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1.
Drug Alcohol Rev ; 42(3): 691-703, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36657792

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: High alcohol availability is related to increased alcohol consumption and harms. Existing quantitative research provides potential explanations for this relationship but there is little understanding of how people experience local alcohol availability. This is the first review to synthesise qualitative research exploring the relationship between alcohol availability and other factors in local alcohol environments. METHODS: The scoping review includes qualitative studies exploring community-level alcohol availability and other factors, facilitating the purchase and consumption of alcohol. We included studies focusing on children and adolescents as well as adults. Study findings were brought together using thematic analysis and the socio-environmental context model, which explains how certain environments may facilitate drinking. RESULTS: The review includes 34 articles. The majority of studies were conducted since 2012. Most studies were conducted in the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa. The physical availability of alcohol and proximity to local amenities and temporal aspects, like late night opening hours, may be linked to social factors, such as normalisation of drinking and permissive drinking environments. The review highlights the importance of social and cultural factors in shaping interactions with local alcohol environments. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: This qualitative scoping review advances understanding of the pathways linking alcohol availability and alcohol harms by showing that availability, accessibility and visibility of alcohol may contribute towards permissive drinking environments. Further research is needed to better understand how people experience alcohol availability in their local environment and how this can inform alcohol control policies.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Drinking , Adult , Adolescent , Child , Humans , Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology , Qualitative Research , Australia , United Kingdom , South Africa
2.
Health Place ; 59: 102140, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31374380

ABSTRACT

A systematic review was conducted, following PRISMA guidelines, to examine the application of finite mixture models (FMMs) in the study of neighbourhoods and health. Two reviewers screened 814-studies identified through database searches and citation tracking. Data were extracted from 19-studies that met the inclusion criteria, and a risk of bias analysis undertaken. Data were synthesised narratively, with a focus on methodological issues idiosyncratic to FMMs. Motivated by a desire to account for neighbourhood heterogeneity, studies sought to identify meaningful neighbourhood-level typologies that explained the distributional nature of health outcomes. Neighbourhood-centred applications of FMMs were promising but there remains scope for advancement. Research-based recommendations are outlined to strengthen prospective neighbourhood-centred studies applying FMMs.


Subject(s)
Health Services Research/statistics & numerical data , Models, Statistical , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Humans
4.
Soc Sci Med ; 177: 239-247, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27720553

ABSTRACT

Place and health are inextricably entwined. Whilst insights have been gained into the associations between places, such as neighbourhoods, and health, the understanding of these relationships remains only partial. One of the reasons for this relates to time and change and the inter-relationships between the dynamic nature of both neighbourhoods and health. This paper argues that the lifecourse of place can be used as a conceptual framework to understand the evolution and ongoing development of neighbourhoods, and their impact on the geographies of health, past, present and future. Moreover, this paper discusses the capacity of a longitudinal form of enquiry - latent transition analysis - that is able to operationalise conceptual models of the lifecourse of place. To date, latent transition analysis has not been applied to the study of neighbourhoods and health. Drawing on research across a range of disciplines including developmental psychology, sociology, geography and epidemiology, this paper also considers praxis-based implications and recommendations for applications of latent transition analysis that aim to advance understanding of how neighbourhoods affect health in and over time.


Subject(s)
Environment , Geography, Medical/methods , Residence Characteristics , Environment Design , Health Status Disparities , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Socioeconomic Factors
6.
Int J Environ Res Public Health ; 10(12): 7193-206, 2013 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24351741

ABSTRACT

The study objectives were to characterise the smoking status and quit smoking behaviour of Aboriginal Health Workers (AHWs) in South Australia (SA), Australia; and identify the psychosocial, socio-demographic, and household smoking characteristics that distinguish smokers from quitters and never smokers. A self-reported cross-sectional survey was completed by AHWs in SA. Non-parametric statistics were used for inferential analyses. Eighty-five AHWs completed surveys representing a response rate of 63.0%. The prevalence of current smokers was 50.6%. Non-smokers (49.5%) included quitters (22.4%) and never smokers (27.1%). Smoking status did not differ by gender or geographic location. Of current smokers, 69.0% demonstrated a readiness to quit and 50.0% had made at least one quit attempt in the last 12 months. Compared to quitters and never smokers, current smokers expressed lower emotional wellbeing, and three times as many resided with another smoker. Quitters had the highest levels of perceived social support and part-time employment. A high proportion of AHWs who smoke desire, and are ready to quit. Individual, social and household factors differentiated smokers from non-smokers and quitters. Social support, and relationships and structures that favour social support, are implicated as necessary to enable AHWs who smoke to act on their desire to quit smoking.


