An information and research blog for health professionals, compiled by Port Macquarie Base Hospital Library staff.
MNCLHD
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
HIV management: A guide for clinical care
Need a Cochrane refresher?
Free PDA & iPhone/iPod touch Resources
SUPPORT Tools for evidence-informed health Policymaking (STP)
The series describes a set of tools that have been developed by the SUPporting POlicy relevant Reviews and Trials (SUPPORT) project, an international collaboration funded by the European Commission’s 6th Framework (http://www.support-collaboration.org/
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Career Choice and Practice Location of Medical Graduates
Expectations and Experiences Associated With Rural GP Placements
First Six Monthly Report for Remote Indigneous Services
Australian Government Contribution to Hospital Care
Northern Territory Child Health Checks
Caesarean Rate Stabilises as Baby Boom Continues
Monday, December 14, 2009
Prevention of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic kidney disease: targeting risk factors
A guide to what works for depression – Beyondblue
Diabetes, medicines and me
The videos range from one to five minutes and you may download, display print and reproduce the videos in unaltered form only for non-commercial use either personally or within your organisation.
Australian Guideline for the Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism (VTE).
Improving Stroke Management in Australian Emergency Departments
The package comprises a small number of evidence-based interventions, grouped together and applied to the management of a particular condition. Download the package here.
Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Information site for social workers
The site is updated regularly and includes links to news items, open access journals, grey literature, meta analyses and guidelines.
Cycling safety and injuries
"With a dramatic increase in cycling, comes a plethora of new safety issues on the roads. Doctors, politicians, planners and cyclists agree it will mean changing the way we design, govern and use our roads." ABC Radio National's Background Briefing this week presented their program on On-Road Cycling. It is estimated that there has been a 48% increase in people riding their bikes to work over the last five years, which has led to a huge increase in Emergency Department presentations for cycling injuries - especially in the 40-49 year age group. Police records for cycling accidents are greatly underestimated as so many go unreported.
Monday, December 07, 2009
Australian Eye Health
Women and health: today's evidence tomorrow's agenda
Closing the Gap Collection
the General Collection—a broad collection of material related to the COAG building blocks.
E-Health
TIME: Toolkit of Instruments to Measure End-of-life Care
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Creative Ageing Seminar
New reports on General Practice activity
In addition, the AIHW published General practice activity in Australia 1999-00 to 2008-09: 10 year data tables which also stems from the BEACH program and details changes that have occurred over the last decade in the characteristics of general practitioners and the patients they see; the problems managed and the treatments provided. "In adult patients aged 18 years and over, between 1999–00 and 2008–09 prevalence of overweight increased from 33% to 36%, obesity from 19% to 25%, daily smoking decreased from 19% to 15% and at-risk alcohol consumption remained static at 26%."
More than 85% of the population visit a GP at least once in any year. From March 2008 to April 2009, there were about 112 million general practice consultations paid for by Medicare, up from 101 million in 1999–00; an average of 5.1 per person, a similar visit rate to 1999–00 (5.4 visits per head). The GPs themselves are aging, feminising and becoming more qualified.
Draft Australian Guidelines on ADHD
More than 350,000 Australian children and adolescents are estimated to have ADHD and this draft updates the guidelines published in 2005 which have now been withdrawn. The NHMRC site linked to above also contains other useful information to assist parents and medical professionals in treating and recognising ADHD, including a systematic literature review.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Anonymous NSW Hospital Blog
The website says, "It has to be anonymous because all staff of Sydney West Area Health Service are required not to speak to the media as part of their employment contract. Where is the accountability of the system if staff are gagged?" The bloggers from Katoomba Hospital, west of Sydney, have taken elaborate steps to protect their anonymity.
Life Tables, Australia, 2006–2008
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Indigenous health report - concerns for males
Fourth National Mental Health Plan 2009-14
The plan has five priority areas for government action in mental health:
* Social inclusion and recovery
* Prevention and early intervention
* Service access, coordination and continuity of care
* Quality improvement and innovation and
* Accountability - measuring and reporting progress.
Systematic reviews for Managers
"To help managers and policymakers find and use these reviews, we’ve identified as many management- and policy-relevant reviews as possible, categorized them in ways that will make it easy to retrieve citation details and summaries of them (whenever possible), and made the database available online."
Proposed Denticare scheme explained
Monday, November 23, 2009
Quality Care at the End of Life
Alcohol & other drug treatment services in Australia
The report, Alcohol and other drug treatment services in Australia 2007-08: report on the National Minimum Data Set, found that treatment for alcohol issues has continued to increase, with treatment for alcohol comprising 44% of treatment episodes in 2007-08 compared with 38% in 2002-03. Alcohol treatment was followed by treatments for cannabis (22% of treatment episodes), amphetamines (11%) and heroin (11%).
