to Australian emergency departments with chest pain every year. The current approach to rule out heart attack for these patients is lengthy, costly and creates overcrowding in the emergency department. This is not sustainable in a system with growing demand and finite resources. This study will evaluate a rapid assessment pathway for investigating chest pain in the emergency department. The pathway will reduce healthcare utilisation while retaining patient safety.
Establishing A Digital Health Foundation For Outcomes-based Diagnostic Excellence, Safety And Value
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,027,501.00
Summary
Our partnership proposal will lead to the development of a digital infrastructure (involving big data resources and sophisticated decision support systems) as a foundation for outcomes-based research, optimised clinical care processes and translation into policy and practice. The partnership will encompass key research areas involving the quality, safety and value of care in musculoskeletal care, infectious diseases, diabetes care and emergency/intensive care.
Improving The Safety And Quality Of Emergency Nursing Care
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,498,877.00
Summary
Failure to assess, treat comprehensively and escalate emergency patient care can be catastrophic. However, there is no emergency nursing framework in use for the 29,000+ emergency nurses working in Australia. We aim to improve access, consistency, safety and quality of emergency care for the best possible patient outcomes through system wide implementation of HIRAID - the only validated framework designed to teach emergency nurses how to systematically assess and manage emergency patients.
Improving Rehabilitation Outcomes Through Self-Management: My Therapy
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$743,438.00
Summary
We must ensure patients have enough therapy practice for the best inpatient rehabilitation outcomes. During rehabilitation, we know patients don't often receive enough therapy and actually spend most of the day sitting and lying down. My Therapy was designed to increase independent practice of therapy exercises during rehabilitation, in addition to usual care, without additional staff. Through My Therapy, patients achieved 100 extra minutes of weekly therapy participation and better function.
A National Aged Care Medication Roundtable - Translating Aged Care Data Into Action To Improve Quality Of Care Through Collaboration And Co-design
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,444,499.00
Summary
Older Australians with the most complex health needs live in residential care. Greater than 80% of residents are on five or more medications daily, and 40% are taking 10 or more. Poor medication management is the greatest source of complaint to the Aged Care Quality & Safety Commission. This project will provide timely information to a group of providers and consumers about the medicines residents receive, identify problem areas and trial innovative interventions to address these issues.
A Digital Sexual Health Hub: Co-design, Development And Evaluation Of An Online Sexual Health Clinic
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,424,364.00
Summary
Sexually transmitted infection rates have increased dramatically in recent years in Australia, with major health consequences - congenital syphilis is killing babies, chlamydia in females is causing pelvic inflammatory disease, increasing the risk of infertility, and drug-resistant gonorrhoea is an urgent global threat. Our specialist sexual health services are at capacity. We will develop an innovative online sexual health hub providing online testing and treatment for STIs and HIV.