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Active Lives South Australia Health Economic Analysis - An Evidence Base For Potential Of Health Promotion Strategies To Reduced Public Health Costs With Meeting Of Adult Physical Activity Guidelines. A Report Prepared For Sa Office Of Recreation, Sport And Racing And Sa Health., Simon Eckermann, Michelle Crisp, Andy Willan
Active Lives South Australia Health Economic Analysis - An Evidence Base For Potential Of Health Promotion Strategies To Reduced Public Health Costs With Meeting Of Adult Physical Activity Guidelines. A Report Prepared For Sa Office Of Recreation, Sport And Racing And Sa Health., Simon Eckermann, Michelle Crisp, Andy Willan
Australian Health Services Research Institute
No abstract provided.
Aroc Annual Report – The State Of Inpatient Rehabilitation In Australia In 2019, Tara L. Alexander, Frances D. Simmonds, Jacquelin T. Capell, Lewis J. Green
Aroc Annual Report – The State Of Inpatient Rehabilitation In Australia In 2019, Tara L. Alexander, Frances D. Simmonds, Jacquelin T. Capell, Lewis J. Green
Australian Health Services Research Institute
This is the 14th comprehensive annual report describing discharge episodes from subacute inpatient rehabilitation programs provided by Australian facilities that are members of the Australasian Rehabilitation Outcomes Centre (AROC).
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 26,586 patients who received palliative care during July to December 2019 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 4,631 patients who received palliative care in Western Australia during July to December 2019 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For July – December 2019, Samuel F. Allingham, Samuel J. Burns, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson, Kathy Eagar, Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 2,204 patients who received palliative care in South Australia during July to December 2019 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
Proximity To Pain Management Services In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard
Proximity To Pain Management Services In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard
Australian Health Services Research Institute
This paper aims to investigate the proximity of specialist pain management facilities to the people who receive their services.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 24,564 patients who received palliative care during January to June 2019 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 1,845 patients who received palliative care in South Australia during January to June 2019 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 4,181 patients who received palliative care in Western Australia during July to December 2018 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In South Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 1,903 patients who received palliative care in South Australia during July to December 2018 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 23,333 patients who received palliative care during July to December 2018 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
A Profile Of Patients Receiving Palliative Care In Western Australia For July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that aims to improve the quality and outcomes of palliative care in Australia. This is achieved via a standardised clinical language that supports a national data collection. This report provides a high level profile of 3,813 patients who received palliative care in Western Australia during July to December 2018 and had their pain, symptom, family / carer and psychological / spiritual issues assessed as part of routine clinical care.
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - South Australia, July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - South Australia, July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Australian palliative care sector is a world leader in using routine clinical assessment information to guide patient centred care and measure patient and family outcomes. Providers of palliative care are commended for their commitment to excellence in delivering evidence-based, patient-centred care by using the routine Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assessment framework and contributing patient data toward national outcome measurement and benchmarking. PCOC acknowledges the dedication and willingness of clinicians to improve the care of patients, their families and caregivers. The information collected is not just data - it represents the real-life outcomes of over 40,000 Australians who die …
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - South Australia, January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - South Australia, January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Australian palliative care sector is a world leader in using routine clinical assessment information to guide patient centred care and measure patient and family outcomes. Providers of palliative care are commended for their commitment to excellence in delivering evidence-based, patient-centred care by using the routine Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assessment framework and contributing patient data toward national outcome measurement and benchmarking. PCOC acknowledges the dedication and willingness of clinicians to improve the care of patients, their families and caregivers. The information collected is not just data - it represents the real-life outcomes of over 40,000 Australians who die …
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - Western Australia, January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - Western Australia, January - June 2019, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham, Barbara A. Daveson