Counselling was the most common form of treatment followed by withdrawal management.
Addiction, free will & self control
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Centre for Evidence Based Practice Australasia
1. to provide an additional layer of resources to that already provided by Australasian EBP sites,
2. to provide a central point for Australasia-wide EBP collaboration, learning and knowledge-sharing and
3. to facilitate the translation of (evidence-based) knowledge into action.
The Royal Melbourne Hospital Director of Education, A/Prof Peter Morley, said: “The CEBPA fills a gap in the current health infrastructure and potentially plays a major role in improving the quality of healthcare. There is also potential for saving costs across diverse areas of healthcare, with flow-on benefits in clinical audit, clinical governance and safety."
To view the CEBPA cloud, go to http://www.cebpa.info/ and click on Login, then follow the prompts. Once you have logged on you will then see an expanded Menu (as well as expanded discussion forums).
Patient Survey 2009 Statewide Report
NSW Government releases report on health reforms
However the Sydney Morning Herald headlines on November 19 state "Doctors sick of failure to fix ailing hospitals". "Since Peter Garling, SC, handed down his landmark report a year ago, calling for an urgent overhaul of the state's hospital system, little has changed on the ground, the survey conducted for the Australian Medical Association and the Australian Salaried Medical Officers concluded." AMA (NSW) President Dr Brian Morton said the Independent Panel’s review of the State Government’s Caring Together reforms highlighted the need to better engage health professionals in hospital decision making.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
- Children, youth and families - 15% of Australia's children lived in jobless families in 2006
- Ageing and aged care - Home and Community Care (HACC) continues to reach the largest number of older clients in community care.
- Disability and disability services - The number of people with disability doubled between 1981 and 2003, to reach an estimated 3.9 million Australians.
- Carers and informal care - Most informal carers are women aged from 25-54 years, and they live with the person for whom they care.
- Housing and housing assistance - Current demand for affordable housing exceeds supply
- Homelessness - There are high rates of homelessness in regional and rural areas, and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are over-represented in the homeless
population.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Birth and Perinatal Death Statistics
3301.0 - Births, Australia, 2008: This publication contains statistics on perinatal deaths for Australia, 1999 to 2007. Australia has again set a new record for the number of births in a year, according to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). A total of 296,600 births were registered in 2008, surpassing the previous record years of 2007 (285,200 births) and 1971 (276,400).
Monday, November 16, 2009
Bush Support Services
2009 AMA Indigenous Health Report Card
Friday, November 13, 2009
Anxiety website
The website includes three main areas:
- Information: Information and resources for general anxiety and specific anxiety disorders.
- Clinical assessment: An online psychological assessment program which provides individual feedback on the nature of your anxiety problems and recommendations for what to do about it.
- Treatment programs: For each of the specific anxiety disorders, either self-help programs or Therapist-assisted programs are offered.
Monday, November 09, 2009
Public health expenditure in Australia, 2007-08
Full report
Hazardous Substances Data Bank (HSDB®) Has Added First Set of Nanomaterial Records
Friday, November 06, 2009
Caesarean Sections - Health Report feature
Caesarean sections are becoming more common. In Australia one in three babies are born this way, and once a mother has one caesarean she has at least a 50% chance of having another one in a following pregnancy. In about 18% of cases the Caesarean is performed for no medical reason but because the mother has requested it, and the worry is that there can be serious consequences for both the mother and the baby. Part one looked at reasons for the rise in this type of birth and interviewed mothers and obstetricians who defended the right to choose. Next week's episode will look at the risks and consequences of the increase in caesareans.
Training for rural and remote allied health professionals
This education project was funded by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing and it includes a swathe of resources, learning modules, competencies, personal stories, and a discussion forum.
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey, 2008
Doing it tough: Carers in rural Australia
Cutting through: using health information technology for effective chronic care delivery
Nutrition and preventative health in Indigenous futures
What do Aboriginal women think is good antenatal care?
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Cost effectiveness of needle and syringe programs this year
The report comes out very positively in favour of the gains made in these programs from 2000 - 2009, estimating that 32,050 HIV infections and 96,667 HCV infections have been averted. This has meant "substantial healthcare cost savings to government, and substantial gains in disability-adjusted life years ... For every dollar currently spent on the programs, more than four dollars will be returned (in addition to the investment – that is, five times the investment) and approximately 0.2 days of disability-adjusted life gained. Over a longer time horizon there is even greater return."
