208 results match your criteria: "Jamieson Trauma Institute[Affiliation]"
Injury
June 2024
Jamieson Trauma Institute, Australia; Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
There remains a paucity of evidence on the early predictors of long-term Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) outcomes post-burn in hospitalised adults. The overall aim of this study was to identify the factors (personal, environmental, burn injury and burn treatment factors) that may predict long-term HRQoL outcomes among adult survivors of hospitalised burn injuries at 12 months post-burn. A total of 274 participants, aged 18 years or over, admitted to a single state-wide burn centre with a burn injury were recruited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
March 2024
Surgical Treatment and Rehabilitation Service (STARS) Education and Research Alliance, The University of Queensland and Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Introduction: Management guidelines for low back pain (LBP) recommend exclusion of serious pathology, followed by simple analgesics, superficial heat therapy, early mobilisation and patient education. An audit in a large metropolitan hospital emergency department (ED) revealed high rates of non-recommended medication prescription for LBP (65% of patients prescribed opioids, 17% prescribed benzodiazepines), high inpatient admission rates (20% of ED LBP patients), delayed patient mobilisation (on average 6 hours) and inadequate patient education (48% of patients). This study aims to improve medication prescription for LBP in this ED by implementing an intervention shown previously to improve guideline-based management of LBP in other Australian EDs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Spinal Cord Med
March 2024
Hunter Medical Research Institute, New Lambton Heights, Australia.
Objective: To determine the prevalence, reported harms and factors associated with opioid use among adults with spinal cord injury (SCI) living in the community.
Study Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Methods: Comprehensive literature searches were conducted in PubMed (MEDLINE), EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science and Scopus for articles published between 2000 and 2023.
Stress Health
August 2024
Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI), Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
The number of people providing informal care has increased considerably in the last years while, at the same time, about one in four Australians have financial stress problems. This study uses rich longitudinal data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) survey to estimate the effect of informal care on financial stress. To establish causality, we exploit a fixed effect-instrumental variable approach to address omitted variable bias and reverse causality problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSouth Afr J Crit Care
December 2023
Division of Health Sciences Education, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
Burns
May 2024
Infection Collaboration in trAuma, orthopaedics and burns (ICARAUS), Australia; State Burns Unit, Fiona Stanley Hospital, Murdoch 6150, Western Australia, Australia.
Background: The disruption to the immune system and profound metabolic response to burn injury gives rise to a unique susceptibility to infection. Indeed, infection is one of the most frequently encountered post-burns complications placing significant burden on patients and healthcare system. Advancements in burn care have led to marked improvements in burn-related mortality and morbidity; however, scarce hospital resources hamper adequate burn-related care, and patient length of stay (LOS) in hospital is an important drain on such resources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intensive Med
January 2024
Department of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Microbiol Spectr
February 2024
UQ Centre for Clinical Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
We aimed to evaluate the performance of Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) sequencing from positive blood culture (BC) broths for bacterial identification and antimicrobial susceptibility prediction. Patients with suspected sepsis in four intensive care units were prospectively enrolled. Human-depleted DNA was extracted from positive BC broths and sequenced using ONT (MinION).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone Joint J
January 2024
Jamieson Trauma Institute, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Metro North Health, Brisbane, Australia.
Aims: The aim of this study was to perform the first population-based description of the epidemiological and health economic burden of fracture-related infection (FRI).
Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of operatively managed orthopaedic trauma patients from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2016, performed in Queensland, Australia. Record linkage was used to develop a person-centric, population-based dataset incorporating routinely collected administrative, clinical, and health economic information.
J Geriatr Cardiol
November 2023
JC School of Public Health and Primary Care, Centre for Health Education and Health Promotion, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Crit Care Resusc
December 2021
Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Intensive Care Med Exp
December 2023
Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
Background: Direct assessment of microcirculatory function remains a critical care research tool but approaches for analysis of microcirculatory videomicroscopy clips are shifting from manual to automated algorithms, with a view to clinical application in the intensive care unit. Automated analysis software associated with current sidestream darkfield videomicroscopy systems is demonstrably unreliable; therefore, semi-automated analysis of captured clips should be undertaken in older generations of software. We present a method for capture of microcirculatory clips using current version videomicroscope hardware and resizing of clips to allow compatibility with legacy analysis software.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care Resusc
June 2022
Jamieson Trauma Institute, Queensland Health, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Medications prescribed for indications or at doses, frequencies or durations not approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration are considered "off- label". Critical illness makes seeking consent for off-label medication use impractical. We aimed to characterise the extent of off-label medication use in a tertiary medical- surgical intensive care unit (ICU) by auditing the electronic health records of all patients admitted over a one-month period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Anaesth
January 2024
School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Two randomised controlled trials have reported a reduction in mortality when adjunctive hydrocortisone is administered in combination with fludrocortisone compared with placebo in septic shock. A third trial did not support this finding when hydrocortisone administered in combination with fludrocortisone was compared with hydrocortisone alone. The underlying mechanisms for this mortality benefit remain poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAust Crit Care
January 2024
School of Nursing, Centre for Healthcare Transformation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia; School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Injury
March 2024
Q-Script Management Unit, Queensland Health, Brisbane, Australia.
