ORCID Profile
0000-0002-7340-9689
Current Organisations
University of Queensland
,
Climate and Energy College
,
University of Melbourne
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Publisher: Hindawi Limited
Date: 2012
DOI: 10.1155/2012/261787
Abstract: A 77-year-old female with recurrent non-small-cell lung cancer presented to a hospital outpatient clinic with tremor, weakness, inability to coordinate motor movements, and confusion. It was suspected that the symptoms were due to possible central nervous system metastases however, a CT scan of her head was unremarkable. The lung clinic liaison pharmacist took a medication history from the patient, complimented by extra information from the patient’s community pharmacy. The pharmacist suspected the rare side effect of serotonin syndrome was responsible for the patient’s presenting symptoms caused by the combination of oxycodone and citalopram. The patient’s symptoms resolved soon after oxycodone was changed to morphine.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2019
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 30-03-2017
DOI: 10.1111/RESP.13034
Abstract: Coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP), as part of the spectrum of coal mine dust lung disease (CMDLD), is a preventable but incurable lung disease that can be complicated by respiratory failure and death. Recent increases in coal production from the financial incentive of economic growth lead to higher respirable coal and quartz dust levels, often associated with mechanization of longwall coal mining. In Australia, the observed increase in the number of new CWP diagnoses since the year 2000 has necessitated a review of recommended respirable dust exposure limits, where exposure limits and monitoring protocols should ideally be standardized. Evidence that considers the regulation of engineering dust controls in the mines is lacking even in high-income countries, despite this being the primary preventative measure. Also, it is a global public health priority for at-risk miners to be systemically screened to detect early changes of CWP and to include confirmed patients within a central registry a task limited by financial constraints in less developed countries. Characteristic X-ray changes are usually categorized using the International Labour Office classification, although future evaluation by low-dose HRCT) chest scanning may allow for CWP detection and thus avoidance of further exposure, at an earlier stage. Preclinical animal and human organoid-based models are required to explore potential re-purposing of anti-fibrotic and related agents with potential efficacy. Epidemiological patterns and the assessment of molecular and genetic biomarkers may further enhance our capacity to identify susceptible in iduals to the inhalation of coal dust in the modern era.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 10-2021
DOI: 10.1111/IMJ.15415
Abstract: Ambient (outdoor) air pollution is a key risk factor for health for which effective policy plays an important preventative role. Australian federal and related state air quality standards have historically relied on international evidence for guidance, which may not accurately reflect the Australian context. However, there has been a large increase in Australian epidemiological studies over recent years. The aim of this study is to provide an updated systematic literature review of peer‐reviewed epidemiological studies that examined the health impacts of outdoor air pollution in Australia, including short‐ and long‐term exposure. Following PRISMA guidelines, we conducted a systematic literature review. Broad search terms were applied to two databases (PubMed and Web of Science) and Google Scholar. Quality assessment and risk of bias were assessed using standard metrics. Included studies were summarised by tabulating key study characteristics, grouped by health outcomes. In total, 72 studies were included in the review. Sixty‐four (89%) studies used daily or hourly pollutant concentrations to examine short‐term exposure impacts, of which 59 (92%) revealed significant associations with one or more health outcomes, including cardio‐respiratory, all‐cause mortality or morbidity and birth outcomes. Eight (11%) studies used annual average pollutant concentrations to investigate the long‐term exposure finding significant associations with asthma, reduced lung function, atopy and cardio‐respiratory mortality across five studies. The remaining three studies found no significant association with asthma, mortality and a range of self‐reported diseases, respectively. Ambient air pollution has substantial health impacts in Australia. The body of domestic evidence has increased markedly since national air quality standards were first set in the 1990s, which could be drawn on by policy‐makers when revising the existing standards, or considering new standards.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 16-09-2016
DOI: 10.1111/AJCO.12267
Abstract: Medication misadventure contributes to unplanned hospital admissions. General practitioners (GPs) may lack experience in managing problems involving complex cancer-related medication. A previous survey explored the unmet needs of lung cancer outpatients and highlighted their desire for more medication information. Inpatient clinical pharmacy services positively impact on patient care. This study evaluated the effects of extending this service to outpatients. A specialist cancer pharmacist joined the lung cancer clinic team for 6 months. Patients completed assessments of their medication adherence and their satisfaction with the provision of medicine information (at baseline and repeated within 30 days of initial pharmacist review). Following review, a medication list and plan (detailing recommendations/interventions) were provided to patients and their health care providers. Interventions were categorized and graded according to risk avoided. Unplanned admissions and clinic attendance rates were compared with the previous year. GPs' opinion of the service was also evaluated. Forty-eight patients participated in the study. Medication adherence (P = 0.007) and patient satisfaction (P < 0.001) significantly improved. A total of 154 pharmacist interventions were made: 4.5% extreme risk and 43.5% high risk. The mean number of unplanned admissions and clinic attendances per patient decreased from 0.3 to 0.26 (P = 0.265) and from 3.32 to 2.98 (P = 0.004), respectively. Seventy-four percent of surveyed GPs found the service useful. Adding a specialist cancer pharmacist to the outpatient lung cancer team led to significant improvements in patient medication adherence. Both patients and GPs were highly satisfied with the service. Medication misadventure and clinic attendances were reduced.
No related grants have been discovered for Clare Walter.