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Australian palliative care sector is a world leader in using routine clinical assessment information to guide patient centred care and measure patient and family outcomes. Providers of palliative care are commended for their commitment to excellence in delivering evidence-based, patient-centred care by using the routine Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assessment framework and contributing patient data toward national outcome measurement and benchmarking. PCOC acknowledges the dedication and willingness of clinicians to improve the care of patients, their families and caregivers. The information collected is not just data - it represents the real-life outcomes of over 40,000 Australians who die …
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - Western Australia, July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care - Western Australia, July - December 2018, Alanna M. Connolly, Samuel J. Burns, Samuel F. Allingham, Tanya Pidgeon, Natalie Joseph, Linda M. Foskett, Sabina P. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Australian palliative care sector is a world leader in using routine clinical assessment information to guide patient centred care and measure patient and family outcomes. Providers of palliative care are commended for their commitment to excellence in delivering evidence-based, patient-centred care by using the routine Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assessment framework and contributing patient data toward national outcome measurement and benchmarking. PCOC acknowledges the dedication and willingness of clinicians to improve the care of patients, their families and caregivers. The information collected is not just data - it represents the real-life outcomes of over 40,000 Australians who die …
Normative Data For Adults Referred For Specialist Pain Management In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard, Janelle M. White, Meredith P. Bryce
Normative Data For Adults Referred For Specialist Pain Management In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard, Janelle M. White, Meredith P. Bryce
Australian Health Services Research Institute
Nicholas and colleagues have developed an extensive normative dataset for a range of assessment tools used in pain management services. The present paper aims to provide normative data for the measures used in the ePPOC minimum dataset for a large cohort of adults referred to pain management services throughout Australia. This information will provide a description of the people seeking specialist pain management in Australia during the period 2014-17, and allow pain management services to compare scores for individuals seen at their service to these group values.
Normative Data For Children And Adolescents Referred For Specialist Pain Management In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard, Meredith P. Bryce, Janelle M. White
Normative Data For Children And Adolescents Referred For Specialist Pain Management In Australia, Hilarie Tardif, Megan B. Blanchard, Meredith P. Bryce, Janelle M. White
Australian Health Services Research Institute
This paper aims to provide normative data for the PaedePPOC measures used by specialist paediatric pain management services. This information will provide a description of the children and adolescents referred for specialist pain management in Australia during the period from January 2014 to June 2018, allowing pain management services to compare scores for individuals seen at their service to these group values.
Relation Of Child, Caregiver, And Environmental Characteristics To Childhood Injury In An Urban Aboriginal Cohort In New South Wales, Australia, Katherine Thurber, Leonie Burgess, Kathleen Falster, Emily Banks, Holger Moller, Rebecca Q. Ivers, Chris T. Cowell, Vivian Isaac, Deanna Kalucy, Peter Fernando, Cheryl Woodall, Kathleen F. Clapham
Relation Of Child, Caregiver, And Environmental Characteristics To Childhood Injury In An Urban Aboriginal Cohort In New South Wales, Australia, Katherine Thurber, Leonie Burgess, Kathleen Falster, Emily Banks, Holger Moller, Rebecca Q. Ivers, Chris T. Cowell, Vivian Isaac, Deanna Kalucy, Peter Fernando, Cheryl Woodall, Kathleen F. Clapham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
Objective: Despite being disproportionately affected by injury, little is known about factors associated with injury in Aboriginal children. We investigated factors associated with injury among urban Aboriginal children attending four Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services in New South Wales, Australia. Methods: We examined characteristics of caregiver-reported child injury, and calculated prevalence ratios of 'ever-injury' by child, family, and environmental factors. Results: Among children in the cohort, 29% (n=373/1,303) had ever broken a bone, been knocked out, required stitches or been hospitalised for a burn or poisoning; 40-78% of first injuries occurred at home and 60-91% were treated in hospital. Reported …
South Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2014, Alanna M. Holloway, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Janet Taylor, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
South Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2014, Alanna M. Holloway, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Janet Taylor, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this PCOC report, data submitted for the July to December 2014 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Karen Quinsey, Linda M. Foskett, Samuel F. Allingham
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Karen Quinsey, Linda M. Foskett, Samuel F. Allingham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that utilises standardised clinical assessment tools to measure and benchmark patient outcomes in palliative care. Participation in PCOC is voluntary and can assist palliative care service providers to improve practice. This is achieved via the PCOC patient outcome improvement framework which is designed to: * provide clinicians with the tools to systematically assess individual patient experiences using validated clinical assessment tools, * define a common clinical language to streamline communication between palliative care providers, * facilitate the routine collection of national palliative care data to drive quality improvement through reporting …
