5 results on '"O'Brien, Kylie"'
Search Results
2. Confidence in Clinical Practice of Chinese Medicine Degree Graduates 1 Year After Graduation: A Pilot Study.
- Author
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Moore, Amber and O'Brien, Kylie
- Subjects
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WORK environment , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *CLINICAL competence , *CONFIDENCE , *STATISTICAL correlation , *BUSINESS management of health facilities , *MEDICAL practice , *CHINESE medicine , *MENTORING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *QUALITATIVE research , *PILOT projects , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *JUDGMENT sampling , *GRADUATES , *JOB performance , *QUANTITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: The issue of transition from student to practitioner of Chinese medicine (CM) in Australia and other Western countries has received little formal attention. Workforce studies, while not up to date nationally in Australia, suggest that the majority of CM practitioners practice as sole practitioners or in small practices. Data from the state of Victoria suggest that a significant proportion of the CM workforce is relatively new to the profession. It is not known how many graduates successfully enter the workforce and importantly, remain in it. Objectives: An initial survey of final-year bachelor degree CM students in Australian education institutions in 2008 suggested that students felt 'somewhat' prepared for clinical practice in eight dimensions of clinical practice. The authors conducted a follow-up study to this initial one, seeking to investigate perceptions of confidence in CM graduates in various aspects of clinical practice within the first year of completing their degree. Methods: A content-validated survey based on the previous study was distributed to a subset of 30 graduates from the original study cohort who had indicated a willingness to participate in this follow-up survey. Results: There were a small number of responses ( n=12), limiting the usefulness of the quantitative questions. However, some interesting qualitative outcomes from the long-answer part of the survey support findings from the previous study that recent practitioners would like more clinical experience, as well as support in developing their business and interpersonal skills, and the option to participate in a professional mentoring arrangement. Conclusions: Results of this study suggest that both education providers and professional associations may be able to play important and complementary roles in assisting CM students to successfully transition into the workforce. If CM is to continue to develop as a profession in Australia, it will be important that more attention be given to how to assist new graduates to successfully transition into and remain in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Chinese Medicine in Australia.
- Author
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Moore, Amber, Komesaroff, Paul A., O'Brien, Kylie, Hong Xu, and Bensoussan, Alan
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DOCUMENTATION , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *ACUPUNCTURE , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *BIRTHPLACES , *TEST validity , *LABOR supply , *LONGITUDINAL method , *BOTANIC medicine , *CHINESE medicine , *MULTILINGUALISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SURVEYS , *USER charges , *QUALITATIVE research , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL coding , *WORK experience (Employment) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIETIES ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Objectives: Chinese medicine is a complex domain of theoretical and practical approaches that is being increasingly put under the research spotlight. The "Chinese Medicine in Australia"research project attempted to capture the clinical features of practitioners of Chinese medicine. Participants and Interventions: The project involved a national survey of Chinese medicine professional association members and registered practitioners in the state of Victoria, Australia (n = 655; response rate, 42%-55%) completed in 2012-2013. Design: The content and face validated survey was developed using new and previous workforce survey questions. Results: This paper reports on the workforce and practice characteristics of the survey respondents. Chinese medicine practitioners are highly educated, come from diverse backgrounds, and have chosen to practice predominantly in sole or multipractitioner private practice settings. An interest in the philosophy of Chinese medicine and previous experiences contributed to practitioners' decisions to study and practice Chinese medicine. Incorporating a variety of techniques, practitioners describe themselves as practicing predominantly Chinese acupuncture and herbal medicine. Conclusions: The results from this survey contribute to the understanding of the nature and description of Chinese medicine practice in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Chinese Medicine Students' Preparedness for Clinical Practice: An Australian Survey.
- Author
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Moore, Amber, Canaway, Rachel, and O'Brien, Kylie A.