Background: Despite a focus of opioid-related research internationally, there is limited understanding of long-term opioid use in adults following injury. We analysed data from the 'Community Opioid Dispensing after Injury' data linkage study.
Aims: This paper aims to describe the baseline characteristics of the injured cohort and report opioid dispensing patterns following injury-related hospitalisations.
Clin Toxicol (Phila)
September 2023
Clinical Toxicology Unit, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health
January 2024
Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK. Electronic address:
Background: Existing clinical trials of cognitive behavioural therapies with a trauma focus (CBTs-TF) are underpowered to examine key variables that might moderate treatment effects. We aimed to determine the efficacy of CBTs-TF for young people, relative to passive and active control conditions, and elucidate putative individual-level and treatment-level moderators.
Methods: This was an individual participant data meta-analysis of published and unpublished randomised studies in young people aged 6-18 years exposed to trauma.
Aust N Z J Public Health
December 2023
Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI), School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove, Queensland, 4059, Australia; Jamieson Trauma Institute, Metro North Health, Queensland, Australia.
Objective: To elicit and summarise collective expert opinion on contemporary child product safety risks, challenges and priorities.
Methods: An online survey targeted international experts from a cross-section of product safety fields.
Results: Fifty-five experts participated, representing 1,137 years of product safety experience, from a broad range of fields including industry risk management, product assessment and testing, policy and regulation, research, paediatric medicine, advocacy and product liability.
Crit Care Resusc
March 2023
Division of Anaesthesiology Critical Care Emergency and Pain Medicine, Nîmes University Hospital, University of Montpellier, Nîmes, France.
Objective: To describe whether contemporary dosing of antifungal drugs achieves therapeutic exposures in critically ill patients that are associated with optimal outcomes. Adequate antifungal therapy is a key determinant of survival of critically ill patients with fungal infections. Critical illness can alter an antifungal agents' pharmacokinetics, increasing the risk of inappropriate antifungal exposure that may lead to treatment failure and/or toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Bioeng Biotechnol
October 2023
Australian Research Council (ARC) Training Centre for Multiscale 3D Imaging, Modelling, and Manufacturing (M3D Innovation), Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Three-dimensional (3D)-printed medical-grade polycaprolactone (mPCL) composite scaffolds have been the first to enable the concept of scaffold-guided bone regeneration (SGBR) from bench to bedside. However, advances in 3D printing technologies now promise next-generation scaffolds such as those with Voronoi tessellation. We hypothesized that the combination of a Voronoi design, applied for the first time to 3D-printed mPCL and ceramic fillers (here hydroxyapatite, HA), would allow slow degradation and high osteogenicity needed to regenerate bone tissue and enhance regenerative properties when mixed with xenograft material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed J Aust
November 2023
Centre for Health Services Research, the University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD.
Objective: To determine whether perinatal outcomes after excluding gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) on the basis of fasting venous plasma glucose (FVPG) assessment during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in 2020 were similar to those during the preceding year after excluding GDM using the standard oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) procedure.
Design: Retrospective pre-post study.
Setting, Participants: All women who gave birth in Queensland during 1 July - 31 December 2019 and 1 July - 31 December 2020.
Anthropol Anz
March 2024
School of Mechanical, Medical and Process Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, 60 Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove QLD 4059, Australia.
Manufacturers aim to design implants fitting for the broadest possible population segment. Due to the scarcity of available morphological data of intact long bones, anatomical collections of historical bone specimens may represent valuable additional sources. Previous work on femoral morphology measurements suggests that historical specimens are widely consistent with data from present-day populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuroeng Rehabil
September 2023
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Background: Walking impairments are a common consequence of neurological disorders and are assessed with clinical scores that suffer from several limitations. Robot-assisted locomotor training is becoming an established clinical practice. Besides training, these devices could be used for assessing walking ability in a controlled environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Alcohol Rev
November 2023
Chemical Pathology, Pathology Queensland, Queensland Health, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
Introduction: The health impact from alcohol is of recognised concern, from acute intoxication as well as increased risk of chronic health issues over time. Identifying factors associated with higher alcohol consumption when presenting to the emergency department (ED) will inform public health policy and enable more targeted health care and appropriate referrals.
Methods: Secondary testing of blood samples collected during routine clinical care of 1160 ED patients presenting to the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital in Queensland, Australia, for 10 days between 22 January and 1 February 2021.