1,065 results
Search Results
2. A community engaged primary healthcare strategy to address rural school student inequities: a descriptive paper.
- Author
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Jones, Debra, Ballard, Jacqueline, Dyson, Robert, Macbeth, Peter, Lyle, David, Sunny, Palatty, Thomas, Anu, and Sharma, Indira
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COMMUNITY health nursing , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *HIGH school students , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *LABOR supply , *NURSING services , *PRIMARY health care , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL conditions , *STRATEGIC planning , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Aim: This descriptive paper aims to describe the design and implementation of a community engaged primary healthcare strategy in rural Australia, the Primary Healthcare Registered Nurse: Schools-Based strategy. This strategy seeks to address the health, education and social inequities confronting children and adolescents through community engaged service provision and nursing practice. Background: There have been increasing calls for primary healthcare approaches to address rural health inequities, including contextualised healthcare, enhanced healthcare access, community engagement in needs and solutions identification and local-level collaborations. However, rural healthcare can be poorly aligned to community contexts and needs and be firmly entrenched in health systems, marginalising community participation. Methods: This strategy has been designed to enhance nursing service and practice responsiveness to the rural context, primary healthcare principles, and community experiences and expectations of healthcare. The strategy is underpinned by a cross-sector collaboration between a local health district, school education and a university department of rural health. A research framework is being developed to explore strategy impacts for service recipients, cross-sector systems, and the establishment and maintenance of a primary healthcare nursing workforce. Findings: Although in the early stages of implementation, key learnings have been acquired and strategic, relationship, resource and workforce gains achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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3. A Discussion Paper: The Development of Professional Teacher Standards in Environmental Education.
- Author
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Cutter-Mackenzie, Amy, Clarke, Barbara, and Smith, Phil
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ENVIRONMENTAL education ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,TEACHERS - Abstract
Professional teaching associations in Australia and abroad have been developing teacher and/or teaching standards and associated professional learning and assessment models in the key discipline areas since the 1990s. In Australia, a specific intent of this approach is to capture and recognise the depth and range of accomplished educators' teaching. Despite the increasing work in this area, there has been a dearth of discussion about teacher standards in environmental education and no previous attempt to research and/or develop professional teacher standards for environmental education in Australia. This paper discusses the history of teacher standards in Australia, and considers the implications for the development of teacher standards in environmental education. In doing so, we present a research-practice model that is currently being piloted in Victoria for developing accomplished professional teacher standards and learning in environmental education with and for accomplished Australian primary and secondary teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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4. Who excludes? Young People's Experience of Social Exclusion.
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REDMOND, GERRY, MAIN, GILL, O'DONNELL, ALEXANDER W., SKATTEBOL, JENNIFER, WOODMAN, RICHARD, MOONEY, ANNA, WANG, JOANNA, TURKMANI, SABERA, THOMSON, CATHERINE, and BROOKS, FIONA
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SOCIAL participation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SOCIAL isolation ,EXPERIENCE ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL integration ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Existing policy research has not comprehensively examined the processes by which young people experience social exclusion: that is, the relationships among different risk factors for exclusion, their actual experiences of exclusion, and outcomes that matter for their life chances. Drawing on data from a survey of Australian 13-14 year olds (N=3,535), this paper adapts the Bristol Social Exclusion Matrix to examine pathways from young people's personal and family resources, their experience of participation (school engagement; bullying victimization; teacher support), and their life satisfaction – a predictive indicator of wellbeing and mental health in adulthood. The effects of other characteristics or risk factors for young people's social exclusion (living with disability, being a young carer, identifying as Indigenous, and speaking a language other than English at home), are also examined. This paper shows that experience of exclusion mediates the relationship between young people's personal and family resources and life satisfaction. Controlling for characteristics or risk factors does not change this relationship, suggesting that processes of social exclusion, enacted in interpersonal encounters, are driven by overarching structural factors. These findings are relevant for policy in Australia, and in other countries with similar policy regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Understanding unmet aged care need and care inequalities among older Australians.
- Author
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Hill, Trish
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HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PATIENTS' rights ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEALTH equity ,POVERTY ,CONCEPTS ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,ELDER care - Abstract
In Australia, numerous reviews and inquiries have documented concerns about inadequate access to, and the quality of, aged care. Despite those concerns, research is yet to appraise fully how care needs are assessed, prioritised, and met or left unmet. This paper asks two interrelated questions: (1) How should we conceptualise and measure unmet care need and care inequalities among older people? (2) What are the policy parameters for assessing needs, prioritising access to support and monitoring quality in aged care in Australia? Key insights from academic literature are used to critically review Australian policy documents describing rights, assessments, prioritisation, quality standards and performance indicators for the aged care sector. Using the concepts of care inequalities and care poverty, the paper develops a framework for understanding and measuring needs and unmet needs in aged care, and for encompassing fundamental and valued aspects of life for older people, their carers and their care network. The paper argues that the concept of care poverty opens the space to discuss what level of unmet need and inequality in access to aged care in any society may be considered intolerable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Extraordinary Back-to-Back Human and Animal Figures in the Art of Western Arnhem Land, Australia: One of the World's Largest Assemblages.
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Taçon, Paul S.C., May, Sally K., Goldhahn, Joakim, Taylor, Luke, Brady, Liam M., Ressel, Alex, Jalandoni, Andrea, Wesley, Daryl, and Maralngurra, Gabriel
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ROCK art (Archaeology) ,BARK painting (Aboriginal Australian art) ,ANIMAL species ,SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Depictions of mythical beings appear in many different forms of art world-wide, including rock art of various ages. In this paper we explore a particular type of imagery, back-to-back figures, consisting of two human-like figures or animals of the same species next to each other and facing in opposite directions. Some human-like doubles were joined at the back rather than side-by-side, but also face opposite directions. In this paper, we report on new research on rock art, bark paintings and recent paintings on paper and chart a 9000-year history of making aesthetically, symbolically and spiritually powerful back-to-back figures in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Mobility-based disadvantage in older age: insecure housing and the risks of moving house.
- Author
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Power, Emma R.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,QUALITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HOUSING ,HOMELESSNESS ,DATA analysis software ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,RESIDENTIAL mobility - Abstract
This paper develops knowledge of the logistics of moving house amongst older people living in insecure housing. These people typically do not move once and settle into a new house, but face ongoing moves driven by factors including housing affordability, tenure conditions and eviction. The paper identifies four domains of experience faced by people undergoing cumulative, involuntary residential moves: the material (process of relocating oneself and possessions), economic (costs of moving house), embodied (physical experience) and affective (how relocation is experienced and felt). The logistics of relocation are examined through the experiences of single older women living in insecure housing in the greater Sydney region of Australia. The accounts of these women foreground the costs and challenges of insecure housing that are a consequence of relocation. Conceptually this work contributes to understandings of mobility-based disadvantage in older age through drawing out the ways that the logistics of moving house – of relocating oneself and possessions – contribute in distinct ways to mobility-based disadvantage through risks to identity and senses of home. Empirically it addresses gaps in gerontological and housing scholarship through developing knowledge of the logistics and experiences of ongoing, involuntary residential moves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Reality checks for career women: An interpretevist paradigm.
- Author
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Anthony, Mary and Soontiens, Werner
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LEGAL education ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,LAW enforcement ,SELF-determination theory ,AMERICAN law - Abstract
This paper reflects on the latent organisational process that leads tothe scarcity of women in senior positions. Utilising characteristics of legitimisation, institutionalisation and self-determination theories the paper observes how women manage upward mobility. Subsequently, it was important to investigate the mid-level cohorts, as there lies the critical question triggering the anomaly. Focusing on the public sector with an interest in gendered organisations, the study examines law enforcement. Conversely, the aim of this paper is to focus on why there is a continued dearth in the number of policewomen at top level positions in USA and Australia. A qualitative study with a phenomenological approach is applied. Semi-structured interviews are conducted with 40 policewomen in mid-management positions in American and Australian law enforcement. It further aims to explore the linkages of the ongoing paucity of gendered leadership in organisations, questioning how these will influence women's ability to advance to higher-level positions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Are Factors Associated with Adult Refugees' Settlement different from Well-Being? A Longitudinal Study focusing on Gender and Age in Australia.