Subject(s)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/statistics & numerical data , Smoking Cessation/psychology , Smoking/epidemiology , Smoking/psychology , Adult , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Self Report , Smoking Cessation/statistics & numerical data , Social Support , South Australia/epidemiology , Young Adult
7.
Med J Aust ; 195(11-12): 714-6, 2011 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22171877

ABSTRACT

During a time of war, the federal government passed the National Fitness Act 1941 to improve the fitness of the youth of Australia and better prepare them for roles in the armed services and industry. Implementation of the National Fitness Act made federal funds available at a local level through state-based national fitness councils, which coordinated promotional campaigns, programs, education and infrastructure for physical fitness, with volunteers undertaking most of the work. Specifically focused on children and youth, national fitness councils supported the provision of children's playgrounds, youth clubs and school camping programs, as well as the development of physical education in schools and its teaching and research in universities. By the time the Act was repealed in 1994, fitness had become associated with leisure and recreation rather than being seen as equipping people for everyday life and work. The emergence of the Australian National Preventive Health Agency Act 2010 offers the opportunity to reflect on synergies with its historic precedent.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/history , Health Promotion/history , Physical Fitness/history , Australia , Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Promotion/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans
8.
Annu Rev Public Health ; 32: 327-47, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21219157

ABSTRACT

This review examines environments in relation to cardiometabolic diseases in Indigenous populations in developed countries. Environmental factors are framed in terms of context (features of places) and composition (features of populations). Indigenous peoples are seen to have endured sociopolitical marginalization and material disadvantage spanning generations. Past adverse collective experiences, modified by culture, are reflected by current heterogeneity in environmental context and composition. As risk conditions, unfavorable contextual and compositional exposures influence the expression of cardiometabolic risk for individuals. Minimal research has evaluated heterogeneity in risk conditions against heterogeneity in cardiometabolic diseases between or within Indigenous populations. Thus far, the features of populations, not of places themselves, have been implicated in relation to cardiometabolic diseases. Behavioral, psychosocial, and stress-axis pathways may explain the relationships between risk conditions and cardiometabolic diseases. Implications of environmental factors and their pathways as well as important research needs are discussed in relation to ecological prevention to reduce cardiometabolic diseases.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Environment , Metabolic Diseases , Population Groups , Cardiovascular Diseases/ethnology , Humans , Metabolic Diseases/ethnology , Risk Factors
9.
Heart Lung Circ ; 19(5-6): 306-15, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20356789

ABSTRACT

This review establishes the relevance and frames the relationship of environmental factors to cardiometabolic risk factors and disease in Aboriginal populations. Environmental factors operate at the level of communities or populations. They include contextual measures of places and compositional measures of populations which together constitute "risk conditions" affecting individual risk factors. Environmental factors have been implicated by contrasting Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations in cardiometabolic risk factors and outcomes, or by geographic contrasts of Aboriginal populations in remote, rural and urban regions. It is unclear whether heterogeneity in contextual or compositional factors between and within Aboriginal populations is associated with heterogeneity in cardiometabolic risk factors and outcomes. Empirical literature that links environmental factors and cardiometabolic outcomes in Aboriginal populations is critically reviewed for three postulated pathways of influence: (1) behaviour; (2) psychosocial factors; and (3) stress response axes. These pathways, represented as interdependent, can explain how and why environments are associated with cardiometabolic outcomes. The need remains, however, to develop a robust quantitative evidence base in cardiometabolic research aimed at enhancing knowledge of the specific environmental factors related to the cardiometabolic health of Aboriginal populations as well as explicating the underlying mechanisms by which environmental risk conditions 'get under the skin'.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/ethnology , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Environment , Metabolic Diseases/ethnology , Metabolic Diseases/etiology , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/statistics & numerical data , Australia , Cardiovascular Diseases/physiopathology , Cultural Characteristics , Educational Status , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Female , Health Education/organization & administration , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Services, Indigenous/organization & administration , Health Status , Humans , Male , Metabolic Diseases/physiopathology , Needs Assessment , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Population Groups , Psychology , Risk Assessment , Socioeconomic Factors
10.
Physiother Res Int ; 12(3): 147-61, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17624895

