90 results match your criteria: "Clinical Excellence Queensland[Affiliation]"

Contextual Factors that Influence Antibiotic Prescribing: A Discrete Choice Experiment of GP Registrars.

Appl Health Econ Health Policy

January 2025

General Practice Clinical Unit, Faculty of Clinical Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.

Introduction: Antimicrobial resistance is a global emergency related to overprescribing of antibiotics. Few studies have explored how prescribing behaviours may change as the consequence of changing resistance. Understanding how contextual factors influence antibiotic prescribing will facilitate improved communication strategies to promote appropriate antibiotic prescribing.

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Background And Objectives: Assessment and care of substance use disorder within mental health services are essential due to the high prevalence and harms associated with comorbidity. Substance use disorder assessment and care are routinely recommended in clinical guidelines; however, processes are not agreed. This systematic review of routine clinical practice in relation to substance use disorders in adult mental health service aims to identify routine assessment and diagnosis processes, the proportion of patients and service episodes in which they occur and their outputs.

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Rationale: Hospitals are increasingly utilising allied-health professionals to provide clinical triage to patients. While these positions are routinely implemented, and several observational studies have reported positive outcomes, the effectiveness of this intervention has been rarely tested in a clinical trial.

Aims And Objectives: The objectives of this study were to (i) evaluate a podiatry-led orthopaedic triage service using patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), and (ii) determine if it is cost-effective in terms of incremental cost/quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).

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Objective: To co-design artificial intelligence (AI)-based clinical informatics workflows to routinely analyse patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) in hospitals.

Methods: The context was public hospitals (n=114) and health services (n=16) in a large state in Australia serving a population of ~5 million. We conducted a participatory action research study with multidisciplinary healthcare professionals, managers, data analysts, consumer representatives and industry professionals (n=16) across three phases: (1) defining the problem, (2) current workflow and co-designing a future workflow and (3) developing proof-of-concept AI-based workflows.

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There are increasing calls for the application of systems ergonomics methods in healthcare, although evidence for their utility and uptake is limited. In this study, 67 Australian healthcare workers participated in a six-month longitudinal study where they were trained to apply the AcciMap adverse event analysis and Net-HARMS risk assessment methods. Data were gathered in line with the RE-AIM (Reach, Efficacy, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) evaluation framework, including rates of organisational uptake and method validity, perceived workload, usability, and barriers and facilitators to use in practice.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study addresses the issue of low attendance at cardiac rehabilitation (CR) by analyzing data from 33,055 patients in Queensland over two years to identify characteristics affecting CR participation.
  • Results reveal that 37% of patients declined CR, 35% started but didn't finish, and 28% completed it, with age, Indigenous status, living location, and specific heart conditions being key factors linked to non-attendance and non-completion.
  • The findings suggest that targeted initiatives are needed to improve CR participation, particularly for Indigenous populations and those with certain demographic and health-related characteristics.
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Article Synopsis
  • Supporting clinical teams to enhance care for palliative patients and their caregivers is a top priority, and patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) like consideRATE can help identify areas for improvement.
  • A study in an Australian hospital showed a 71% response rate from eligible patients and their caregivers, with a majority preferring to complete the measure electronically, and many needing assistance.
  • The findings suggest that using consideRATE is feasible and provides valuable feedback to clinicians, who noted the importance of having accessible and context-sensitive data for quality improvement.
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Background: Health workforce supply is critical to ensuring the delivery of essential healthcare and may be enhanced via mechanisms which alter the scopes of practice of health professions. The aim of this paper is to study the collective perspectives of allied health decision-makers on factors which influence their development and implementation of advanced and extended scope of practice initiatives, and how they contribute to scope of practice change. The reasoning for the selection of each factor will also be examined.

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Background: Choice, a fundamental pillar of woman-centred maternity care, depends in part on the right to decline recommended care. While professional guidance for midwives and obstetricians emphasises informed consent and respect for women's autonomy, there is little guidance available to clinicians or women about how to navigate maternity care in the context of refusal.

Aim: To describe the process and outcomes of co-designing resources to support partnership between the woman who declines recommended maternity care and the clinicians and health services who provide her care.

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Reduction of healthcare access inequity using telehealth and patient travel cost subsidisation.

Public Health Pract (Oxf)

December 2024

Clinical Excellence Queensland, Queensland Health, Brisbane, Australia.

Objective: Telehealth and patient travel cost subsidisation are two strategies used to reduce the effects of healthcare access inequity. Despite this shared goal, these programs are usually run independently, and their effects are infrequently compared in evaluation. Understanding how these programs are used helps ensure services are delivered efficiently.

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Objectives: This study reports the development and pilot application of the Bariatric Surgery Assessment and Prioritisation Tool (BAPT) for use in a public health system. The BAPT was designed as a patient prioritisation instrument to assess patients with excessive weight and type 2 diabetes suitable for bariatric surgery. We assessed whether the instrument successfully identified those who gained the greatest benefits including weight loss, diabetes remission, reduction in comorbidities, and health-related quality of life (HR-QoL).