- Author
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MAHADEVAN, RENUKA and JAYASINGHE, MANEKA
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SATISFACTION ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,SEX distribution ,LIFE expectancy ,AGE distribution ,HAPPINESS ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL support ,REFUGEES ,WELL-being - Abstract
Using three waves of data and tracing the same refugees over time, this paper shows that some factors associated with settlement experience are different from life satisfaction. Evidence shows that although settlement experience has not improved over time, life satisfaction of both male and female refugees has. The non-linear effect of age on life satisfaction disappears over time while that of settlement experience lingers on. Discrimination affects both male and female life satisfaction but is only a concern for females and the younger cohort's settlement experience. Psychological capital did not appear to moderate the discrimination effect, but this needs to be robustly examined further. Lastly, different support for refugees over time and a targeted focus on some groups is likely to be more effective than a blanket support policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Opportunities and challenges in developing a whole-of-government national food and nutrition policy: lessons from Australia's National Food Plan.
- Author
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Carey, Rachel, Caraher, Martin, Lawrence, Mark, and Friel, Sharon
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NUTRITION policy ,PUBLIC health ,CIVIL society ,NUTRITIONAL value ,FOOD consultants ,AGRICULTURE ,HEALTH policy ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC administration ,PRIVATE sector ,FOOD science ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Objective: The present article tracks the development of the Australian National Food Plan as a 'whole of government' food policy that aimed to integrate elements of nutrition and sustainability alongside economic objectives.Design: The article uses policy analysis to explore the processes of consultation and stakeholder involvement in the development of the National Food Plan, focusing on actors from the sectors of industry, civil society and government. Existing documentation and submissions to the Plan were used as data sources. Models of health policy analysis and policy streams were employed to analyse policy development processes.Setting: Australia.Subjects: Australian food policy stakeholders.Results: The development of the Plan was influenced by powerful industry groups and stakeholder engagement by the lead ministry favoured the involvement of actors representing the food and agriculture industries. Public health nutrition and civil society relied on traditional methods of policy influence, and the public health nutrition movement failed to develop a unified cross-sector alliance, while the private sector engaged in different ways and presented a united front. The National Food Plan failed to deliver an integrated food policy for Australia. Nutrition and sustainability were effectively sidelined due to the focus on global food production and positioning Australia as a food 'superpower' that could take advantage of the anticipated 'dining boom' as incomes rose in the Asia-Pacific region.Conclusions: New forms of industry influence are emerging in the food policy arena and public health nutrition will need to adopt new approaches to influencing public policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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11. Exploring the relationship between Big Food corporations and professional sports clubs: a scoping review.
- Author
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Ireland, Robin, Chambers, Stephanie, and Bunn, Christopher
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ATHLETIC clubs ,PROFESSIONAL sports ,PROFESSIONAL corporations ,JUNK food ,SPECIAL events ,PUBLIC health research ,SPORTS drinks ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CORPORATIONS ,FOOD habits ,FOOD industry ,HEALTH promotion ,MARKETING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SPORTS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LITERATURE reviews ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: Professional sport occupies a prominent cultural position in societies across the globe and commercial organisations make use of this to promote their products. The present scoping review explores existing academic literature on the relationship between professional sports clubs and food and drink marketing and considers how this relationship may impact upon the public's health.Design: The scoping review searched six databases. Experts were also consulted. Records written in languages other than English were excluded. We also excluded records relating to mega events (e.g. Olympics, Football World Cup) and alcohol marketing, because of the attention already given to these.Setting: Professional sports clubs.Results: We identified 18 166 titles, reviewed 163 abstracts and read twenty-six full texts. We included six papers in the review. Four were from Australia and New Zealand. The Australasian literature focused largely on the marketing of foods and beverages to children and the potential impact on consumption. Single papers from researchers in Turkey and the USA were identified. The Turkish paper analysed shirt sponsorship in football leagues internationally and showed food and beverage (including alcohol) companies were the most common sponsors. The US paper examined a mixed reaction to a football team named after an energy drink.Conclusions: Commercial relationships between professional sports clubs and Big Food corporations have largely eluded scrutiny in much of the world. The current review highlights the lack of public health research on these relationships. Research exploring the interdependent commercial practices of food and drink companies and professional sports clubs is urgently needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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12. A Second Front: Canon Garland, Chaplain Maitland Woods and Anglo-Catholicism in the Australian Imperial Force during the First World War.
- Author
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REYNAUD, DANIEL
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WORLD War I ,ANGLO-Catholicism ,PROTESTANTS - Abstract
This article explores the work and influence of Anglo-Catholicism in the Australian Imperial Force during the Great War, based on reading the wartime correspondence of key AIF Anglo-Catholics, especially that of Canon David Garland and Chaplain William Maitland Woods. Anglo-Catholics were enthusiastic in support of the war, but simultaneously used it to promote Anglo-Catholicism and combat what they perceived to be the errors of non-Anglo-Catholic Anglicanism and the various Protestant groups, opening what might be considered a second front against these religions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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13. Six nations: a clinical scenario comparison of systems for prisoners with psychosis in Australia, Bolivia and four European nations.
- Author
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Aboaja, Anne, Pandurangi, Prashant, Almeida, Susana, Castelletti, Luca, Rivera-Arroyo, Guillermo, Optiz-Welke, Annette, Welke, Justus, and Barlow, Stephen
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MENTAL health laws ,MENTAL illness treatment ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,PSYCHOSES ,PRISONERS - Abstract
This paper compares across six nations the mental health systems available to prisoners with the highest acuity of psychosis and risk combined with the lowest level of insight into the need for treatment. Variations were observed within and between nations. Findings highlight the likely impact of factors such as mental health legislation and the prison mental health workforce on a nation's ability to deliver timely and effective treatment close to home for prisoners who lack capacity to consent to treatment for their severe mental illness. The potential benefits of addressing the resulting inequalities are noted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Simultaneous cochlear implantation and removal of acoustic neuroma: implications for hearing.
- Author
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Roberts, S, Levin, B, Sanli, H, Ferch, R, Kong, K, and Eisenberg, R
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ACOUSTIC neuroma ,ALGORITHMS ,AUDITORY evoked response ,BRAIN stem ,COCHLEAR implants ,EAR surgery ,FACIAL nerve ,HEARING disorders ,INTRAOPERATIVE monitoring ,CASE studies ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,DISEASE relapse ,TERTIARY care - Abstract
Objective: To present our data evaluating the feasibility of simultaneous cochlear implantation with resection of acoustic neuroma. Methods: This paper describes a case series of eight adult patients with a radiologically suspected acoustic neuroma, treated at a tertiary referral centre in Newcastle, Australia, between 2012 and 2015. Patients underwent cochlear implantation concurrently with removal of an acoustic neuroma. The approach was translabyrinthine, with facial nerve monitoring and electrically evoked auditory brainstem response testing. Standard post-implant rehabilitation was employed, with three and six months' follow-up data collected. The main outcome measures were: hearing, subjective benefit of implant, operative complications and tumour recurrence. Results: Eight patients underwent simultaneous cochlear implantation with resection of acoustic neuroma over a 3-year period, and had 25–63 months' follow up. There were no major complications. All patients except one gained usable hearing and were daily implant users. Conclusion: Simultaneous cochlear implantation with resection of acoustic neuroma has been shown to be a safe treatment option, which will be applicable in a wide range of clinical scenarios as the indications for cochlear implantation continue to expand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. The Effect of Heat Events on Prehospital and Retrieval Service Utilization in Rural and Remote Areas: A Scoping Review.
