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Research Topic : Road Safety
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Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified (4)
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  • Funded Activity

    Understanding The Sources Of Campylobacter In Australia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $546,720.00
    Summary
    Campylobacter is a key cause of foodborne disease in Australia, with rates of illness amongst the highest in the world. Our project brings together academic, government and industry partners to harness new genetic techniques to better identify sources and risk factors for Campylobacter infection. The project will assist health agencies to include genomics in public health, with findings directly informing government policies and industry practices to minimise disease caused by Campylobacter.
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    Funded Activity

    Creating A Culture Of Safety And Respect: A Controlled, Mixed Methods Study Of The Effectiveness Of A Behavioural Accountability Intervention To Reduce Unprofessional Behaviours

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $875,978.00
    Summary
    Unprofessional behaviours among health professionals are common and are associated with increased patient dissatisfaction and medicolegal risk. Addressing these behaviours is a national issue. Ethos is a structured accountability system involving a process of early, non-punitive and tiered intervention and will be introduced across four Australian hospitals. This research will be the first controlled study to assess the effectiveness of the Ethos program to improve patient safety in Australia.
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    Funded Activity

    Notifications To The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency: Identifying ‘hot Spots’ Of Risk To Help Improve The Quality And Safety Of Healthcare

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $276,072.00
    Summary
    Health practitioners with performance, health or conduct concerns can present a serious risk to patients. Yet we lack reliable methods for identifying these practitioners at an early stage. Each year the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency receives 1,000s of notifications about individual practitioners. We will use this data to identify “hot spots” of risk among different groups of practitioners and help target interventions to support practitioners and protect patients from harm.
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    Funded Activity

    Transforming Nursing Assessment In Acute Hospitals: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial Of An Evidence-based Core Assessment Protocol (the ENCORE Trial)

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,069,268.00
    Summary
    Patients in acute care hospital are increasingly dependent on effective nursing surveillance for early detection of decline in clinical stability. But to meet the imperatives of the safety and quality agenda hospitals are universally moving towards systems that track physiological decline and trigger emergency response. This research will study the effectiveness of an intervention that supports nurses’ patient surveillance practices to achieve reduction in the events of clinical deterioration.
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    Funded Activity

    Delivering Safe And Effective Care For Children In Hospital With Ehealth Systems

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $660,217.00
    Summary
    Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network plans to implement an electronic medication management system (eMM) for all patients attending their two paediatric hospitals and an integrated electronic medical record (eMR) for oncology patients. This project will assess the effects of the eMM in reducing medication errors and associated costs across the paediatric hospitals; and evaluate the impact of the eMR on the work and patient outcomes of the paediatric oncology departments.
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    Funded Activity

    MatesMonitor: Evaluating Suicide Prevention In The Construction Industry

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $628,742.00
    Summary
    We will evaluate a smart-phone based suicide prevention program for the construction industry called MatesMonitor. This will complement face-to-face training provided by an industry-wide suicide prevention program. MatesMonitor will provide education and awareness about suicide prevention and additional social support through regular contacts with participants. We anticipate MatesMonitor will result in improved suicide prevention literacy, and reduced suicide ideation and self harm.
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    Funded Activity

    Optimising Computerised Decision Support To Transform Medication Safety And Reduce Prescriber Burden

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $325,546.00
    Summary
    As medication management in Australian hospitals shifts from paper to electronic formats, organisations are faced with a difficult decision: should drug-drug interaction (DDI) alerts be turned on and if so, which alerts? In this study, we propose a highly innovative approach to assess DDI alerts, which combines a robust evaluation of error rates with a human factors evaluation of alerts.
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    Funded Activity

    The Evaluation Of The Impact Of A World-first State-wide Program In Reducing Cardiac Arrests And Other Adverse Events In Emergency Departments In New South Wales

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $471,409.00
    Summary
    Up to 400,000 patients died needlessly each year in the USA hospitals and many suffered from unexpected cardiac arrests. The concept of rapid response system (RRS) has been proposed to reduce unexpected cardiac arrests and related mortality. The Clinical Excellence Commission implemented a RRS under a program called Between the Flags with a specific emergency department module. The current study aims to evaluate the impact of such program on the reduction of cardiac arrests and unexpected death.
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    Funded Activity

    The Appropriateness Of Healthcare Delivered To Australian Children: CareTrack Kids

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,307,423.00
    Summary
    Despite the prevalence of evidence-based clinical guidelines, studies show considerable gaps between care regarded as appropriate and care received. This study will, for the first time, identify the appropriateness of healthcare delivered to children in Australia, barriers that prevent appropriate delivery and test novel interventions to ensure appropriate evidence-based care can be delivered. In addition we will examine the frequency and nature of adverse events involving children.
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    Funded Activity

    Can E-Health Improve Post-marketing Surveillance Of Drugs And Vaccines? The Stimulated Telephone Assisted Rapid Safety Surveillance (STARSS) Randomised Controlled Trial.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $445,368.00
    Summary
    Despite the considerable benefits of vaccination there is public concern about the safety of newly introduced or seasonal influenza vaccines. Loss of confidence in vaccine safety can result in decreased vaccine coverage and resurgence of disease. The current system of monitoring vaccines after licensure is unable to detect all important adverse events following immunisation. The proposed study evaluates web based communication and mobile phone text messaging to identify adverse events following .... Despite the considerable benefits of vaccination there is public concern about the safety of newly introduced or seasonal influenza vaccines. Loss of confidence in vaccine safety can result in decreased vaccine coverage and resurgence of disease. The current system of monitoring vaccines after licensure is unable to detect all important adverse events following immunisation. The proposed study evaluates web based communication and mobile phone text messaging to identify adverse events following immunisation.
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