Browsing by Subjects "Northern Territory"
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Annual Report 2002-2003 Department of Health and Community Services Annual Report(DHCS, 2003)Department of Health10753 731 - Publication
Journal Article 2013-14 Ross River virus season in Darwin(Medical Entomology, DoH, 2014-12)Warchot, AllanThis article summarises the 2013-14 wet season in Darwin urban in relation to rainfall, mosquito numbers and notified Ross River virus cases.7782 765 - Publication
Annual Report 2013-2014 Department of Health Annual Report(2014)Department of HealthThis Annual Report aims to: outline the services we provided; present our vision, mission, values and core business objectives; show how we measure our fulfil our obligation to the Parliament and Territorians to provide an account of our actions against budget; highlight the key achievements for our organisation, services and people; provide insight and information relating to the Department’s direction, strategic priorities and planning.2031 565 - Publication
Annual Report 2014-2015 Department of Health Annual Report(2015)Department of HealthThis Annual Report aims to: outline the services we provided; present our vision, mission, values and core business objectives; show how we measure our fulfil our obligation to the Parliament and Territorians to provide an account of our actions against budget; highlight the key achievements for our organisation, services and people; provide insight and information relating to the Department’s direction, strategic priorities and planning.2297 4539 - Publication
Annual Report 4810 2739 - Publication
Award 2018 Nursing and Midwifery Excellence Awards recipient Profiles(Department of Health, 2018-05)Departmentt of HealthA list of recipient profiles nominated for the 2018 Nursing and Midwifery Excellence awards.3983 821 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1988)Northern Territory Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamAdult Assessment and Coordination Team 6 monthly report October 1987 - March 19886227 79 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1986-04-30)Northern Territory Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamThe Adult Assessment and Coordination Team 6 monthly report to 30th April 19966424 80 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1987-03-31)Northern Territory Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamAdult Assessment and Coordination Team 6 monthly report to 31st March 19876675 71 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1986-09)Northern Territory Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamAdult Assessment and Coordination Team 6 monthly report to 31st September 1986. **Original document has 31st September in error7673 100 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1990)Northern Territory Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamThis report contains the Adult Assessment and Coordination Team 6 monthly report January - June 19906186 138 - Publication
Report 6 monthly report(Northern Territory Department of Health and Community Services, 1985-10-31)Northern Territory. Adult Assessment and Coordination TeamA six monthly report of the NT Adult Assessment and Coordination Team6009 76 - Publication
Journal Article A descriptive study of domestic and family violence presentations to an emergency department in the Northern Territory.(2024-04-21); ; ; ; Kault, DavidExamine the nature of domestic and family violence (DFV) presentations to an ED in the Northern Territory and identify potential gaps in service delivery.Prospective descriptive study of DFV presentations in November 2021.A total of 70 presentations were identified, representing 1.2% of all presentations aged 16 years and older. Disproportionately impacted were First Nations people (90%), women (77.1%) and those aged less than 40 years (67.1%). Most (81.4%) arrived outside of business hours and only 37.1% were assessed by the social worker. Case complexity was increased by high rates of homelessness (30%), concurrent alcohol consumption (44.3%) and pregnancy (11.1% of females). More than a third (37.1%) had attended on one to four occasions in the previous 6 months with a DFV-related injury. Compared to non-DFV attendances, the median ED length of stay was approximately twice as long (456 vs 210 min), admissions rates to the ED short stay unit five times higher (25.7% vs 5.7%; P < 0.01, odds ratio [OR] = 5.7 and 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.3-9.8) and rates of self-discharge prior to completion of care 9 times higher (12.9% vs 1.5%; P < 0.01, OR = 9.5 and 95% CI = 4.6-19.7).The data highlights the need for a 24 h trauma-informed, culturally safe and integrated service to support people experiencing DFV. This could be achieved by a specialist unit designed and staffed by First Nations health practitioners.52 - Publication