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O'Donnell, Elen, Honan, Bridget, Quilty, Simon, and Schultz, Rebecca
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HEAT ,AMBULANCES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LITERATURE reviews ,RURAL population - Abstract
Introduction: It is well-established that heatwaves increase demand for emergency transport in metropolitan areas; however, little is known about the impact of heat events on demand for prehospital retrieval services in rural and remote areas, or how heatwaves are defined in this context.Inclusion Criteria: Papers were eligible for inclusion if they reported on the impact of a heat event on the activity of a prehospital and retrieval service in a rural or remote area.Methods: A search of PubMed, Cochrane, Science Direct, CINAHL, and Google Scholar databases was undertaken on August 18, 2020 using search terms related to emergency medical transport, extreme heat, and rural or remote. Data relevant to the impact of heat on retrieval service activity were extracted, as well as definitions of extreme heat.Results: Two papers were identified, both from Australia. Both found that heat events increased the number of road ambulance call-outs. Both studies used the Excess Heat Factor (EHF) to define heatwave periods of interest.Conclusions: This review found almost no primary literature on demand for prehospital retrieval services in rural and remote areas, and no data specifically related to aeromedical transport. The research did recognize the disproportionate impact of heat-related increase in service demand on Australian rural and regional health services. With the effects of climate change already being felt, there is an urgent need for more research and action in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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16. 'Contact' Rock Art and the Hybrid Economy Model: Interpreting Introduced Subject Matter from Marra Country, Southwest Gulf of Carpentaria, Northern Australia.
- Author
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Brady, Liam M., Wesley, Daryl, Bradley, John, Kearney, Amanda, Evans, Shaun, and Barrett, David
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ROCK art (Archaeology) ,CROSS-cultural studies - Abstract
Studies of introduced subject matter in rock-art assemblages typically focus on themes of cross-cultural interaction, change and continuity, power and resistance. However, the economic frameworks guiding or shaping the production of an assemblage have often been overlooked. In this paper we use a case study involving a recently recorded assemblage of introduced subject matter from Marra Country in northern Australia's southwest Gulf of Carpentaria region to explore their production using a hybrid economy framework. This framework attempts to understand the nature of the forces that shape people's engagement with country and subsequently how it is being symbolically marked as adjustments to country occur through colonization. We argue that embedding these motifs into a hybrid economy context anchored in the pastoral industry allows for a more nuanced approach to cross-cultural interaction studies and adds another layer to the story of Aboriginal place-marking in colonial contexts. This paper aims to go beyond simply identifying motifs thought to represent introduced subject matter, and the cross-cultural framework(s) guiding their interpretation, and instead to direct attention to the complex network of relations that potentially underpin the production of such motifs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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17. A systematic review of the determinants of seafood consumption.
- Author
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Govzman, S., Looby, S., Wang, X., Butler, F., Gibney, E. R., and Timon, C. M.
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FOOD habits ,ONLINE information services ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CONSUMER attitudes ,FOOD preferences ,SEAFOOD ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Although seafood is considered to be an important part of a balanced diet, many national food consumption surveys suggest that seafood is not consumed in sufficient amounts. As consumers are moving to diversify their diet from animal-based protein, it is important to understand the factors influencing consumption of marine foods. This review aims to assess the characteristics of seafood consumers as well as the influences on seafood consumption in Europe, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Systematic search strategies were used to identify relevant journal articles from three electronic databases (PubMed, Web of Science and Embase). Three searches were carried out and identified 4405 unique publications from which 121 met the criteria for the review process. The reviewed studies revealed that seafood consumers were more likely to be older, more affluent and more physically active and were less likely to smoke compared with non-seafood consumers. Sex and BMI did not appear to have a directional association with seafood consumption. The most commonly reported barriers to seafood consumption were cost, followed by sensory or physical barriers, health and nutritional beliefs, habits, availability and cooking skills. The most commonly reported influences were beliefs about the contribution of seafood to health, environmental influences and personal preferences. Based on the findings of this review, future intervention strategies to increase seafood consumption may need to consider affordability and education in terms of health, nutrition and cooking skills. More research is needed to explore the effectiveness of specific interventions at increasing the consumption of seafood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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18. 'Knowledge is everything?' How well do the general public understand aged care and how does this affect their attitudes towards quality of care and future funding?
- Author
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Hutchinson, Claire, Ratcliffe, Julie, Crocker, Matthew, Kumaran, Sheela, Milte, Rachel, and Khadka, Jyoti
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MEDICAL quality control ,TAXATION ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,LITERACY ,INTELLECT ,QUALITY assurance ,QUALITY of life ,GOVERNMENT aid ,ELDER care ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
The recent Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety in Australia has documented systemic failures and shocking incidences of abuse and neglect, a not uncommon story internationally. As aged care in many countries is predominantly publicly funded, it is important to understand the general public's attitudes towards aged care quality, what aspects of care quality they think are most important and their willingness to contribute to increased funding to the sector. This paper asks specifically whether self-reported aged care literacy impacts expectations and willingness to pay. More than 10,000 members of the general population were surveyed stratified by age, gender and state. Regardless of the level of aged care literacy, there was consensus about what constitutes quality care, and care priorities for the sector. However, aged care literacy affected willingness to pay to fund a better-quality aged care system. The current crisis facing Australia's aged care system and that of many other countries internationally demonstrates the central importance of general public support to drive quality improvements, recognising that increasing public expenditure on aged care is a necessary part of the solution. This study provides important baseline data from which to commence national and international conversations to consider all options for ensuring the quality, safety and sustainability of aged care now and into the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. Provenance of a Late Permian retroarc foreland basin along the eastern Gondwanan margin: northern Sydney Basin, eastern Australia.
- Author
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Maravelis, Angelos G., Offler, Robin, Botziolis, Chrysanthos, Pantopoulos, George, Scott, Alexandra, Landenberger, Bill, and Collins, William J.
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METAMORPHIC rocks ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,ANALYTICAL geochemistry ,MUDSTONE ,URANIUM-lead dating - Abstract
The Upper Permian sedimentary successions in the northern Sydney Basin have been the subject of several stratigraphic, sedimentological and coal petrographic studies, and recently, extensive U-Pb zircon dating has been carried out on tuffs in the Newcastle Coal Measures. However, detailed petrographic and geochemical studies of these successions are lacking. These are important because a major change in tectonic setting occurred prior to the Late Permian because of the Hunter-Bowen Orogeny that caused the uplift of the Carboniferous and Devonian successions in the Tamworth Group and Tablelands Complex adjacent to the Sydney Basin. This should be reflected in the detrital makeup of the Upper Permian rocks. This study provides data that confirms major changes did take place at this time. Petrographic analysis indicates that the source area is composed of sedimentary, felsic volcanic and plutonic and low-grade metamorphic rocks. Conglomerate clast composition analysis confirms these results, revealing a source region that is composed of felsic volcanics, cherts, mudstones and sandstones. Geochemical analysis suggests that the sediments are geochemically mature and have undergone a moderate degree of weathering. The provenance data presented in this paper indicate that the southern New England Orogen is the principal source of detritus in the basin. Discrimination diagrams confirm that the source rocks derive from an arc-related, contractional setting and agree with the provenance analyses that indicate sediment deposition in a retroarc foreland basin. This study offers new insights on the provenance and tectonic setting of the Northern Sydney Basin, eastern Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. The reality of at risk mental state services: a response to recent criticisms.