Body Image strategy for Australia
The report encourages advertisers, the media and the fashion industry to promote more positive body image messages and includes a Voluntary Industry Code of Conduct on Body Image which recommends using healthy weight models, realistic and natural images of people and disclosure when images of people have been digitally manipulated.
Monday, October 26, 2009
Osteoporosis affects 1 in 3 men over 60
HealthMash.com
More breast cancer cases, but early detection and improved treatment lead to fewer deaths
Friday, October 23, 2009
Indigenous issues in rural emergency departments
Leanne also presented her paper at the Emergency Nurses International Conference at the Gold Coast last month and won the best rural paper at the conference, awarded by the Australian Society for Emergency Medicine. Her research found that Aboriginal people were 1.5 times more likely to leave rural emergency departments prior to being seen by the medical officer, and 2.5 times more likely to “discharge against medical advice” than non-Aboriginal people. "The study replicated urban trends for rates of “did not wait” and “discharge against medical advice” for Aboriginal people, supporting indirect evidence of service dissatisfaction for this group. Rural communities often provide limited or no choice for alternative after-hours health care arrangements, leading to potential adverse outcomes for this vulnerable group."
Thursday, October 22, 2009
eviQ Cancer Treatments Online - new website
The Cancer Institute of NSW is replacing its CI-ScAT website with this new, more user-friendly point of care resource. From this week, the eviQ Cancer Treatments Online site will provide all breast, colorectal, lung, gynaeoncology, lymphoma, myeloma, and radiation oncology treatment information, as well as some nursing information. The other areas will be gradually migrated from CI-ScAT, which still remains operational until mid-December. Registration is free and the site includes such evidence-based goodies as:
- Cancer treatment protocols, all with accompanying patient information available as PDFs
- Chemotherapy dosing calculator and a Biological Equivalent Dose (BED) calculator
- Information presented in tumour specific areas
Medical and Nursing workforce reports
Nursing and midwifery labour force 2007 reports that the total number of registered and enrolled nurses 305,834, an increase of 12% since 2003. In that time, the proportion of nurses aged 50 years or over increased from 28% to 33%. The number of full time equivalent nurses per 100,000 population increased by 8% and the profession continued to be predominantly female, with females comprising 90% of employed nurses in 2007.
The Medical Labour force 2007 report found that supply of employed medical practitioners increased between 2003 and 2007, from 279 to 305 full-time equivalent practitioners per 100,000 population, which reflected a 20% rise in practitioner numbers. Women made up 34% of practitioners in 2007 compared to 32% in 2003. The average hours worked by male practitioners declined from 47.5 to 45.9 hours, while hours worked by female practitioners remained steady at 37.6 hours.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Farm life and mental health
The report found that suicides and levels of self-reported distress amongst farm workers was high, due to such factors as drought, finance, meeting government requirements and family pressures. It was concluded that there is a need to work with farming families to reduce their levels of distress and there is a description of the NSW Farmers Blueprint for Mental Health and Wellbeing.
Best practice guidelines for mental health promotion programs: Children & Youth
Reposted from GWAHS Libraries Blog
Health promotion of physical activity
Other topics covered in this PHCRIS Research Roundup series have included
Chronic disease self-management, Dementia and primary health care, The primary care role for people with cancer, Improving access to rural health care, Researching patient & family experience and A new climate for Indigenous health
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Tips for parents on limiting video game and computer use by their children
Friday, October 09, 2009
Health expenditure in Australia 2007-2008
Does improving quality save money?
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Assisted reproductive technology in Australia and New Zealand
http://www.aihw.gov.au/publications/index.cfm/title/10753
Mothers and the child protection system
The research, conducted by Associate Professor Heather Douglas and Dr Tamara Walsh from UQ’s TC Beirne School of Law, has found that parents experiencing poverty and domestic violence are often targeted for intervention by child protection departments but that child protection workers do not have the skills or resources to support families.As a result, some children may be unnecessarily removed from their parents.
Douglas H, Walsh T & Blore K,
http://www.law.uq.edu.au/uq-research-provides-insight-into-child-protection
Internet addiction linked to ADHD, depression in teens
* Study found boys were at a higher risk of Internet addiction than girls
* Doctor: Treatment for addiction cannot involve simply abstaining from the Internet
* Internet addiction may be not as widespread in the U.S. as in Asian countries
* It could become one of the most chronic childhood diseases in America, doctor says
Read the whole story: http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/10/05/depression.adhd.internet.addiction/
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
PubMed® Redesign
Thursday, October 01, 2009
CDC Links Infections With Swine Flu Deaths
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
New reviews of surgical procedures
Systematic literature reviews
• Permanent and semi-permanent dermal fillers
Rapid reviews
The full range of ASERNIP-S reviews is accessible through the publications page of ASERNIP-S on the Australian College of Surgeons website.