Journal Article "A Huge Gap": Health Care Provider Perspectives on Cancer Screening for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People in the Northern Territory.(2024-01-27) ;Taylor, Emma V; ; ;Garvey, GailThompson, Sandra CCancer is one of the leading causes of death for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Northern Territory (NT). Accessible and culturally appropriate cancer screening programs are a vital component in reducing the burden of cancer. Primary health care plays a pivotal role in facilitating the uptake of cancer screening in the NT, due to the significant challenges caused by large distances, limited resources, and cultural differences. This paper analyses health care provider perspectives and approaches to the provision of cancer screening to Aboriginal people in the NT that were collected as part of a larger study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 50 staff from 15 health services, including 8 regional, remote, and very remote primary health care (PHC) clinics, 3 hospitals, a cancer centre, and 3 cancer support services. Transcripts were thematically analysed. Cancer screening by remote and very remote PHC clinics in the NT is variable, with some staff seeing cancer screening as a "huge gap", while others see it as lower priority compared to other conditions due to a lack of resourcing and the overwhelming burden of acute and chronic disease. Conversely, some clinics see screening as an area where they are performing well, with systematic screening, targeted programs, and high screening rates. There was a large variation in perceptions of the breast screening and cervical screening programs. However, participants universally reported that the bowel screening kit was complicated and not culturally appropriate for their Aboriginal patients, which led to low uptake. System-level improvements are required, including increased funding and resourcing for screening programs, and for PHC clinics in the NT. Being appropriately resourced would assist PHC clinics to incorporate a greater emphasis on cancer screening into adult health checks and would support PHCs to work with local communities to co-design targeted cancer screening programs and culturally relevant education activities. Addressing these issues are vital for NT PHC clinics to address the existing cancer screening gaps and achieving the Australian Government pledge to be the first nation in the world to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem by 2035. The implementation of the National Lung Cancer Screening Program in 2025 also presents an opportunity to deliver greater benefits to Aboriginal communities and reduce the cancer burden.27 - Publication
Journal Article A method for rapid machine learning development for data mining with doctor-in-the-loop.Classifying free-text from historical databases into research-compatible formats is a barrier for clinicians undertaking audit and research projects. The aim of this study was to (a) develop interactive active machine-learning model training methodology using readily available software that was (b) easily adaptable to a wide range of natural language databases and allowed customised researcher-defined categories, and then (c) evaluate the accuracy and speed of this model for classifying free text from two unique and unrelated clinical notes into coded data. A user interface for medical experts to train and evaluate the algorithm was created. Data requiring coding in the form of two independent databases of free-text clinical notes, each of unique natural language structure. Medical experts defined categories relevant to research projects and performed 'label-train-evaluate' loops on the training data set. A separate dataset was used for validation, with the medical experts blinded to the label given by the algorithm. The first dataset was 32,034 death certificate records from Northern Territory Births Deaths and Marriages, which were coded into 3 categories: haemorrhagic stroke, ischaemic stroke or no stroke. The second dataset was 12,039 recorded episodes of aeromedical retrieval from two prehospital and retrieval services in Northern Territory, Australia, which were coded into 5 categories: medical, surgical, trauma, obstetric or psychiatric. For the first dataset, macro-accuracy of the algorithm was 94.7%. For the second dataset, macro-accuracy was 92.4%. The time taken to develop and train the algorithm was 124 minutes for the death certificate coding, and 144 minutes for the aeromedical retrieval coding. This machine-learning training method was able to classify free-text clinical notes quickly and accurately from two different health datasets into categories of relevance to clinicians undertaking health service research.3508 - Publication
Comparative Study Aboriginal and non-aboriginal perinatal deaths in Darwin: a comparative view.