- Author
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Yung, Alison R., Wood, Stephen J., Malla, Ashok, Nelson, Barnaby, McGorry, Patrick, and Shah, Jai
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,PSYCHOSES ,MEDICAL personnel ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Background: In the 1990s criteria were developed to detect individuals at high and imminent risk of developing a psychotic disorder. These are known as the at risk mental state, ultra high risk or clinical high risk criteria. Individuals meeting these criteria are symptomatic and help-seeking. Services for such individuals are now found worldwide. Recently Psychological Medicine published two articles that criticise these services and suggest that they should be dismantled or restructured. One paper also provides recommendations on how ARMS services should be operate. Methods: In this paper we draw on the existing literature in the field and present the perspective of some ARMS clinicians and researchers. Results: Many of the critics' arguments are refuted. Most of the recommendations included in the Moritz et al. paper are already occurring. Conclusions: ARMS services provide management of current problems, treatment to reduce risk of onset of psychotic disorder and monitoring of mental state, including attenuated psychotic symptoms. These symptoms are associated with a range of poor outcomes. It is important to assess them and track their trajectory over time. A new approach to detection of ARMS individuals can be considered that harnesses broad youth mental health services, such as headspace in Australia, Jigsaw in Ireland and ACCESS Open Minds in Canada. Attention should also be paid to the physical health of ARMS individuals. Far from needing to be dismantled we feel that the ARMS approach has much to offer to improve the health of young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The under-reporting of sexual harassment in Australian workplaces: are organisational processes falling short?
- Author
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MacDermott, Therese
- Subjects
SEXUAL harassment ,WORK environment ,PROBLEM solving ,COMPLAINTS & complaining - Abstract
Sexual harassment is persistent, prevalent and under-reported in Australian workplaces despite its legal regulation over many decades. The most recent survey data in Australia indicate that the majority of individuals who are subject to sexual harassment at work do not make a formal report or lodge a complaint. The opportunity for voice that organisational processes provide to those who experience sexual harassment at work is a particular focus, given the under-reporting problem. The paper also considers the impact of organisational processes on those who observe the inappropriate behaviour and/or the organisational response. Ultimately, this paper argues that organisations should reduce their reliance on individual complaints by expanding the pathways by which concerns can be raised or observed behaviours addressed that offer alternative voice mechanisms, with an emphasis on problem-solving and early intervention where this is appropriate. The paper also considers different communications strategies, such as approaches to training, the sharing of information about workplace incidents, and leadership on the issue within organisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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22. What Should Engagement in Health Research Look Like? Perspectives from People with Lived Experience, Members of the Public, and Engagement Managers.
- Author
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Pratt, Bridget
- Subjects
PATIENT participation ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care research ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Engagement in health research is increasingly practised worldwide. Yet many questions remain under debate in the ethics field about its contribution to health research and these debates have largely not been informed by those who have been engaged in health research. This paper addresses the following key questions: what should the ethical goals of engagement in health research be and how should it be performed? Qualitative data were generated by interviewing 22 people with lived experience, members of the public, and engagement managers about power sharing in health research. Thematic analysis of study data identified the following five themes: the value of engagement in research, ideal engagement, tokenistic engagement, terms to describe those engaged, and engagement roles in research. The paper presents that data and then considers what insights it offers for what engagement should look like—its ethical goals and approach—according to those being engaged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
23. Exploring barriers to social inclusion for disabled people: perspectives from the performing arts.
- Author
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Collins, Ayse, Rentschler, Ruth, Williams, Karen, and Azmat, Fara
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PEOPLE with disabilities ,SOCIAL integration ,INCLUSION (Disability rights) ,SOCIAL model of disability ,PERFORMING arts ,SOCIAL impact - Abstract
Although the potential of arts to promote social inclusion is recognised, barriers to social inclusion for disabled people in the arts is under-researched. Based on 34 semi-structured interviews with disabled people and those without disability from four arts organisations in Australia, the paper identifies barriers for social inclusion for disabled people within performing arts across four dimensions: access; participation; representation and empowerment. Findings highlight barriers are societal, being created with little awareness of needs of disabled people, supporting the social model of disability. Findings have implications beyond social inclusion of disabled people within the arts, demonstrating how the arts can empower disabled people and enable them to access, participate and represent themselves and have a voice. Our framework conceptualises these four barriers for social inclusion for disabled people for management to change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Negotiating the care convoys for a diverse group of older Australians living in rural communities: a large qualitative study.
- Author
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Petersen, Maree, Winterton, Rachel, Warburton, Jeni, and Wilson, Jill
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- *
ELDER care , *RESOURCE allocation , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL population , *SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Whilst ageing in place is integral to international policy, there is less understanding of how individuals utilise formal services and informal supports in diverse rural environments to maintain their wellness and independence. Consequently, how older people negotiate their care within rural communities is subject to misconceptions. This paper draws on the convoy of care model to explore how older rural Australians negotiate their preferences and needs in the context of informal networks, availability of community resources, and the health and aged care system. The analysis draws on 60 in-depth interviews in six diverse rural communities across two Australian states. Three distinct care convoys are identified and demonstrate the interaction of multiple factors including individual preferences and needs, availability of family and community supports, and accessibility of local health and aged care services in the context of resource allocation. The findings highlight how families and communities compensate for a lack of accessible formal services. For older people without family and strong social networks, formal services are relied upon despite their inadequacy in some locales. This research has provided evidence that some Australian rural locales have limited resources resulting in challenges for older people to access home care and support. This results in many older people facing challenges to age in place. With aged care and health policy commonly designed for an urban context, our findings illustrate the importance of tailoring policy to respect the strengths and challenges existing in rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Developing a multisensory methodology to explore older people's landscape experience in Australian aged-care facilities.
- Author
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Tsai, Mimi, Brough, Mark, and Cushing, Debra Flanders
- Subjects
CONCEPT mapping ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,COGNITION ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RESIDENTIAL care ,NATURE ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,THEMATIC analysis ,ELDER care ,STORYTELLING ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
This paper aims to develop a sensory methodological framework to explore older user's landscape experience. Applying empirical experience in Australian aged-care facilities, it addresses a methodological gap in the current literature to help move beyond the current taken-for-granted approaches such as interviews, cognitive mapping, behavioural observation and visual methods. We propose a more holistic method which enables the exploration of older people's in situ environmental experience. The multisensory framework we propose here is based on the first author's doctoral fieldwork experience that took place in two aged-care facilities in Brisbane, Australia. Findings suggest this framework facilitates an understanding of users' olfactory, auditory and visual responses to the physical environment, and promotes a deeper engagement with the landscape. We argue that this is essential to promoting good landscape design which genuinely connects with older people's needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. To what extent does early childhood education policy in Australia recognise and propose action on the social determinants of health and health equity?
- Author
-
VAN EYK, HELEN, BAUM, FRAN, FISHER, MATT, MACDOUGALL, COLIN, and LAWLESS, ANGELA
- Subjects
SOCIAL determinants of health ,EARLY intervention (Education) ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,POLICY sciences ,HEALTH equity ,POVERTY ,PARENTS - Abstract
Early childhood education (ECE) and development is internationally recognised as important to child health and wellbeing and to enabling children to become healthy productive adults. This paper analyses Australian ECE policy current in 2019. It uses the institutional framework of ideas, actors and institutions to determine the extent to which ECE policy recognises and acts on social determinants of health and health equity. We found that the policies supported integrated approaches, intersectoral collaboration and partnerships with parents and families. Evidence was important in formulating the ideas underpinning ECE policy. ECE was widely recognised as a social determinant of health, and the impacts of other social determinants of health and health equity were acknowledged. The ECE policies tended to be future-focused and not respond to social determinants that influence children and their families in the present time. The policies lacked strategies to address social determinants, or to engage with other sectors for this purpose. While some policies focused on breaking the cycle of disadvantage, they did not explore potential policy responses to pathways from intergenerational disadvantage to reduce poverty. Despite this, Australian ECE policy has achieved significant coherence, with shared understandings of the purpose and benefits of ECE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The role of negative emotions in learning music: qualitative understanding of Australian undergraduate students' listening experience of unfamiliar music.
