Therapeutic Guidelines Limited (TGL)/RACGP Research Grant

There are over 125 million general practice consultations taking place annually in Australia, with 83 percent of the Australian population consulting a GP at least once a year. General practitioners (GPs) provide person centred, continuing and comprehensive medical care to individuals and families within their community.

General practitioners are not limited by age, gender, body system, disease process or service site. The scope of clinical practice is challenging, spanning prevention, health promotion, early intervention for those at risk, and the management of acute, chronic and complex conditions within the practice population whether in the home, practice, health service, outreach clinic, hospital or community. General practitioners utilise best practice evidence in the light of individual patient circumstances, to understanding, plan and manage their patients’ health needs.

There are many guidelines providing best practice and evidence for managing different conditions for GPs. The aim of this grant is to support guidelines research that investigates use and implementation of guidelines in general practice. Specifically, research topics focusing on:
1. Guideline: content and format – presentation, useability, navigation, access and functionality of guidelines. How do GPs want information presented and implemented?
2. Behavioural aspects of guideline use: how do people use guidelines, how often, what is looked up, when, why and how can this be improved.
3. Consequence (outcome): benefits of using particular guidelines to improve health outcomes.
4. Evidence-practice gaps: do Australian GPs follow specific guidelines well, and if not, why not?

While research falling under any of these areas will be considered, studies focusing on (1) guideline content and format and (2) behavioural aspects of guideline use are encouraged as areas of particular interest. Both pilot studies and proposals for full-scale research studies will be considered.

Amount
Upper  $100,000AUD

Up to two grants (one large and one smaller project) to a total value of up to $100,000 (excluding GST) will be offered for a period up to 18 months.

The grant will be paid only to incorporated bodies that have an ABN and ACN and not to individuals. Funds awarded may only be used for direct research costs (including project-related salaries and reasonable costs) and not for any overhead or management fees of administering organisations.

If the project is delayed in any way or if any of the deadlines are unable to be met, the researcher must request an extension of this timeline.

EOI DEADLINE: 11 April 2017 

Family Medicine Forum – Nov 8-11, 2017 in Montreal, Quebec – submissions wanted

The organisers of the Family Medicine Forum 2017 are keen to have international research presentations at the  Forum to be held from Nov 8-11, 2017 in Montreal, Quebec It is the  annual scientific meeting of the College of Family Physicians of Canada and is Canada’s largest and most comprehensive primary care conference. The first day is research and teaching specific, and the remaining 3 days has a clinical

They are encouraging primary care researchers outside of Canada for research submissions, the deadline to submit oral presentations and posters is April 8th 2017

To read more information please go to the  website http://fmf.cfpc.ca/, although a detailed program is not available yet.

The top 4 submitted oral presentations (as independently ranked by 3 primary care researchers and clinicians) are chosen for distinguished plenary presentation on Nov 8. An international distinguished plenary presentation would be valuable to most early career investigators and might make it worth the consideration of members of your department submitting to Family Medicine Forum.

Graduate Medicine identifies areas of improvement for post-hospital patient care hospital discharge summary the key focus of new research

Dear all,

Dr Carl Mahfouz will be speaking on ABC Illawarra (97.3) tomorrow (Thursday 9 February) at 8.30am with Nick Rheinberger about his research that has just been published.

http://www.racgp.org.au/afp/2017/januaryfebruary/an-australian-discharge-summary-quality-assessment-tool-a-pilot-study/

 

MEDIA RELEASE                         8 FEBRUARY 2017

Graduate Medicine identifies areas of improvement for post-hospital patient care

hospital discharge summary the key focus of new research

A study undertaken by researchers from the University of Wollongong (UOW) could vastly improve the health outcomes of patients following their discharge from hospital.

Dr Carl Mahfouz from UOW’s Graduate Medicine (GM), commenced working on an 18-month study into how hospital discharge summaries could be improved to better suit the needs of the GPs and the discharge information they require to optimally address the health care needs of their patients.

“I noticed inconsistencies on the discharge summaries of some of my patients, which prompted me to investigate whether this was a common problem,” he said.