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Article Synopsis
  • The Safer Baby Bundle (SBB) initiative in Australia aimed to lower stillbirth rates by enhancing pregnancy care through five key practices, including smoking cessation and fetal monitoring.
  • A study assessed changes in healthcare professionals' (HCPs) knowledge and women's experiences regarding pregnancy care before and after the SBB's implementation, surveying over 1,200 women and 1,400 HCPs.
  • Results showed a significant increase in HCPs consistently applying best practices and improved conversations about stillbirth risk; however, progress in smoking cessation practices was less marked.
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Objectives: This systematic literature review aimed to explore experiences worldwide of societal preferences integration into health technology assessments (HTAs) for rare diseases (RDs) and orphan drugs (ODs) through the implementation of multicriteria decision analysis (MCDA), discrete choice experiments (DCEs), and person trade-off (PTO) methods, among others.

Methods: A systematic search of the literature was conducted in April 2021 using PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, and Scopus databases. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses approach was used for the review phases.

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Improving health system responses when patients are harmed: a protocol for a multistage mixed-methods study.

BMJ Open

July 2024

Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Introduction: At least 10% of hospital admissions in high-income countries, including Australia, are associated with patient safety incidents, which contribute to patient harm ('adverse events'). When a patient is seriously harmed, an investigation or review is undertaken to reduce the risk of further incidents occurring. Despite 20 years of investigations into adverse events in healthcare, few evaluations provide evidence of their quality and effectiveness in reducing preventable harm.

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Over the past decade, healthcare systems have started to establish control centres to manage patient flow, with a view to removing delays and increasing the quality of care. Such centres-here dubbed Healthcare Capacity Command/Coordination Centres (HCCCs)-are a challenge to design and operate. Broad-ranging surveys of HCCCs have been lacking, and design for their human users is only starting to be addressed.

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Development and implementation of the Specialist Palliative Care in Aged Care (SPACE) Project across Queensland.

Aust Health Rev

March 2024

Healthcare Improvement Unit, Clinical Excellence Queensland, Queensland Health, Brisbane, Qld, Australia; and Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service, Southport, Qld, Australia; and Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.

There is an urgent and unmet need for specialist palliative care services in residential aged care. The Specialist Palliative Care in Aged Care (SPACE) Project aimed to improve palliative and end-of-life care for older people living in residential aged care facilities in Queensland. A representative working group developed a series of service principles around palliative care practice in aged care (comprehensive resident-focused care, streamlined service, and capacity building).

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Objectives: Logan local government area (LGA) in Queensland has the highest diabetes prevalence (6.5%) within Metro South Health (MSH). The study aimed to determine the burden of, and equity of access to secondary healthcare, for diabetic foot disease (DFD) for Logan residents to better inform healthcare services planning.

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Health-related quality of life in people with different diabetes-related foot ulcer health states: A cross-sectional study of healed, non-infected, infected, hospitalised and amputated ulcer states.

Diabetes Res Clin Pract

January 2024

Allied Health Research Collaborative, The Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Aims: Diabetes-related foot ulcers (DFU) are a leading cause of infection, hospitalisation and amputation. However, to our knowledge no studies have compared the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of people with DFU that were infected, hospitalised or amputated. This study aimed to investigate and compare the HRQoL of different groups of people with healed, non-infected, infected, hospitalised, or amputated DFU.

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In Australia, Indigenous children have rates of overweight and obesity 1.5 times those of non-Indigenous children. Culturally safe and effective nutrition interventions are needed for this group.

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Objective: To identify factors influencing implementation of machine learning algorithms (MLAs) that predict clinical deterioration in hospitalized adult patients and relate these to a validated implementation framework.

Materials And Methods: A systematic review of studies of implemented or trialed real-time clinical deterioration prediction MLAs was undertaken, which identified: how MLA implementation was measured; impact of MLAs on clinical processes and patient outcomes; and barriers, enablers and uncertainties within the implementation process. Review findings were then mapped to the SALIENT end-to-end implementation framework to identify the implementation stages at which these factors applied.

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Impact of pay-for-performance for stroke unit access on mortality in Queensland, Australia: an interrupted time series analysis.

Lancet Reg Health West Pac

December 2023

Stroke and Ageing Research, Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Clayton 3168, Australia.

Background: Stroke unit care provides substantial benefits for all subgroups of patient with stroke, but consistent access has been difficult to achieve in many healthcare systems. Pay-for-performance incentives have been introduced widely in attempt to improve quality and efficiency in healthcare, but there is limited evidence of positive impact when they are targeted at hospitals. In 2012, a pay-for-performance program targeting stroke unit access was co-designed and implemented within a clinical quality improvement network across public hospitals in Queensland, Australia.

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Issue Addressed: Co-designed and culturally tailored preventive initiatives delivered in childhood have high potential to close the cross-cultural gap in health outcomes of priority populations. Māori and Pacific Islander people living in Australia exhibit a higher prevalence of overweight and obesity and higher rates of multimorbidity, including heart disease, cancer and diabetes.

Methods: This mixed-methods, pilot implementation and evaluation study, aimed to evaluate the implementation of a community-based, co-designed and culturally tailored childhood obesity prevention program, using quantitative (pre-post anthropometric measurement, pre-post health behaviour questionnaire) and qualitative (semi-structured interview) methods.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to see if implementing a sepsis screening tool and management bundle in emergency departments (EDs) improved antibiotic prescribing practices for patients showing signs of sepsis.
  • The research took place in three hospitals in Queensland, Australia, and involved over 2,500 adult patients assessed for sepsis from July 2017 to March 2020.
  • Results indicated a slight increase in adherence to antibiotic guidelines after the intervention (from 54% to 59.5%) and significantly more appropriate antibiotic prescriptions (from 57.1% to 69.9%), but no changes in the timing of administering effective antibiotics or rates of adverse effects.
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