- Author
-
Matsunobu, Koji, Davidson, Robert, and Lo, Khin Yee
- Subjects
UNDERGRADUATES ,COLLEGE students ,MUSIC education ,MUSIC psychology - Abstract
This paper examines the experience and role of negative emotions in facilitating university students' learning in world music courses. Based on a review of literature in music psychology and music education, we posit that negative emotions can engender a meaningful learning context. In this project conducted in an Australian university, we created a condition in which students were engaged in repeated listening to recordings of music from cultures different from their own, which they reported as sounding "unpleasant." We then analysed how they overcame emotional responses through a listening exercise. The findings suggest that the students developed enhanced motivation and cognitive reflection by facing their own negative emotions through repeated listening. The article finishes with a discussion about the positive side of negative emotions and the negative side of positive emotions as they relate to music education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. ‘Sustainability does not quite get the attention it deserves’: synergies and tensions in the sustainability frames of Australian food policy actors.
- Author
-
Trevena, Helen, Kaldor, Jenny Claire, and Downs, Shauna M
- Subjects
NUTRITION policy ,FOOD industry ,SYNERGETICS ,PUBLIC health research ,FOOD supply - Abstract
ObjectiveThe development of food policy is strongly influenced by the understanding and position actors adopt in their ‘framing’ of sustainability. The Australian Government developed a National Food Plan (2010–2013). In public consultations on the National Food Plan Green Paper, the government sought stakeholders’ views on sustainability. The present study examined the way in which the food industry and civil society organizations framed sustainability in their submissions to the Green Paper.DesignSubmissions by food industry actors and civil society organizations were analysed using a framing matrix that examined positioning, drivers, underlying principles and policy solutions related to sustainability. Submissions were open coded and subsequently organized based on themes within the framing matrix.SettingAustralia.SubjectsOne hundred and twenty-four written submissions (1420 pages).ResultsWhile submissions from industry and civil society organizations often framed sustainability similarly, there were also major differences. Civil society organizations were more likely to make the link between the food supply and population health, while industry was more likely to focus on economic sustainability. Both viewed consumer demand as a driver of sustainability, welcomed the idea of a whole-of-government approach and stressed the need for investment in research and development to improve productivity and sustainable farming practices.ConclusionsThe meaning of sustainability shifted throughout the policy process. There are opportunities for creating shared value in food policy, where the health, environment and economic dimensions of sustainability can be compatible. However, despite pockets of optimism there is a need for a shared vision of sustainability if Australia is to have a food policy integrating these dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Medical fears of the malingering soldier: 'phony cronies' and the Repat in 1960s Australia.
- Author
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Karageorgos, Effie
- Subjects
VETERANS ,MILITARY service ,PSYCHIATRY ,REPATRIATION - Abstract
The fear of the malingering soldier or veteran has existed in Australia since its first nationwide military venture in South Africa. The establishment of the Repatriation Department in 1917 saw the medical, military and political fields work collectively, to some extent, to support hundreds of thousands of men who returned from their military service wounded or ill. Over the next decades the medical profession occasionally criticised the Repatriation Department's alleged laxness towards soldier recipients of military pensions, particularly those with less visible war-related psychiatric conditions. In 1963 this reached a crescendo when a group of Australian doctors drew battle lines in the correspondence pages of the Medical Journal of Australia , accusing the Repatriation Department of directing a 'national scandal', and provoking responses by both the Minister for Repatriation and the Chairman of the War Pensions Assessment Appeal Tribunal. Although this controversy and its aftermath does allow for closer investigation of the inner workings of the Repatriation Department, the words of the doctors themselves about 'phony cronies', 'deadbeats' and 'drongoes' also reveal how the medical fear of the malingering soldier, and particularly the traumatised soldier-malingerer, lingered into the early 1960s and beyond. This paper will analyse the medical conceptualisation of the traumatised soldier in the 1960s in relation to historical conceptions of malingering, the increasingly tenuous position of psychiatry, as well as the socio-medical 'sick role', and will explore possible links with the current soldier and veteran suicide crisis in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Gendered moral rationalities in later life: grandparents balancing paid work and care of grandchildren in Australia.
- Author
-
Hamilton, Myra and Suthersan, Bridget
- Subjects
MOTHERS ,CHILD care ,FOCUS groups ,PATIENT participation ,NEGOTIATION ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,WORK ,GRANDPARENTS ,WORK-life balance ,SURVEYS ,RESPONSIBILITY ,PARENTING ,DECISION making - Abstract
In recent years there has been increasing policy focus on keeping mature-age people engaged in the labour market. At the same time, grandparents play an important role as regular child-care providers for many families. Yet, little research has explored how grandparents negotiate these dual, often competing demands of paid employment and intergenerational care. Drawing on focus groups with 23 grandparents and an online survey of 209 grandparents providing regular child care for their grandchildren in Australia, this paper addresses this gap in the literature by examining how Australian grandparents experience and negotiate competing responsibilities as older workers and intergenerational care providers. The paper draws on the concept of gendered moral rationalities to examine the way in which grandparents' decisions about participation in paid work are deeply embedded in idealised forms of parenting and grandparenting that are highly gendered. The paper suggests that, as the rate of both maternal and mature-age participation in the paid labour market continues to rise, inadequate attention is being paid to how time spent undertaking unpaid care is compressed, reorganised and redistributed across genders and generations as a result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Health and occupation: the limits to older adults' work hours.
- Author
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Doan, Tinh, Labond, Christine, Yazidjoglou, Amelia, Timmins, Perri, Yu, Peng, and Strazdins, Lyndall
- Subjects
- *
WORK capacity evaluation , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH status indicators , *RESEARCH funding , *WAGES , *FUNCTIONAL status , *LONGITUDINAL method , *QUALITY of life , *PARTICIPATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ACTIVE aging - Abstract
More people are working into older age, raising questions about how many hours they can work before their health becomes compromised. This paper models work-hour tipping points for mental health and vitality among older Australian workers aged 50–70 years. We use longitudinal data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey, 2005–2016 (about 44,900 observations), and bootstrapping Three Stage Least Squares (3SLS) estimation techniques to adjust for reverse and reciprocal relationships between wages, work hours and health. Our approach corrects for heteroscedasticity in the system equation error terms, and we estimate models on the relatively healthy older adults who have remained employed into older age. Among these older workers we observe weekly thresholds of 39–40 hours beyond which mental health and vitality decline. This average, however, hides variability in work-hour limits linked to overall health and occupation. Thus, weekly tipping points for blue- and pink-collar jobs are 7–9 hours lower compared to white-collar jobs, and even wider gaps (11 hours) are apparent for workers with poorer physical functioning, which becomes common as people age. Our modelling reveals that age is not the biggest limiting factor for how many hours older adults can work, rather their health and the types of jobs are critical, and likely widen the gap in who ages successfully or not. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Reframing commitment in authentic leadership: Untangling relationship–outcome processes.
- Author
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Lux, Andrei A., Grover, Steven L., and Teo, Stephen T. T.
- Subjects
AUTHENTIC leadership ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,ORGANIZATIONAL commitment ,JOB involvement ,JOB satisfaction - Abstract
Affective organizational commitment is theorized and empirically tested as a key mediator between authentic leadership and desirable employee outcomes. The results of a two-wave survey of 830 business people in Australia support a serial mediation model of authentic leadership efficacy. Followers' perceptions of authentic leadership behavior influence their personal identification and affect-based trust in the leader, which in turn are mediated by affective organizational commitment to positively influence their work engagement and job satisfaction. These findings reinforce previous work that positions personal identification and affect-based trust as the two primary mediating mechanisms of authentic leadership. This paper extends prior research by demonstrating the important role of followers' affective bonds with their organization in the operation of authentic leadership, moving beyond the dyad in our understanding of follower outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The age and paleoclimate implications of relict periglacial block deposits on the New England Tablelands, Australia.