Towards national Indicators of Safety and Quality in Health Care
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare suggests that public reporting on these indicators could serve two main purposes: to provide transparency and to inform decision-making about overall priorities and system-level strategies for safety and quality improvement; and to inform quality improvement activities of service providers. The indicators cover the national health priority areas and major burden of disease and injury groups. Download here for free.
Health expenditure Australia 2007-08
Welfare’s long-running series of reports on Australia’s National Health Accounts. Health expenditure in Australia in 2007-08 reached $104 billion and as a percentage of GDP it was 9.1%, the same level as in 2006-07. The area of health expenditure showing the highest growth was public health expenditure which grew by 21% in real terms, mostly due to extra spending on immunisation. Health expenditure Australia 2007-08 examines expenditure on different types of health goods and services in the decade to 2007-08. It describes funding by the Australian and State governments, private health insurance and individuals; compares health expenditures in the different states and territories and compares Australia's spending with other countries. Download part or all of the report here.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Faster Detection of TB May Be on the Horizon
Thursday, September 24, 2009
World Alzheimer Report
The report also offers examples of good national dementia plans and information on health service responses. It includes eight recommendations that will provide a global framework for action on dementia, the first of which is that The World Health Organization (WHO) should declare dementia a world health priority.
Cardiovascular risk factors and life expectancy
18 863 men aged 40-69 employed in the civil service in London, were examined in 1967-70 and followed for 38 years. 13 501 have died and 4811 were re-examined in 1997. At entry, 42% of the men were current smokers, 39% had high blood pressure, and 51% had high cholesterol. Even though these risk factors changed over time (for example, many gave up smoking), baseline differences in risk factors were associated with 10 to 15 year shorter life expectancy from age 50.
Monday, September 21, 2009
Paediatric Emergency Guidelines
WHO Issues Guidelines for Antiviral Treatment of H1N1 and Other Influenza
Women’s Health Topics
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Top 10 Internet Search Tips
The invisible or deep Web is the vast reservoir of information stored in databases, estimated to be 500 times larger than the visible web and inaccessable to search engines. Find ways with this 5 page summary to improve your searching.
OncologySTAT
If you need to keep up with latest oncology information, use OncologySTAT to stay current, save time and make informed evidence-based decisions. Sign up for free and have a look at some of the following features.
- 29 Cancer-type spotlights, allowing all content for a specific cancer to be easily accessed from a single page
- Journal Scans: Concise summaries of the most important articles from the leading cancer journals, as selected by our expert editors
- Free full-text access to recent articles from over 100 Elsevier cancer-related journals
- Daily professional news stories
- Dedicated Review Article section
Screening on SBS by the Rural Health Education Foundation
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Antibiotics Bought Easily on the Internet
"The expanded and uncontrolled use of antibiotics is a public health hazard because of the impact on creating multiple drug-resistant bacteria," said Dr. Robert Schwartz, chair of the department of family medicine and community health at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. "We already have a problem in our country with physicians overprescribing antibiotics . . . Allowing individuals in society unrestricted access to antibiotics is a set-up for a public health disaster." Most previous research and attention has focused on overprescribing by doctors, said Arch G. Mainous III, lead author of a paper appearing in the September/October issue of the Annals of Family Medicine. "Unfortunately, it's misleading to make the assumption that that's only where antibiotics are available," he noted. "Consumers should consult with their primary-care providers first before ordering antibiotics and ask for advice," Schwartz recommended. "Many people will take antibiotics for viral infections, which of course are useless and have potential negative side effects -- destroying normal gut flora, allowing potentially harmful bacteria that are stable under normal conditions to become pathogenic or harmful. They should save their money." (From Healthfinder 16/9/09)
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
University of California, San Francisco: Drug Industry Document Archive
Monday, September 14, 2009
Diabetes Type 2 Guidelines
- National Evidence Based Guideline for Diagnosis, Prevention and Management of Chronic Kidney Disease in Type 2 Diabetes
- National Evidence Based Guideline for Case Detection and Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes
- National Evidence Based Guideline for Patient Education in Type 2 Diabetes
- National Evidence Based Guideline for Blood Glucose Control in Type 2 Diabetes
The Diabetes Australia website has several more best practice guidelines for health professionals.