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Physiotherapists' use of research evidence with clinical decision-making has interested researchers world-wide since 1980; however, little is known about such practices in Australia. The present survey sought information on Australian physiotherapists' perceptions of the importance of research, and barriers to uptake of evidence in clinical practice, when compared with an international cohort from 2001. METHOD: An Australian-relevant version of an English (UK) National Health Service (NHS) survey instrument was used to canvass 453 physiotherapists, randomly selected from the South Australian Physiotherapy Registration Board 2004-2005 records. The first survey was mailed in August 2005, a reminder was sent two weeks later to non-responders and a follow-up survey was sent in April 2006 to non-responders whose addresses had changed since 2005. RESULTS: There was a 51% response rate. Of the non-responders, 12% were not contactable at their listed address, highlighting the mobility of Australian physiotherapists. Most respondents had undertaken research as students (59.5%) or as students and clinicians (11.5%). Of these, 37.1% were encouraged to embark on more research, and 20.5% were discouraged. The significant predictors of positive perceived importance of research were: previous research experience; being positive about undertaking further research; working in hospitals and holding a postgraduate degree. Clinicians working privately were significantly less likely than managers to be positive about research importance. The only significant predictor for not perceiving barriers to uptake of evidence was being positive about undertaking future research. CONCLUSIONS: The study identified constraints on uptake of evidence into practice that were related to accessing, reading and interpreting published research, and implementing findings. Found consistently across employment categories were barriers relating to lack of time, uncertainty about what the research reported, scepticism about the value of research and being isolated from peer support and literature sources. The responses indicated a positive shift towards evidence uptake since the 2001 NHS survey, suggesting an influence of increased exposure to information on evidence-based practice. A greater focus on research whilst training, the application of educational strategies for empowerment, better knowledge transfer and upskilling within the workplace, and ensuring dedicated time and organizational support for research activities are indicated.


Subject(s)
Health Services Research , Physical Therapy Specialty , Australia , Clinical Competence , Evidence-Based Medicine , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Health Care Surveys , Humans , Logistic Models
11.
Aust J Physiother ; 53(1): 19-28, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17326735

ABSTRACT

QUESTION: Which models of undergraduate/entry-level clinical education are being used internationally in allied health disciplines? What is the effect and, from the perspective of stakeholders, what are the advantages, disadvantages, and recommendations for successful implementation of different models of undergraduate/entry-level clinical education? DESIGN: Systematic review with data from quantitative and qualitative studies synthesised in a narrative format. PARTICIPANTS: Undergraduates/entry-level students from five allied health disciplines undergoing clinical education. INTERVENTION: Six broad models of clinical education: one-educator-to-one-student (1:1); one-educator-to-multiple-students (1:2); multiple-educators-to-one-student (2:1); multiple-educators-to-multiple-students (2:2); non-discipline-specific-educator and student-as-educator. OUTCOME MEASURES: Models were examined for productivity; student assessment; and advantages, disadvantages, and recommendations for implementation. RESULTS: The review found few experimental studies, and a large amount of descriptive research and opinion pieces. The rigour of quantitative evidence was low, however qualitative was higher. Evidence supporting one model over another was largely deficient with few comparative studies available for analysis. Each model proffered strengths and weaknesses, which were unique to the model. CONCLUSION: There is currently no 'gold standard' model of clinical education. The perception that one model is superior to any other is based on anecdotes and historical precedents, rather than on meaningful, robust, comparative studies.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Models, Educational , Physical Therapy Specialty/education , Allied Health Occupations/education , Education, Professional/methods , Humans , Teaching
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