- Author
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Slee, Adrian, Barrows, Timothy T., Shulmeister, James, Gontz, Allen, Kiernan, Kevin, Haworth, Robert, Clark, Douglas, and Fifield, L. Keith
- Subjects
PALEOCLIMATOLOGY ,COSMOGENIC nuclides ,LAST Glacial Maximum ,TOPOGRAPHY ,TEMPERATURE measurements - Abstract
Pleistocene periglacial activity in eastern Australia was widespread and has been predicted to have extended along much of the east coast. This paper describes block deposits in the New England Tablelands, Australia, as far north as 30°S. These deposits are characterized by openwork blocks on slopes below the angle of repose. The deposits are positioned where frost cracking was significant and range in area up to 8 ha. Surface exposure dating using the cosmogenic nuclide
36 Cl from four block deposits indicate all sites were active late during the last glacial cycle, with a concentration of activity between 15-30 ka. Modern temperature measurements from block deposits highlight the importance of local topography for promoting freezing. Periglacial deposits are likely to have been more extensive than previously recognized at these northern limits, and mean annual temperature more than 8°C colder than today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Francesco De Pinedo and Ernesto Campanelli's record-breaking flight to Australia – perception, recognition and legacy: an account in the Australian Press.
- Author
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Cauli, Alberto
- Subjects
REVENUE accounting ,PRESS ,PUBLIC interest ,SHUTTLE services ,AUSTRALIANS ,CORPORATE image - Abstract
The year 2020 marked the 95th anniversary of Francesco De Pinedo and Ernesto Campanelli's record-breaking flight of 55,000 km, from Italy to Australia, Japan and back, in a seaplane named Gennariello. Their achievement was lauded worldwide, especially in Australia, where the press reported on it intensively. This paper reconstructs the story of the flight by analysing the Australian press accounts and De Pinedo's diary, to understand how the Australian public perceived the event. It investigates the aviators' arrival in Perth, Adelaide and Melbourne, where their popularity was greatest and where the local Italian communities enthusiastically welcomed them. The analysis shows that the flight engendered increased public interest and paid dividends in terms of image for the commercial companies involved, while fascism exploited it to display its progress in aviation. The paper concludes by exploring the legacy of the endeavour in modern Italy and Australia, emphasising the differences between the countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Dementia, post-traumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder: a review of the mental health risk factors for dementia in the military veteran population.
- Author
-
Rafferty, L. A., Cawkill, P. E., Stevelink, S. A. M., Greenberg, K., and Greenberg, N.
- Subjects
DEMENTIA risk factors ,DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,DIAGNOSIS of post-traumatic stress disorder ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Background: Dementia is currently incurable, irreversible and a major cause of disability for the world's older population. The association between mental health difficulties, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder (MDD), and dementia has a long history within the civilian population. Despite the increased importance of this link within the military veteran population, who suffer a greater propensity of mental health difficulties and consist largely of over 65s, attention is only recently being paid to the salience of such an association for this group. This paper aims to explore the relationship between PTSD and MDD with dementia within the military veteran population. Method: A systematic review was conducted on articles from 1990 to July 2016 on MEDLINE, EMBASE, EBSCO and Web of Science electronic databases with an update conducted in February 2017. Results: Six empirical studies were identified from the review, the majority of which originated from the USA. Five of the studies asserted that veterans with a diagnosis of either PTSD or MDD are at a significantly greater risk of developing dementia than ‘healthy’ controls. The final study, conducted in Australia, found only a small, but non-significant, correlation between earlier MDD and future dementia, but no concurrent correlation. Conclusions: While causality cannot be determined, it is likely that PTSD and depressive disorders are related to an increased risk of dementia in military veterans. Potential pathological explanations and risk factors are reviewed and the clinical and neuroscience implications of these findings are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Locked-in or Locked-out: Can a Public Services Market Really Change?
- Author
-
CONSIDINE, MARK, O'SULLIVAN, SIOBHAN, MCGANN, MICHAEL, and NGUYEN, PHUC
- Subjects
BUSINESS ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Australia's welfare-to-work system has been subject to ongoing political contestation and policy reform since the 1990s. In this paper we take a big picture look at the Australian system over time, re-visiting our earlier analysis of the impact of marketisation on flexibility at the frontline over the first ten years of the Australian market in employment services. That analysis demonstrated that marketisation had failed to deliver the service flexibility intended through contracting-out, and had instead produced market herding around a common set of standardised frontline practices. In the interim, there have been two further major redesigns of the Australian system at considerable expense to taxpayers. Re-introducing greater flexibility and service tailoring into the market has been a key aim of these reforms. Calling on evidence from an original, longitudinal survey of frontline employment service staff run in 2008, 2012 and 2016, this paper considers how the Australian market has evolved over its second decade. We find remarkable consistency over time and, indeed, evidence of deepening organisational convergence. We conclude that, once in motion, isomorphic pressures towards standardisation quickly get locked into quasi-market regimes; at least when these pressures occur in low-trust contracting environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. PERFECT TRIANGLES ON THE CURVE $C_{4}$.
- Author
-
ISMAIL, SHAHRINA
- Subjects
TRIANGLES ,ELLIPTIC curves ,CURVES ,NUMBER theory ,HERONS - Abstract
A Heron triangle is a triangle that has three rational sides $(a,b,c)$ and a rational area, whereas a perfect triangle is a Heron triangle that has three rational medians $(k,l,m)$. Finding a perfect triangle was stated as an open problem by Richard Guy [Unsolved Problems in Number Theory (Springer, New York, 1981)]. Heron triangles with two rational medians are parametrized by the eight curves $C_{1},\ldots ,C_{8}$ mentioned in Buchholz and Rathbun ['An infinite set of heron triangles with two rational medians', Amer. Math. Monthly 104(2) (1997), 106–115; 'Heron triangles and elliptic curves', Bull. Aust. Math.Soc. 58 (1998), 411–421] and Bácskái et al. [Symmetries of triangles with two rational medians, http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.65.6533, 2003]. In this paper, we reveal results on the curve $C_{4}$ which has the property of satisfying conditions such that six of seven parameters given by three sides, two medians and area are rational. Our aim is to perform an extensive search to prove the nonexistence of a perfect triangle arising from this curve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Treatment-seeking differences for mental health problems in male- and non-male-dominated occupations: evidence from the HILDA cohort.
- Author
-
Milner, A., Scovelle, A. J., and King, T.
- Subjects
MENTAL health personnel ,MENTAL health ,WOMEN'S employment ,OCCUPATIONS ,HELP-seeking behavior - Abstract
Background: There is a well-established gender divide among people who do and do not seek professional help from mental health professionals. Females are typically more likely to report, and seek help for, mental health problems. The current paper sought to examine the role of employment context on help-seeking for mental health issues. We hypothesised that men and women in male-dominated occupations would be less likely to seek help than those in non-male-dominated occupations. Methods: Data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey were used. Help-seeking, measured in 2013, was defined as whether a person reported attending a mental health professional in the 12 months prior to the survey. The exposure, male- and non-male-dominated occupations (measured in 2012), was defined using census data based on self-reported occupation. Analyses were stratified by gender and controlled for relevant confounders (measured in 2012), including mental health and prior help-seeking. We conducted multivariate logistic and propensity score analyses to improve exchangeability of those exposed and unexposed. Results: For males, being in a male-dominated occupation was independently associated with reduced likelihood of help-seeking (OR 0.66, 95% CI 0.46–0.95) in the adjusted model, although this result fell just out of significance in the propensity score analysis. There was no independent effect of being in a male-/non-male-dominated occupation for help-seeking among women. Conclusions: Results suggest that male-dominated occupations may negatively influence help-seeking among males. There is a need for more research to understand this relationship and for workplace-based prevention initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. OSWALD TOYNBEE FALK: KEYNES’ MODEL ECONOMIST?
- Author
-
MILLMOW, ALEX
- Subjects
LETTERS ,BIOGRAPHICAL sources ,INVESTORS ,PHILOSOPHY of economics ,HISTORY of economics -- 20th century - Abstract
Oswald ‘Foxy’ Falk was the enigmatic figure who understood, probably more than any other person, how the mind of Maynard Keynes operated. Regrettably, Falk never wrote a memoir on Keynes or even expanded upon his long professional association with him. Equally, there has been relatively little written of Falk in the economics literature. This article attempts, at least, to address that gap. The character and philosophy of Falk are examined through the prism of a lengthy correspondence he had with another businessman who knew Keynes, William Sydney Robinson. Their letters reveal why Keynes fell out with his former business partner but also, more importantly, how, in talking about the great and the good, lesser mortals are inclined to tell the occasional mistruth. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Use of Individual Education Programs for Children in Australian Schools.