(1992-04-20) ;Matthias, G SMorgan, GTo compare perinatal deaths in Aborigines and non-Aborigines, and to identify the differences between the two groups in order to plan better prevention and bring about a reduction in perinatal deaths. A retrospective review of the records of 198 consecutive perinatal deaths (96 Aboriginal and 102 non-Aboriginal) in infants delivered in the maternity unit between 1984 and 1989. Royal Darwin Hospital Maternity Unit. Stillbirth rate, neonatal death rate, perinatal mortality rate; classifying perinatal deaths by cause and birthweight. The Aboriginal perinatal mortality rate was 40.9 per 1000, three times that of the non-Aboriginal rate (13.4 per 1000). The stillbirth rate in Aborigines was 18.7 per 1000, 2.5 times that in non-Aborigines (7.2 per 1000). The Aboriginal neonatal mortality rate was 22.5 per 1000, 3.5 times the non-Aboriginal rate (6.2 per 1000). There was no significant difference in the distribution of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal perinatal deaths when classified by cause, with the exception of pre-eclampsia. Aboriginal women appeared to be 2.5 times more likely than non-Aboriginal women (P = 0.002) to have pre-eclampsia causing perinatal death. Prematurity and the unexplained categories were the major causes of perinatal death in both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal infants. The suboptimal perinatal outcome in Aborigines highlights the importance of antenatal care for Aboriginal mothers, and indirectly reflects the need for improving their standard of living.1954 - Publication
Journal Article The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander casemix study.(1998-10-19) ;Fisher, D A ;Murray, J M ;Cleary, M IBrewerton, R EWith increasing implementation of casemix-based funding for hospitals, quantitative data were needed to confirm the clinical impression that treating Aboriginal (compared with non-Aboriginal) inpatients consumes significantly more resources. Utilisation data, collected over a three-month period in 10 hospitals, were used to determine a cost per inpatient episode, which was grouped according to AN-DRG-3 to give a cost per AN-DRG for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) patients and non-ATSI patients. ATSI patients had consistently longer average length of stay and significant variation in relative frequency of admissions, compared with non-ATSI patients, with higher prevalences of infectious diseases. Degenerative and neoplastic conditions were more common in non-ATSI patients. There were significant differences in casemix-adjusted costs per patient episode (ATSI, $1856; non-ATSI, $1558; P < 0.001). Our study has quantified differential resource consumption between two Australian populations, and highlights the need for recognition of some hospitals' atypical populations and special funding requirements.2114 - Publication
Journal Article 1956 - Publication
Journal Article Aboriginal mental health workers and the improving Indigenous mental health service delivery model in the 'Top End'.(2006-09-01) ;Nagel, TriciaThompson, CarolynThis article reviews the changing Aboriginal mental health service delivery model of Top End Mental Health Services, and highlights the importance of Aboriginal mental health workers in improving communication with Aboriginal patients. The Australian Integrated Mental Health Initiative Northern Territory Indigenous stream (AIMHI NT) is introduced. Baseline measures of AIMHI NT in 2003, and findings from two clinical file audits (1996 and 2001) at Royal Darwin Hospital inpatient unit are presented. The files were audited for a range of assessment and treatment interventions. The audits reveal significant improvements in Aboriginal inpatient care between 1995 and 2001. Aboriginal mental health workers provide essential services as cross-cultural brokers in the setting of Aboriginal mental illness. The improvements in care found in this file audit coincide with the commencement of employment of Aboriginal mental health workers in the inpatient unit. The AIMHI consultation reveals broad support for employment of more Aboriginal mental health workers in the Top End.1974 - Publication
Evaluation Study Acute rheumatic fever: adherence to secondary prophylaxis and follow up of Indigenous patients in the Katherine region of the Northern Territory.(2007-08) ;Stewart T ;McDonald RThis paper evaluates adherence with secondary preventative treatment and follow up of acute rheumatic fever (ARF) within the Katherine region of the Northern Territory after the introduction of an ARF register. We aimed to assess the rate of adherence with penicillin prophylaxis and follow-up guidelines in patients with previous ARF and the effect of factors such as age, sex, disease severity and clinic attendance. Retrospective study. Five Indigenous Community Health Centres located in the Katherine region of the Northern Territory, Australia. Fifty-nine people resident in five communities who were prescribed monthly prophylactic penicillin for ARF during the 24 months between September 2002 and September 2004. All subjects were Indigenous. Main outcome measures were the number of penicillin injections received over the 24-month period and frequency of echocardiogram and specialist follow up in comparison to Rheumatic Fever Registry Guidelines. Mean adherence with prophylaxis was 56% of prescribed doses. A non-significant trend towards improved adherence was seen in children, patients with less severe disease and those who attended the clinic more frequently. Rheumatic Fever Registry Guidelines for echocardiogram and specialist review were met by 63% and 59% of subjects, respectively. Within this population adherence with penicillin prophylaxis is inadequate to protect against recurrence of ARF and consequent worsening of rheumatic heart disease. In addition, the Rheumatic Fever Registry Guidelines for specialist follow up and echocardiogram are not being adhered to for many patients.1608