Identifying Patient-centred Outcomes For People With Chronic Kidney Disease And Translating Them Into Policy And Practice
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$463,652.00
Summary
This 4 year fellowship project engages with patients, caregivers, clinicians, researchers and policy makers, to establish core outcomes and outcome measures in dialysis and transplantation. This will ensure that patient-centred outcomes are consistently measured and reported in dialysis and transplantation trials and other forms of research.
Exploring Knowledge Translation In Indigenous Primary Health Care
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$93,741.00
Summary
New knowledge is needed about how to implement effective interventions and strengthen Indigenous primary health care systems. This study will explore how new knowledge gets implemented (or doesnÍt), for whom, and under what circumstances in Indigenous primary health care contexts. It will be the first study to look at how evidence, context and facilitation elements influence the implementation of research into Indigenous primary health care practice and policy.
Population-based Genetic Screening For Klinefelters Syndrome: A Critical Analysis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$75,468.00
Summary
Klinefelter’s Syndrome (KS) is a common and important genetic condition affecting males, yet 70% are never diagnosed. Males with KS are always infertile and may have hormone imbalances, breast development, decreased facial and pubic hair, and varying levels of cognitive, social, behavioural and learning difficulties. Treatment and intervention options are available, if KS is diagnosed early enough. Screening for the condition is possible - but what would the advantages and disadvantages of this ....Klinefelter’s Syndrome (KS) is a common and important genetic condition affecting males, yet 70% are never diagnosed. Males with KS are always infertile and may have hormone imbalances, breast development, decreased facial and pubic hair, and varying levels of cognitive, social, behavioural and learning difficulties. Treatment and intervention options are available, if KS is diagnosed early enough. Screening for the condition is possible - but what would the advantages and disadvantages of this be?Read moreRead less
Creating Sustainable Healthcare: Ensuring New Diagnostics Avoid Harms, Improve Outcomes, And Direct Resources Wisely
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,497,658.00
Summary
Novel imaging, biomarkers and genomic tests for risk assessment and early detection are emerging as major forces for change in clinical practice. While providing advances and new benefits for patients, new technologies can also have harmful, unintended consequences - overdiagnosis and overtreatment. This multidisciplinary CRE will investigate how to respond to emerging technologies to optimise health outcomes while avoiding harms and directing healthcare resources wisely.
Exploring Mealtimes On Subacute Wards Using An Ethnographic Approach
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$45,668.00
Summary
This research aims to understand what mealtimes are like for staff and visitors on rehabilitation hospital wards, and what beliefs and attitudes they have about mealtimes. A mealtime program that aims to improve patients’ nutritional intake will be introduced, and how staff and visitors experience this change will be explored. This research will help healthcare organisations to navigate complex change within the healthcare system.
Palliative Care Constituency, Utilisation & Impact On Health Care: A Western Australia Based Epidemiology & Sociological
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$150,000.00
Summary
Using the Western Australian linked database and in consultation with palliative care service providers, the study will: 1. Study patterns of palliative care delivery during the last 12 months of life, comparing utilisation between different socio-demographic groups and cause of death. 2. Study the relationships between the services provided and the terminally ill. 3. Develop a definition of those who utilise designated palliative care programs and apply it to ....Using the Western Australian linked database and in consultation with palliative care service providers, the study will: 1. Study patterns of palliative care delivery during the last 12 months of life, comparing utilisation between different socio-demographic groups and cause of death. 2. Study the relationships between the services provided and the terminally ill. 3. Develop a definition of those who utilise designated palliative care programs and apply it to the population of Western Australia in 1994-1999. 4. Develop a forecasting model to optimise the planning and delivery of palliative care service in Australia.Read moreRead less
An Evaluation Of Trust In A Primary Health Care System
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$135,550.00
Summary
Trust is a critical issue in the relationships between organisations that need to work together to achieve integrated services for consumers. As organisational representatives get to know one another trust may develop permitting a greater degree of collaboration. In Victoria, the Primary Care Partnerships Strategy process aims to strengthen the relationships between agencies in alocal areas to improve collaboration and achieve services that operate in an integrated way in the provision of servic ....Trust is a critical issue in the relationships between organisations that need to work together to achieve integrated services for consumers. As organisational representatives get to know one another trust may develop permitting a greater degree of collaboration. In Victoria, the Primary Care Partnerships Strategy process aims to strengthen the relationships between agencies in alocal areas to improve collaboration and achieve services that operate in an integrated way in the provision of services to consumers. It is about strengthening the system of care. The aim of this study is to understand how people within a primary care system build and maintain relationships of trust between individuals and between organisations. Individuals will be interviewed to learn how they experience trust and related issues, documents will be analysed to learn about the policy and organisational environments of trust relationships, and the Trust Evaluation Scale used to measure the factors associated with trust over a two year period. The outcomes of this study will be an understanding of how organisations establish the relationships that allow them to collaborate effectively. In particular it will help us understand how they can be encouraged to share the same protocols and procedures, to share information, and become more skilful at managing organisational differences, and it will provide a deeper understanding of relationships between primary health care organisations and the strategies that can help individuals and organisations create trust and collaborate.Read moreRead less
What Characterises Influential Population-oriented Public Health Policy Research In Australia?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$447,174.00
Summary
This project examines the characteristics of Australian research and researchers whose work is judged to be influential in influencing public health policy in 6 areas: tobacco control, cancer screening, injury prevention, cardiovascular disease prevention, illicit drugs and alcohol control. The project involves work with both researchers and those who are in positions to advocate and enact policy (politicians, government officials, journalists, public health agencies).