- Author
-
Dempsey, Ian
- Subjects
INDIVIDUALIZED education programs ,SPECIAL education ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STUDENTS with disabilities - Abstract
A cornerstone of special education practice is customising instruction to meet individual students’ needs. Individual education programs (IEPs) are used in many countries to document the manner in which such instruction is customised and to provide a record of student outcomes. Using 2009 data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, this paper examines a range of student and school variables associated with Australian children aged 8 to 9 years who had an IEP at the time. There were significant differences across government, Catholic and independent schools, and significant differences across the states and territories in the use of IEPs. The Discussion section of the paper explores possible reasons for those differences and the desirability for more consistent use of IEPs with students with a disability in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Health promotion in an Australian Aboriginal community: the Growing Strong Brains® toolkit.
- Author
-
Simpson, Wendy, Robinson, Darlene, Bennett, Elaine, Strange, Cecily, Banham, Vicki, Allen, Jenny, and Marriott, Rhonda
- Subjects
EVALUATION of human services programs ,FOCUS groups ,RURAL conditions ,CHILD development ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,INTERVIEWING ,HUMAN services programs ,NEURAL development ,RESEARCH funding ,ACTION research ,DECISION making ,CULTURAL competence ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,RESPECT ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this paper is to describe the implementation and evaluation of the Growing Strong Brains® (GSB) toolkit in a remote Aboriginal community in Western Australia (WA) over a 2-year period, 2018–2019. Background: Ngala, a community service organisation in WA, developed the GSB toolkit in 2014, a culturally appropriate and interactive resource to build knowledge of early childhood development within Aboriginal communities. This was in response to evidence that a higher percentage of children in Aboriginal communities were developmentally vulnerable compared to the rest of the population. The GSB toolkit promotes awareness and understanding of early brain development pre-birth and in the early years of a child's life. Methods: The project was underpinned by participatory action research (PAR). Reflective PAR review cycles (n = 5) monitored local community engagement, navigated challenges and utilised community strengths. Fifty-nine local service providers attended a 2-day formal training. Data were collected by using various methods throughout the project, including feedback following training, focus groups, surveys, one-on-one interviews using yarning techniques and reflective feedback from the Project Lead. Findings: Establishing local Aboriginal project staff was pivotal to the success of the project. When delivering services for and with Aboriginal people, it is essential that cultural competence, safety and decision-making is carried through from planning to implementation and evaluation, and involves genuine, respectful and authentic relationships. Sufficient time allocation directed towards building relationships with other service providers and local community members needs to be considered and built into future projects. The Growing Strong Brains
® project is embedded within the local community, and anticipated implementation outcomes were achieved. The support of the local people and service providers was beyond expectation, enabling the building of local capacity, and the development of a common understanding of the key messages from the GSB toolkit to allow integration throughout all levels of the community. This project has been important to build on the strategies necessary to introduce, implement and evaluate the GSB toolkit in other remote Aboriginal communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Estimating the difference in prevalence of common mental disorder diagnoses for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples compared to the general Australian population.
- Author
-
Page, I. S., Ferrari, A. J., Slade, T., Anderson, M., Santomauro, D., and Diminic, S.
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS Australians ,INDIGENOUS children ,AUSTRALIANS ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health services ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Aims: There is currently little nationally representative diagnostic data available to quantify how many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people may need a mental health service in any given year. Without such information, health service planners must rely on less direct indicators of need such as service utilisation. The aim of this paper is to provide a starting point by estimating the prevalence ratio of 12-month common mental disorders (i.e. mood and anxiety disorders) for Indigenous peoples compared to the general Australian population. Methods: Analysis of the four most recent Australian Indigenous and corresponding general population surveys was undertaken. Kessler-5 summary scores by 10-year age group were computed as weighted percentages with corresponding 95% confidence intervals. A series of meta-analyses were conducted to pool prevalence ratios of Indigenous to general population significant psychological distress by 10-year age groups. The proportion of respondents with self-reported clinician diagnoses of mental disorders was also extracted from the most recent survey iterations. Results: Indigenous Australians are estimated to have between 1.6 and 3.3 times the national prevalence of anxiety and mood disorders. Sensitivity analyses found that the prevalence ratios did not vary across age group or survey wave. Conclusions: To combat the current landscape of inequitable mental health in Australia, priority should be given to populations in need, such as Indigenous Australians. Having a clear idea of the current level of need for mental health services will allow planners to make informed decisions to ensure adequate services are available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Australia's Response to COVID-19.
- Author
-
Stobart, Anika and Duckett, Stephen
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL decision making ,VACCINATION ,COVID-19 ,IMMUNIZATION ,QUARANTINE ,TREATMENT failure ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,STAY-at-home orders ,TRAVEL hygiene - Abstract
Australia suffered two waves of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic in 2020: the first lasting from February to July 2020 was mainly caused by transmission from international arrivals, the second lasting from July to November was caused by breaches of hotel quarantine which allowed spreading into the community. From a second wave peak in early August of over 700 new cases a day, by November 2020 Australia had effectively eliminated community transmission. Effective elimination was largely maintained in the first half of 2021 using snap lockdowns, while a slow vaccination programme left Australia lagging behind comparable countries. This paper describes the interventions which led to Australia's relative success up to July 2021, and also some of the failures along the way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Resistance Is Not Futile: Co-operatives, Demutualization, Agriculture, and Neoliberalism in Australia.
- Author
-
Patmore, Greg, Balnave, Nikola, and Marjanovic, Olivera
- Subjects
COOPERATIVE societies ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,COOPERATIVE agriculture ,WORLD War II - Abstract
Recognition of co-operatives as a legitimate business model and form of economic participation was significantly challenged by the rise of neo-liberalism in the 1980s with its emphasis on individuals and markets. This fueled an externally and internally driven push to demutualize co-operatives and convert them into Investor Owned Businesses (IOB). While the international trend to demutualize emerged from the end of the Second World War, evidence indicates it accelerated from the late 1980s until the onset of the Global Financial Crisis. Drawing on an ongoing project of historical data collection and visual analysis of Australian co-operatives, this paper explores the Australian experience with demutualization, particularly with regard to agriculture. In line with the international experience, there has been a surge in Australian demutualization since the 1980s. However, while demutualization continues to be a feature of the Australian landscape post-GFC as co-operatives tackle with the changed political and economic environment, the paper also challenges the view that demutualization is inevitable for agricultural co-operatives. Co-operative managers can make strategic choices to avoid demutualization and retain member control. Further, co-operative culture and the persistence of co-operative clusters in particular regions can blunt the push to demutualize. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Review of selected research in applied linguistics published in Australia (2008–2014).
- Author
-
Oliver, Rhonda, Chen, Honglin, and Moore, Stephen
- Subjects
APPLIED linguistics ,EDUCATION ,AUSTRALIAN English language ,SECOND language acquisition ,MULTILINGUALISM ,COMPUTER assisted language instruction ,HIGHER education ,YOUNG adults - Abstract
This article reviews the significant and diverse range of research in applied linguistics published in Australia in the period 2008–2014. Whilst acknowledging that a great deal of research by Australian scholars has been published internationally during these seven years, this review is based on books, journal articles, and conference proceedings published in Australia. Many of these sources will be unfamiliar to an international audience, and the purpose of this article is to highlight this body of research and the themes emerging from it. The journals selected in this review include Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, Australian Review of Applied Linguistics (ARAL), BABEL, English in Australia, English Australia, Papers in Language Testing and Assessment, Prospect: An Australian Journal of TESOL, TESOL in Context, and University of Sydney Papers in TESOL. Selected refereed proceedings are from key national conferences including: ALAA (Applied Linguistics Association of Australia), ACTA (Australian Council of TESOL Association), ASFLA (Australian Systemic Functional Linguistics Association), and ALS (Australian Linguistics Society). Our review of selected applied linguistics work revolves around the following themes: the responses to the needs of government planning and policy; the complexity of Australia's multicultural, multilingual society; the concern for recognizing context and culture as key factors in language and language learning; social activism in supporting language pedagogy and literacy programmes at all levels of education; and acknowledgement of the unique place held by Indigenous languages and Aboriginal English in the national linguistic landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Technological Innovation in the Maritime Industry: The Case of Remote Pilotage and Enhanced Navigational Assistance.