The aim of the study was to establish the essential elements required in a hospital discharge summary to enable successful post-hospital continuity of care.

“Often a discharge summary is the only piece of information I receive when I take over a patient’s care. To be able to provide the patient with the best care it’s of the utmost importance that this document is accurate and reflects the true state of the patient,” Dr Mahfouz said.

The study, which drew from a national sample of General Practitioners (GPs), found that many hospital discharge summaries were missing key information such as diagnostic test results.

“GPs want an accurate, comprehensive discharge summary in a timely fashion that contains only relevant information relating to the most recent admission,” Dr Mahfouz said.

“Discharge summaries should be written by someone who has actually seen the patient, not just a copy and paste of a whole record and irrelevant information.”

The literature has demonstrated that a delay in a GP receiving a timely discharge summary has a strong correlation to a patient having to be readmitted to hospital.

Previous research shows that almost half (49 per cent) of patients discharged from hospital experienced at least one adverse event in their continuing care as a result of incorrect information contained in their hospital discharge summary.

“We hope this study will lead to more changes being made in the format, delivery and content of discharge summaries to be able to provide more comprehensive, timely and accurate care to patients,” Dr Mahfouz said.

Following the release of the research this month, the Pharmacy Department at Wollongong Hospital has incorporated several key changes, including the addition of medication changes and reasons for medication changes to discharge summaries.

The project was funded by the Illawarra Shoalhaven Medicare Local over an 18-month period.

The study was undertaken by Dr Carl Mahfouz, Professor Andrew Bonney, Associate Professor Judy Mullan and Dr Warren Rich.

GP Research Project Grants- OPEN

Dear ISPRN members

We are writing to let you know that applications are now open for Coordinare’s GP research project grant.

You may well have come across an issue surrounding chronic disease in your practice and pondered the answer to your question. This grant is the perfect opportunity to find out the answer to your research question.

You don’t need to have had any prior research experience, just an idea and a willingness to learn how to undertake research, fully supported by a research and academic team.

Applications close 13 Feb 2017.

If you have any queries please contact Program Assistant, Alyssa Horgan on 42215819.

Kind Regards,

Alyssa Horgan

GP Research project application

Australian Health Services Research Institute Workshops

Dear Colleague,

I am pleased to invite you and your colleagues to two workshops being conducted by the Australian Health Services Research Institute on Thursday 9 March 2017:

  1. Measuring and Managing Health Outcomes: An Overview
  2. Outcomes Evaluation and Benchmarking: Applications of Outcome Measurement

Professor Kathy Eagar (Director, Australian Health Services Research Institute), Associate Professor Jan Sansoni (Director, Australian Health Outcomes Collaboration) and Ms Frances Simmonds (Director, Australasian Rehabilitation Outcomes Centre), experts in the field of health outcomes and benchmarking, will provide an overview of the current Australian and international focus on health outcomes and discuss the different types of measures and indicators used in health outcomes evaluation. Health outcomes will be discussed in relation to population health, evidence based health care, quality improvement, outcome benchmarking and ‘value-based’ health care activities undertaken by health and community care organisations. The use of patient-reported outcome and experience measures and standardised outcome measurement suites will be reviewed within the context of quality improvement and health service evaluation.

These workshops would be relevant to health professionals and to those undertaking post-graduate studies in health.

The workshops will be held at the University of Wollongong’s Sydney Business School, Gateway Building, 1 Macquarie Place, Circular Quay.

I would appreciate if you could please distribute this information to relevant staff and students within your organisation. View more information and book your place. We hope to see you there.

Yours faithfully,

 

Moira Buckley, on behalf of:
Associate Professor Jan Sansoni
Director, Australian Health Outcomes Collaboration
Australian Health Services Research Institute
University of Wollongong
+61 2 4221 4411

 

GP17- Call for abstracts

 

GP17

RACGP CONFERENCE

ICC Sydney + 26–28? October 2017

gp17.com.au   #GP17Sydney

 

Call for GP17 abstracts now open

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) welcomes you to share your research, knowledge and expertise at GP17 – RACGP Conference.

