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Research Topic : competence
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  • Funded Activity

    Deficits Of Insight And Judgment In Alzheimers Disease: Diagnostic Strategy And Clinical Significance

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $459,983.00
    Summary
    During the next three decades the number of persons older than 85 years will more than double, and the health care need of this burgeoning population are assuming greater importance. Recent studies suggest that the prevalence of dementia in Australia will increase from 172 000 cases in 2000 to 588 000 in 2050. This rapid increase in number of dementia cases will result in an increasing burden for caregivers, and in financial terms, for the working-age population. One of the main clinical problem .... During the next three decades the number of persons older than 85 years will more than double, and the health care need of this burgeoning population are assuming greater importance. Recent studies suggest that the prevalence of dementia in Australia will increase from 172 000 cases in 2000 to 588 000 in 2050. This rapid increase in number of dementia cases will result in an increasing burden for caregivers, and in financial terms, for the working-age population. One of the main clinical problems suffered by individuals of dementia is psychological and behavioural changes such as poor insight, irritability and apathy. These problems account for a large proportion of medical expenses, predict early institutionalization, and are associated with poor quality of life of caregivers. Unfortunately, little is known about the true frequency of problems of insight in dementia, about their impact upon caregivers, and about how to best diagnose the problems of loss of insight and judgment in this condition. Our study will examine the frequency and clinical correlates of poor insight and judgment in dementia, it will establish whether these problems predict other common behavioural problems of Alzheimer’s disease such as apathy and dangerous behaviours, and will demonstrate the reliability and validity of a specific instrument to measure insight and judgment in dementia. This will facilitate the early recognition and adequate treatment of behavioural problems in patients with dementia; it will improve patients’ quality of life, and will have a positive impact on both caregivers’ psychological well-being and on clinical practice.
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    Medical Maturity: An Assessment Of Clinicians Methods For Judging Competence In Young People.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $284,664.00
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    Funded Activity

    The Pen, Or Is It The Spoken Word, That Is Mightier Than The Sword. A Study Focussed On Defining, Teaching And Assessing Skills In Effective And Therapeutic Communication

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $125,503.00
    Summary
    The aim of this research is to define the essential elements in effective and helpful health professional communication, convert these elements to measurable learning objectives, develop a valid method to assess competency and evaluate change that occurs when students participate in programs designed to develop communication competencies. (500 character limit including spaces and line breaks)
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    Funded Activity

    Validation Of A Competency Assessment Method For Persons With Dementia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $580,451.00
    Summary
    Deciding what if any aspects of their financial affairs a person with dementia or suspected dementia can responsibly manage is a difficult process for health and legal professionals as well as for guardianship boards and tribunals. This process is often stressful for the older person, and families can find deciding when to “take over” stressful. Also, having family members manage the older person’s assets may result in family conflict. There is a small amount of overseas research examining this .... Deciding what if any aspects of their financial affairs a person with dementia or suspected dementia can responsibly manage is a difficult process for health and legal professionals as well as for guardianship boards and tribunals. This process is often stressful for the older person, and families can find deciding when to “take over” stressful. Also, having family members manage the older person’s assets may result in family conflict. There is a small amount of overseas research examining this issue. However, no comprehensive and validated method exists internationally or in Australia to determine competency in this context. We will test a methodology for assessing the capacity of individuals to manage their own financial affairs where dementia is an issue. This method involves the use of a number of reliable and well-validated instruments measuring the older person’s mental state, anxiety levels, depression, and social vulnerability combined with an interview exploring the personal circumstances of the older adult in relation to their financial affairs. We will work with the Office of the Adult Guardian in Queensland to recruit participants and to verify both the utility and usability of our methodology with stakeholders (e.g. solicitors, the Office of the Adult Guardian). A comparison will be made between the results obtained in approximately 200 financial competency cases with the competency opinions independently arrived at by the Office of the Adult Guardian in Queensland. As a result of this research, we will be able to ascertain the viability and utility of this assessment method, improve the method as per the data gathered, and ultimately seek future funding to trial the methods across multiple jurisdictions (e.g. other states) and contexts (e.g. various cultural contexts).
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    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

    Targeting Health System Change To Provide Better Care For People With Chronic Pain

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,562,250.00
    Summary
    Chronic pain causes serious impacts to quality of life but the healthcare system is not well suited to managing the problem. This research addresses 3 barriers to evidence-based care. A new model that integrates clinical care with health coaching will be adapted for different settings. A training program to help clinicians incorporate research into their practice will be designed and evaluated. A pain education program aimed at empowering people in regional areas will be rolled-out and assessed.
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    Development, Validation And Implementation Of A Technical And Non-technical Skills Training Curriculum For Laparoscopic Appendicectomy Surgery

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $41,237.00
    Summary
    A structured training curriculum will be developed that can teach novice surgeons in key surgical and decision-making skills required for laparoscopic appendectomy surgery (key-hole removal of the appendix). An assessment tool that can quantitatively evaluate performance during a laparoscopic appendectomy will be developed. Using this, the ability of the developed training curriculum to improve the performance of trainee surgeons during actual laparoscopic appendectomy surgery will be evaluated.
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    Funded Activity

    Early Psychosis Workforce: Development Of Core Competencies For Mental Health Professionals Working In The Field Of Early Psychosis

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $128,332.00
    Summary
    I am a mental health clinician with over 10 years experience working with young people. I intend to develop a set of core competencies (knowledge, attitudes, skills) for mental health professionals working with clients who have recently experienced their first epsiode of psychosis and evaluate how the competency standards are implemented in clinical practice.
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    Funded Activity

    Postgraduate Training And Teaching Methodologies In Regional Anaesthesia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $130,601.00
    Summary
    An important skill of specialist anaesthetists is performing nerve blocks to provide excellent pain relief in surgery and childbirth. This PhD research examines the use of new methods of education, including structured assessment, simulation, and high fidelity models to help train the next generation of anaesthetists. The goals of this research is to provide better quality patient care and improve patient outcomes after anaesthesia and surgery.
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    Funded Activity

    An Ethical Analysis Of The Disclosure Of Surgeons' Performance Data To Patients Within The Informed Consent Process

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $148,937.00
    Summary
    For over a decade, hospitals in the American state of New York have been collecting information about the mortality rates of surgeons conducting Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts, and making this information available to patients. The United Kingdom is set to make these and other performance indicators on the ability of surgeons ('report cards') available from 2004. There are good reasons to think a similar system may be introduced in Australia in the near future. Patients can use the information co .... For over a decade, hospitals in the American state of New York have been collecting information about the mortality rates of surgeons conducting Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts, and making this information available to patients. The United Kingdom is set to make these and other performance indicators on the ability of surgeons ('report cards') available from 2004. There are good reasons to think a similar system may be introduced in Australia in the near future. Patients can use the information contained in report cards when deciding whether or not to consent to have a particular surgeon conduct an operation on them. Contemporary bioethicists stress the importance of a proper informed consent process in medicine. This is a process in which a doctor advises a patient of relevant information and ensures that the patient comprehends that information, before the patient consents to an operation. Currently report cards in America are publicly disseminated on the internet, however there is no systematic attempt to incorporate the information contained in report cards into the informed consent process. We do not know if patients understand the information they are given, or if they incorporate it into their decision making procedures appropriately. In our study we will consider how information that is contained in report cards could best be used in the informed consent process. We will keep in mind the importance of helping patients to make their own informed decisions to consent to operations, the importance of respecting the professional integrity of surgeons and the importance of providing the best possible standard of care for patients. The result of our study will be a revised model of the informed consent process that incorporates report cards in an ethically acceptable way.
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