- Author
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Brooks, Ben, Coltman, Tim, and Yang, Miles
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AUTONOMOUS vehicles ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,AIRPLANE piloting ,ECOSYSTEM dynamics ,GLOBAL Positioning System - Abstract
Advances in technological innovation have been deployed to support autonomous or semi-autonomous vehicles in many industries. A question that remains unanswered is why very little progress has been made in remote pilotage over the past 15 years. This paper draws together theories from innovation management and the high reliability organisation literatures to shed light on this question. Using a case study of two Australian ports, we examine a business case for remote pilotage demonstrating that despite positive cost benefit models, ambiguities in benefits exist throughout the ecosystem. The discussion sheds light on unique challenges that port executives face where it is necessary to simultaneously develop a strategy to: (1) manage the internal innovation process, and (2) manage the external consequences of the innovation by mobilising allies, managing opponents, and converting those who are indifferent to the innovation. The main contribution of this paper is to show that any assessment of the innovation challenge facing remote pilotage and enhanced navigational assistance requires the maritime industry to ask new questions not previously considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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47. The importance of stories in understanding people's relationship to food: narrative inquiry methodology has much to offer the public health nutrition researcher and practitioner.
- Author
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O'Kane, Gabrielle and Pamphilon, Barbara
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PUBLIC health ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,IMMUNIZATION ,NATIONAL health services ,BUSINESS ,COMMUNICATION ,DECISION making ,DIET ,ECOLOGY ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,FOCUS groups ,NUTRITION ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,NARRATIVES ,SOCIAL context ,RESEARCH personnel ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Objective: Despite the usefulness of quantitative research, qualitative research methodologies are equally needed to allow researchers to better understand the important social and environmental factors affecting food choice and eating habits. The present paper contributes insights from narrative inquiry, a well-established qualitative methodology, to a food-related doctoral research study. The connections between food shoppers and the producer, family, friends and others in the food system, between eaters and the earth, and how these connections affect people's meaning-making of food and pathways to food citizenship, were explored in the research.Design: The research used narrative inquiry methodology and focus groups for data collection.Setting: Five different food-ways in the Canberra region of Australia were selected for the present research; that is, community gardens, community-supported agriculture, farmers' markets, fresh food markets and supermarkets.Subjects: Fifty-two people voluntarily attended eight focus groups with four to nine participants in each.Results: From a practical perspective, the present paper offers a guide to the way in which narrative inquiry has been applied to one research project. The paper describes the application of narrative inquiry methodology, revealing the important place of narratives in generating new knowledge. The paper further outlines how phased narrative analysis can lead to a defensible and rigorous interpretive framework grounded in the data generated from people's stories and meaning-making.Conclusions: We argue that individual, social and system change will not be possible without further rigorous qualitative studies to inform and complement the empirical basis of public health nutrition practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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48. 'Yes, I've got the job, but my challenge is keeping the job': an evaluation of a new pathway to open employment to meet the needs of people with acquired brain injury in Australia.
- Author
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Bould, Em, Callaway, Libby, and Brusco, Natasha K.
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN injuries , *ALLIED health personnel , *EMPLOYMENT statistics , *PUBLIC meetings , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *EMPLOYMENT interviewing - Abstract
Background and objectives: In Australia, people with disability continue to experience low employment rates (48%), compared to the national average (79%), and employment is even lower (30%) for people with acquired brain injury (ABI). This paper evaluates a pilot study of a new mainstream employment pathway following ABI, called Employment CoLab. Method: Employment CoLab was piloted across multiple industries using a mix of reasonable employer adjustments, insurance-funded supports and/or access to capacity-building supports. Semi-structured interviews were undertaken with four stakeholders; (1) Employees with ABI (n = 5, age 31–49 years, time since injury M(R) = 11(4–26) years); (2) Employers/co-workers (n = 3); (3) Allied health professionals/vocational providers (n = 4); and (4) Injury insurance funders who hold portfolio responsibility for disability employment (n = 5). An explorative economic evaluation was also conducted to compare the cost to the funder for Employment CoLab compared to traditional employment pathways. Results: Employment CoLab offered a new approach for people with ABI to gain and sustain open employment. Four major themes were identified from participant interviews: valuing employment and diversity; barriers to mainstream employment; reflections on being employed; and being supported over time. The economic evaluation was unable to detect if the pathway was, or was not, less costly when compared to traditional employment pathways. Conclusions: Employment CoLab is a person-centred collaborative approach which, together with effective social disability insurance approaches, has built new opportunities for inclusive mainstream economic participation following ABI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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49. EDITORIAL: MECHANICS IN BIOLOGY.
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DYSON, ROSEMARY J. and GREEN, J. EDWARD F.
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BIOMECHANICS ,FLUID dynamics - Published
- 2018
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50. Efficacy of the Zero Suicide framework in reducing recurrent suicide attempts: cross-sectional and time-to-recurrent-event analyses.
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Stapelberg, Nicolas J. C., Sveticic, Jerneja, Hughes, Ian, Almeida-Crasto, Alice, Gaee-Atefi, Taralina, Gill, Neeraj, Grice, Diana, Krishnaiah, Ravikumar, Lindsay, Luke, Patist, Carla, Engelen, Heidy Van, Walker, Sarah, Welch, Matthew, Woerwag-Mehta, Sabine, and Turner, Kathryn
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ATTEMPTED suicide ,SUICIDE ,MENTAL health services ,SUICIDE prevention ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: The Zero Suicide framework is a system-wide approach to prevent suicides in health services. It has been implemented worldwide but has a poor evidence-base of effectiveness.Aims: To evaluate the effectiveness of the Zero Suicide framework, implemented in a clinical suicide prevention pathway (SPP) by a large public mental health service in Australia, in reducing repeated suicide attempts after an index attempt.Method: A total of 604 persons with 737 suicide attempt presentations were identified between 1 July and 31 December 2017. Relative risk for a subsequent suicide attempt within various time periods was calculated using cross-sectional analysis. Subsequently, a 10-year suicide attempt history (2009-2018) for the cohort was used in time-to-recurrent-event analyses.Results: Placement on the SPP reduced risk for a repeated suicide attempt within 7 days (RR = 0.29; 95% CI 0.11-0.75), 14 days (RR = 0.38; 95% CI 0.18-0.78), 30 days (RR = 0.55; 95% CI 0.33-0.94) and 90 days (RR = 0.62; 95% CI 0.41-0.95). Time-to-recurrent event analysis showed that SPP placement extended time to re-presentation (HR = 0.65; 95% CI 0.57-0.67). A diagnosis of personality disorder (HR = 2.70; 95% CI 2.03-3.58), previous suicide attempt (HR = 1.78; 95% CI 1.46-2.17) and Indigenous status (HR = 1.46; 95% CI 0.98-2.25) increased the hazard for re-presentation, whereas older age decreased it (HR = 0.92; 95% CI 0.86-0.98). The effect of the SPP was similar across all groups, reducing the risk of re-presentation to about 65% of that seen in those not placed on the SPP.Conclusions: This paper demonstrates a reduction in repeated suicide attempts after an index attempt and a longer time to a subsequent attempt for those receiving multilevel care based on the Zero Suicide framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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