This is your opportunity to participate in the GP17 program. The GP17 Scientific Committee is inviting submissions for 15-minute, 30-minute, one-hour oral presentations and poster presentations.

GP17 is the highlight event of the general practice calendar taking place from 26–28 October 2017 at the International Conference Centre (ICC) Sydney.

 

Submit your abstract

 

GP17 – ‘General practice: The foundation of patient-centred care’ key themes include:

+ better systems and data

+ education and research

+ health equity

+ quality care

+ sustainability and financial modelling.

GP17 is your opportunity to collaborate and connect with colleagues, and to gain further insights into general practice.

For further details and submission guidelines, please visit the GP17 website.

The call for abstracts will close at 11.59 pm AEST on Thursday 2 February 2017.

 

Health Impacts Research Cluster Conference Day

Join us for the Health Impacts Research Cluster Conference Day  at the Innovation Campus on the 8th December –

USING BIG DATA TO IMPROVE COMMUNITY HEALTH OUTCOMES

Talks commence at 9:00am in the IC Ocean Room, Level 2, Building 230
Finishing with drinks on the IC terrace 4-6pm

Presenters will include:

  • Professor David Preen (University of Western Australia)
  • Associate Professor Judy Mullan (University of Wollongong/Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District)
  • Professor Linda Tapsell (University of Wollongong/Illawarra Health and Medical Research Institute)
  • Dr Abhijeet Ghosh (Coordinare)

with an introduction by Professor Nicholas Zwar (University of Wollongong).

The conference day will also include a HDR student showcase and opportunities for round table discussions.

Register online by 23rd November at: http://smah.uow.edu.au/hirc or https://topaz.ad.uow.edu.au/events/public/eventregisterI.asp?EventID=415

 

Last chance! Express your interest now: chronic disease research project for general practice

COORDINARE is currently seeking applications from general practices in the South Eastern NSW region who are interested in undertaking a General Practice Research project for chronic disease.

This 18 month research project, supported by the University of Wollongong’s practice-based research network ISPRN, is designed to build research capacity within our region’s practices.

In fact, ISPRN will provide research mentoring and supervision by two senior GSM academics, administrative support and research assistance as part of the project.

The research should focus on chronic disease and involve at least two general practices from the region. The project should also be of sufficient enough scope to enable results to be published in a peer reviewed journal but also achievable by a novice researcher within an 18 month timeframe.

Applications are now open and close at 5pm on 18 November 2016.

Download an application form now!

For further information on the application process contact ISPRN Program Assistant Alyssa Horgan on (02) 4221 5819 or amunkman@uow.edu.au

New ISPRN Website

Dear ISPRN Members

We are pleased to announce the launch of our new ISPRN website, which now sits under the School of Medicine within the Faculty of Science, Medicine & Health.

ISPRN Website

The new website details information on consultancy services the team can provide, up to date information on all ISPRN projects as well as information on ISPRN’s governance from our advisory, academic and strategic working groups.

We are also taking the opportunity over the Christmas period to update the resources on our blog to provide you with an up to date information on research tips, tricks and processes to assist you with your research endeavours.

We are also currently planning ISPRN workshops for 2017 and are interested to hear from you regarding the kind of research workshops that would be most beneficial to you.

If you have any questions, have some suggestions on research workshops or are interested in getting involved in one of our research projects, please feel free to get in touch.

Kind Regards

Alyssa Horgan
ISPRN Program Assistant
Graduate Medicine
amunkman@uow.edu.au 

 

 

 

Message from Pro Vice-Chancellor (Health Strategy) & Executive Dean, Faculty of Science, Medicine & Health, Prof Alison Jones

Dear ISPRN Members

Please see correspondence below from Pro Vice-Chancellor (Health Strategy) & Executive Dean, Faculty of Science, Medicine & Health, Prof Alison Jones.

Letter from Professor Alison Jones

Kind Regards

Alyssa Horgan
Program Assistant
Illawarra and Southern Practice Research Network (ISPRN)