Publications by authors named "C Nagle"

Background/objectives: Assessing perinatal diet and its determinants in Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women remains challenging, given the paucity of tools that incorporate Aboriginal ways of knowing, being, and remembering within a quantitative framework. This study aimed to explore the determinants of perinatal nutrition in this population and to evaluate the efficacy of the Nutrition Education and Screening Tool (NEST) in collecting diet-related data in this population.

Methods: This study employed a Participatory Action Research approach using the NEST as a foundation for structured research inquiry.

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The use of dietary supplements by cancer patients is common but contentious, particularly during chemotherapy. Few studies have investigated this for ovarian cancer. In a prospective study of women with ovarian cancer, dietary supplement use was collected through questionnaires.

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Problem: Most hospital birth environments remain clinical in appearance and are not attuned to the neurohormonal processes that orchestrate labour and birth. Hospital environments are therefore not aligned with the innate needs of a woman to feel safe and secure in the place where she gives birth.

Background: Research has suggested that audio-visual effects such as nature images and sounds may help promote physiological labour in women at low risk of complications.

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(1) Background: Mid-level managers in healthcare are central to improving safety and quality of care. Their ability in demonstrating leadership and management competency in their roles and supporting frontline managers and frontline staff has a direct effect on staff retention and turn-over. Yet, investment in their professional development and support for mid-level managers is often neither adequate nor effective, and high rates of staff turnover are evident.

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Objective: To evaluate if exercise and sitting time during chemotherapy were associated with chemotherapy side-effects, completion of planned chemotherapy and survival.

Methods: We used data from the Ovarian cancer Prognosis And Lifestyle (OPAL) Study, a national prospective cohort of adults with newly-diagnosed epithelial ovarian cancer. At 3-monthly questionnaires we asked about exercise and sitting time in the past week, and treatment-related side-effects.

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