- Subjects
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CHINESE students , *CHINESE medicine , *MEDICAL practice , *PREPAREDNESS , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *PATIENT-professional relations , *SURVEYS - Abstract
Background: Little is known about how prepared Chinese medicine (CM) students perceive themselves to enter the workforce. Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate perceptions of preparedness for clinical practice of final-year CM students in Australia. Design: The study design consisted of a written survey focusing on eight dimensions relating to practice: Interpersonal Skills, Confidence/Coping Skills, Professional Networks, Professional Practice Management, Professional Patient Management, Prevention, Holistic Care, and Self-Directed Learning. Part 1 of the survey required participants to choose from six possible responses on how well they believe their CM course has prepared them in relation to 41 statements about aspects of practice (1 = very inadequately through to 6 = very adequately). Part 2 consisted of nine open-ended questions. Study participants: The study participants were final-year Bachelor degree CM and acupuncture students from Australian universities and privately operated educational institutions. Analysis and main outcome measures: Part 1 of survey: mean scores on the eight dimensions of practice. Part 2 of survey: transcribed responses were imported into NVivo8. Each part of the questions was analyzed and grouped into broad themes. Results: Seventy-one (71) of one hundred and seven (71/107) invited students (average age 29.4 years ± 7.4 years) participated in the survey conducted in 2008. Mean scores on eight dimensions of clinical practice were as follows: Interpersonal Skills 3.9 (±1.1), Confidence/Coping Skills 4.0 (±0.8), Professional Networks 4.2 (±0.8), Professional Practice Management 4.2 (±0.8), Professional Patient Management 4.7 (±0.7), Prevention 4.6 (±0.7), Holistic Care 4.4 (±0.7), and Self-Directed Learning 4.6 (±0.6). There was no significant difference in mean scores across gender. Responses to Part 2 indicated a range of suggestions on the strengths of educational courses and how transition to clinical practice could be facilitated. Conclusions: In general, CM students perceived themselves to be “somewhat adequately” or “adequately” prepared for various aspects of clinical practice. Survey results may help inform CM educators about how to better prepare students for entry into the workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reliability of Chinese Medicine Diagnostic Variables In the Examination of Patients with Osteoarthritis of the Knee.
- Author
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Bin Hua, Abbas, Estelle, Hayes, Alan, Ryan, Peter, Nelson, Lisa, and O'Brien, Kylie
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KNEE diseases , *KNEE disease treatment , *OSTEOARTHRITIS diagnosis , *OSTEOARTHRITIS treatment , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *DIAGNOSIS methods , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *AUSCULTATION , *CLINICAL trials , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DOCUMENTATION , *RESEARCH methodology , *BOTANIC medicine , *CHINESE medicine , *PALPATION , *PHYSICAL diagnosis , *PULSE (Heart beat) , *STATISTICS , *INTER-observer reliability , *MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DIAGNOSIS ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: Chinese medicine (CM) has its own diagnostic indicators that are used as evidence of change in a patient's condition. The majority of studies investigating efficacy of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) have utilized biomedical diagnostic endpoints. For CM clinical diagnostic variables to be incorporated into clinical trial designs, there would need to be evidence that these diagnostic variables are reliable. Previous studies have indicated that the reliability of CM syndrome diagnosis is variable. Little information is known about where the variability stems from--the basic data collection level or the synthesis of diagnostic data, or both. No previous studies have investigated systematically the reliability of all four diagnostic methods used in the CM diagnostic process (Inquiry, Inspection, Auscultation/Olfaction, and Palpation). Objectives: The objective of this study was to assess the inter-rater reliability of data collected using the four diagnostic methods of CM in Australian patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA), in order to investigate if CM variables could be used with confidence as diagnostic endpoints in a clinical trial investigating the efficacy of a CHM in treating OA. Methods: An inter-rater reliability study was conducted as a substudy of a clinical trial investigating the treatment of knee OA with Chinese herbal medicine. Two (2) experienced CM practitioners conducted a CM examination separately, within 2 hours of each other, in 40 participants. A CM assessment form was utilized to record the diagnostic data. Cohen's κ coefficient was used as a measure of the level of agreement between 2 practitioners. Results: There was a relatively good level of agreement for Inquiry and Auscultation variables, and, in general, a low level of agreement for (visual) Inspection and Palpation variables. Conclusions: There was variation in the level of agreement between 2 practitioners on clinical information collected using the Four Diagnostic Methods of a CM examination. Some aspects of CM diagnosis appear to be reliable, while others are not. Based on these results, it was inappropriate to use CM diagnostic variables as diagnostic endpoints in the main study, which was an investigation of efficacy of CHM treatment of knee OA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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