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It’s the Little Things that Matter: Implementation of Evidence-based Practice in Residential Aged Care, SBS HDR Student Conference (2011)
Considerable research has been undertaken in health care about implementing evidence-based practice but there has...
The Clinical Services Redesign Program in New South Wales : perceptions of senior health managers (with Glenn Robert, Grace McCarthy, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2010)
OBJECTIVE: This study explores the views of senior managers regarding their experience of participating in...
Linkage, coordination and integration: Evidence from rural palliative care (with Alan Owen), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2009)
OBJECTIVE: Review the findings from the evaluations of three rural palliative care programs. DESIGN: Review...
Assessment of need and capacity to benefit for people with a disability requiring aids, appliances and equipment (with Alan G. Owen, Tara L. Stevermuer, Kathryn E. Williams, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2008)
Aim: To develop an equitable system for allocating equipment, aids and appliances to adults with...
Evidence-based practice in residential aged care - challenges and opportunities, Australian Health Services Research Institute (2008)
First Annual Report on the NSW Clinical Services Redesign Program (CSRP) (with Luise P. Lago, Peter M. Siminski, Helen M. Hasan, Frances D. Simmonds, Glenn Robert, Paul Bate, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
GAPS revisited: follow up evaluation of an Australian rural palliative care service (with David L. Fildes, Karen Quinsey, and Sheila Matete), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
GPs and other primary health care providers - a case of square pegs and round holes?, Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
Objectives To identify themes emerging from three evaluations examining the role of general practitioners and...
How is palliative care paid for? The Australian perspective (with Maree Banfield), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
Lessons from the national evaluation of the Rural Palliative Care Program: a synthesis of the findings and recommended next steps (with Karen Quinsey, Alan G. Owen, David L. Fildes, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
Priority rating for community care (with Tara L. Stevermuer, Alan G. Owen, and Kathryn E. Williams), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
This paper, which is an additional nosokinetics paper to accompany those presented in Aust Health...
Rural Palliative Care Program: Eastern Goldfields Evaluation Report, Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
Why patients attend emergency departments for conditions potentially appropriate for primary care: Reasons given by patients and clinicians differ (with Andrew J. Bezzina, Peter M. Siminski, Rebekkah Middleton, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2007)
Objectives: To compare reasons identified by clinical staff for potential primary care attendances to the...
Transforming community caring into improved health outcomes: lessons from the evaluation of a national palliative care program (with Karen Quinsey, Kathryn E. Williams, David L. Fildes, Heather Yeatman, and Kate Senior), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2006)
Mission Report on health care financing consultancy for the Ministry of Health, Vietnam., Australian Health Services Research Institute (2005)
PADP Assessment and Priority Setting based on Need and Capacity to Benefit (with Alan G. Owen, Kathryn E. Williams, Louise R. Ramsay, Robert Gordon, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Australian Health Services Research Institute (2005)
Primary care patients' views on why they present to Emergency Departments - inappropriate attendances or inappropriate policy? (with Peter M. Siminski, Susan Cragg, Rebekkah Middleton, Luise P. Lago, Janette P. Green, and Kathleen M. Eagar), Faculty of Commerce - Papers (2005)
This study investigates why some patients with apparently less urgent conditions present to emergency departments...