Chocolate is good for your heart
Chocolate consumption and mortality following a first acute myocardial infarction: The Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program was a population-based inception cohort study, following 1,169 non-diabetic patients hospitalized with a confirmed first acute myocardial infarction and self-reporting of chocolate consumption over time. While chocolate consumption had a strong inverse association with cardiac mortality, the eating of other sweets had no statistical bearing on any type of mortality. The researchers conclude that "confirmation of this strong inverse relationship from other observational studies or large-scale, long-term, controlled randomized trials is needed."
Thursday, September 10, 2009
The hidden cost of genetic screening
Louise Keogh has authored this study, which looks at the causes of colorectal cancer. It found that people are choosing not to obtain genetic information because of how it will affect their eligibility for insurance, despite the fact that early screening can prevent cancer from progressing.
Emergency services and legal implications after Katrina
A fascinating read for anyone interested in emergency preparedness, altered states of care and medical immunity.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009
Exhausted Australian doctors told to drink more coffee
A 102-page "fatigue management strategy" developed by Queensland Health, has recommended that the "strategic use of caffeine" could be beneficial to extremely tired doctors.
The document suggested medics should consume 400 milligrams of caffeine, which is equivalent to six cups of coffee, to stay awake on the job.
As such a high coffee intake was "not always feasible or realistic", the report said doctors could take caffeine tablets or energy drinks as an alternative.
"Compared with other psychoactive drugs, for example, modafinil (a prescription-only narcolepsy treatment), caffeine is supported in its use as it is more readily available and less expensive," the document said.
The recommendation comes after 88 per cent of doctors in a survey of 113 state hospitals said they experienced dangerous fatigue while working.
A union representing Queensland doctors also warned that public hospital patients were dying because dangerously tired medics were being forced to work up to 80 hours without a break.
However, the suggestion that coffee was the solution to the staffing crisis has been greeted with disdain by Australian doctors.
Susannah McAuliffe, of Salaried Doctor's Queensland, said the strategy was "absolutely ridiculous" and would put patients in further danger.
Andrew Pesce, chairman of the Australian Medical Association, said the real answer to fatigue management was sensible rostering.
"It would be hard for me to be convinced that caffeine that makes you feel less tired is going to necessarily improve your performance," he said.
"I think at the end of the day, we should be focusing on a fundamentally safe rostering system and an acknowledgement that certain minimum number of hours of sleep is what is necessary to maximise performance."
Paul Lucas, Queensland's health minister, said the state was aiming to train more doctors and cap hospital shifts at 12 hours over the next two years, but had no immediate solution to fatigue and staff shortages.
"If the doctors are not there, we can't do it," he said. "We can't say we'd rather not have it as it is and create doctors out of the air."
Australia's federal government is currently under pressure to seize control of the nation's ailing public hospital system, which is currently managed by state governments.
Kevin Rudd, the prime minister, made repairing the health system a campaign promise in 2007 and has warned that a full takeover of public hospitals was still on the cards.
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
Let Orthopedic Surgery Wait Until Morning When Possible
Sleep Apnoea Raises Risk of Death, Especially for Men: Report
Monday, September 07, 2009
Josie's Story Teaches Hospitals How to Become Safer
Janice Simmons, for HealthLeaders Media, September 3, 2009
Read the whole article: http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/238442/topic/WS_HLM2_QUA/Josies-Story-Teaches-Hospitals-How-to-Become-Safer.html
Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Disaster Glossaries on the US National Library of Medicine Website
Updated Files on the National Library of Medicine Website
*MedlinePlus: Amyloidosis
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/amyloidosis.html
*MedlinePlus: Tongue Disorders
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/tonguedisorders.html
*MedlinePlus: Intestinal Obstruction
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/intestinalobstruction.html
*MedlinePlus: Hair Loss
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/hairloss.html
Monday, August 31, 2009
Australian e-Journal for the Advancement of Mental Health
Volume 8, Issue 2 (August 2009) www.auseinet.com/journal/ . There is an Editorial: On remembering and forgetting in prevention (Graham Martin, Editor in Chief); A Guest Editorial: Mental wellbeing of older people: making an economic case (Martin Knapp); A Guest Editorial: Mental health promotion, Australian policy, and housing for people with mental illness (Sam Battams); and various other articles on mental health issues. (From ALIAHealth elist)
Early Onset Dementia broadcast
"Dementia is not inevitable as you age, but it becomes increasingly common the older you get. However, in some rare cases dementia can occur in people at the age of 40, 50 or 60. In this program Lynne Malcolm speaks with a 74-year-old woman who is caring for her 56-year-old daughter who has a memory span of just two minutes; and with a neuroscientist who explains younger onset dementia, why it occurs, what the early signs are and how to treat and cope with the disease."
Click here to download a podcast, to listen online or to read a transcript of the program.