Western Australia, Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Tanya Pidgeon, Karen Quinsey, Linda M. Foskett, Samuel F. Allingham
Western Australia, Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Tanya Pidgeon, Karen Quinsey, Linda M. Foskett, Samuel F. Allingham
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that utilises standardised clinical assessment tools to measure and benchmark patient outcomes in palliative care. Participation in PCOC is voluntary and can assist palliative care service providers to improve practice. This is achieved via the PCOC patient outcome improvement framework which is designed to: * provide clinicians with the tools to systematically assess individual patient experiences using validated clinical assessment tools, * define a common clinical language to streamline communication between palliative care providers, * facilitate the routine collection of national palliative care data to drive quality improvement through reporting …
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia, July - December 2014, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia, July - December 2014, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that utilises standardised clinical assessment tools to measure and benchmark patient outcomes in palliative care. Participation in PCOC is voluntary and can assist palliative care service providers to improve practice and meet the Palliative Care Australia (PCA) Standards for Providing Quality Palliative Care for all Australians. This is achieved via the PCOC dataset; a multi-purpose framework designed to: * provide clinicians with an approach to systematically assess individual patient experiences, * define a common clinical language to streamline communication between palliative care providers and * facilitate the routine collection of …
The Aroc Annual Report: The State Of Rehabilitation In Australia In 2014, Frances D. Simmonds, Tara L. Alexander
The Aroc Annual Report: The State Of Rehabilitation In Australia In 2014, Frances D. Simmonds, Tara L. Alexander
Australian Health Services Research Institute
This is the tenth comprehensive annual report describing discharge episodes from subacute inpatient rehabilitation programs provided by Australian facilities that are members of the Australasian Rehabilitation Outcomes Centre (AROC)1.
Western Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2014, Alanna M. Holloway, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Tanya Pidgeon, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
Western Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2014, Alanna M. Holloway, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Tanya Pidgeon, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this PCOC report, data submitted for the July to December 2014 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.
South Australia, Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Janet Taylor, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
South Australia, Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care, January - June 2015, Alanna M. Connolly, Sonia Bird, Sabina P. Clapham, Janet Taylor, Karen Quinsey, Samuel F. Allingham, Linda M. Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) is a national program that utilises standardised clinical assessment tools to measure and benchmark patient outcomes in palliative care. Participation in PCOC is voluntary and can assist palliative care service providers to improve practice. This is achieved via the PCOC patient outcome improvement framework which is designed to: * provide clinicians with the tools to systematically assess individual patient experiences using validated clinical assessment tools, * define a common clinical language to streamline communication between palliative care providers, * facilitate the routine collection of national palliative care data to drive quality improvement through reporting …
South Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2013: Report 16, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
South Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2013: Report 16, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this, the sixteenth PCOC report, data submitted for the July to December 2013 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia: July - December 2013, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia: July - December 2013, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this, the sixteenth PCOC report, data submitted for the July to December 2013 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.
Western Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2013: Report 16, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
Western Australia: Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care: July - December 2013: Report 16, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel Allingham, Carol Hope, Sabina Clapham, Linda Foskett
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this, the sixteenth PCOC report, data submitted for the July to December 2013 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia: January - June 2014: Report 17, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel F. Allingham, Sabina P. Clapham, Linda M. Foskett, Karen Quinsey
National Report On Patient Outcomes In Palliative Care In Australia: January - June 2014: Report 17, Alanna M. Holloway, Samuel F. Allingham, Sabina P. Clapham, Linda M. Foskett, Karen Quinsey
Australian Health Services Research Institute
The Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) assists services to improve the quality of the palliative care they provide through the analysis and benchmarking of patient outcomes. In this, the seventeenth PCOC report, data submitted for the January to June 2014 period are summarised and patient outcomes benchmarked to enable participating services to assess their performance and identify areas in which they may improve.