Sentences with phrase «flinders university»

Flinders Centre for Gambling Research, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Bedford Park, Australia
Professor Dennis McDermott is the Director of the Poche Centre for Indigenous Health and Well - Being, Adelaide, at Flinders University.
He lectures in Indigenous Health in the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences at Flinders University in Adelaide,
«These people judge their self - worth in terms of their ability to pursue and achieve their goals,» says Professor Tracey Wade MAPS * from the School of Psychology at Flinders University.
The Principals as Literacy Leaders (PALLs) program was developed by Griffith University inpartnership with the Australian Primary Principals Association (APPA), EdithCowan University and Flinders University.
The Flinders University Health Sciences Liaison librarian will be available to the team for the conduct of the study and specifically will provide guidance on the search strings for each database.
Ethics approval was received from the Flinders University Social and Behavioural Research Ethics Committee, the SA Health Human Research Ethics Committee and the ethics committees of the Aboriginal Health Council of South Australia and the Department of Education and Children's Services.
In the following piece, Professor Fran Baum and Dr Toby Freeman, from the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity, Flinders University Adelaide, report on this issue and the broader findings of the Symposium.
Dr Toby Freeman is Senior Research Fellow with the CRE and is based at the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity at Flinders University.
In that same year I met Professor Judith Clare whilst I was working at Flinders University.
This event was part of an NHMRC funded research project «Evaluating the effectiveness of comprehensive primary health care in local communities» being conducted at the Southgate Institute for Health Society and Equity at Flinders University The aim of the symposium was to feed back some of the key emerging findings from the study, and to engage primary health care practitioners and policy makers in debate and discussion about the implications of these findings for primary health care policy and practice.
A consortium based in the Centre for Analysis of Educational Futures at Flinders University undertook an evaluation of the two - year trial.
Professor Fran Baum is a Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Director of the Southgate Institute of Health, Society and Equity at Flinders University.
She has an appointment as Professor of Public Health at UNSW Sydney, and is an honorary professor at the University of Sydney and a Professor at Flinders University.
Emma George is a PhD candidate with the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity at Flinders University.
The findings came as a Flinders University study estimated that hangovers were causing 11.5 million «sick days» a year at a cost of $ 3 billion to the Australian economy.
That's good news, says Professor Tim Carey, Director of the Centre for Remote Health, which has been jointly established in Alice Springs by Flinders University and Charles Darwin University.
Miriam Vandenberg is a PhD candidate with the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity at Flinders University.
Professor John Wakerman, Director, Centre for Remote Health, A joint Centre of Flinders University & Charles Darwin University, writes: 1.
MJA Insight quoted Professor Michael Kidd from Flinders University calling on his GP colleagues to help developing countries develop their primary care systems, by sharing local experiences and solutions.
• Professor Fran Baum, Southgate Institute for Health Society and Equity, Flinders University and NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence, Health Equity.
Dr Matt Fisher is Senior Research Fellow with the CRE and is based at the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity at Flinders University.
Phillip T. Slee is a Professor in Human Development in the School of Education at Flinders University of South Australia.
Honours Thesis, Flinders University
Centre for Analysis of Educational Futures, Flinders University of South Australia.
Dr Katherine Dix, Senior Analyst from the KidsMatter Primary evaluation team at Flinders University, said: «We found that when implemented well in schools, KidsMatter Primary was associated with an improvement in academic performance as though students had received up to six months more schooling.
At Flinders University he co-ordinates major under - graduate programs in the Bachelor of Education, and has published extensively in the field of child development, bullying, school violence and stress, including books, book chapters and journal papers and produced educational resources in the form of videos and resource packages.
A further study *** conducted by Flinders University, which was published in the British journal Child and Adolescent Mental Health in 2011, found a correlation between the successful implementation of KidsMatter Primary and a school's NAPLAN results.
The KidsMatter Primary pilot was evaluated by Flinders University of South Australia.
A two - year evaluation ** of the KidsMatter Primary pilot program by Flinders University found that:
Learn more about how the initiative is helping children, families and ECEC services in the official evaluation by Flinders University.
Flinders University has also released some great news about the pilot: a research team has published an Evaluation report showing that KidsMatter has a significant and positive impact on ECEC services.
Phillip T. Slee School of Education Flinders University GPO Box 2100 Adelaide, SA.
The evaluation of the pilot program by Flinders University found that 20 % of students experiencing mental health difficulties were no longer considered to be so two years after implementing KidsMatter Primary.
Researchers at Flinders University have published an Evaluation showing that there were significant and positive changes in services implementing the framework, for children, educators and families.
KidsMatter was extensively evaluated in 2009 by Flinders University.
Patricia Muncey, KidsMatter Placement Program at Uni SA believes the collaboration with their traditional competitor, Flinders University, was very successful.
In 2009 KidsMatter Primary was thoroughly evaluated by the Centre for Analysis of Educational Futures at Flinders University and the results were very positive.
Flinders University will be handing down their evaluation of the pilot in 2012.
Flinders University and Uni SA took the radical step of being competitive collaborators in an effort to find meaningful field placements for their Social Work students.
Additionally, there was personal follow up by managers of the Flinders University and the University of South Australia Field Education Managers, and the Universities funded a full time position for a semester to develop the concept.
Mary Duncan, Manager Field Education (School of Social and Policy Studies) at Flinders University said, «KidsMatter and Social Work is a perfect fit and this had made it easier to plan and develop solid placements that have positive outcomes for students and school communities».
A two - year independent evaluation of the pilot program, conducted by the Centre for Analysis of Educational Futures at Flinders University, found that 20 % of students experiencing mental health difficulties were shown to no longer be at risk after adopting the KidsMatter Primary program over a two - year period.
Ethics approval Ethics approval was obtained from Flinders University's Social and Behavioural Research Ethics Committee.
A systematic literature review of primary research investigating the relationship between work and depression, anxiety and substance - use disorders in male dominated industries, undertaken by the National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction (NCETA) at Flinders University.
But a presentation on cross-cultural training by Flinders University associate professor Dr Lily Xiao highlighted that the majority of overseas - born residents come from Europe while the majority of overseas - born staff come from Asian and African regions.
Chaired by Romlie Mokak (CEO, Lowitja Institute, second from right), the panel — Tamara Mackean (Flinders University, left), Janine Mohamed (CEO, Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and Midwives, second from left), Luke Pearson (@IndigenousX founder, centre) and Richard Weston (CEO, Healing Foundation, right)-- shared their experiences, ideas and hopes for the future.
The Centre is collaboration between researchers at Flinders University, Australian National University, University of Ottawa, University of Sydney, University College London, the University of Oxford, Simon Fraser University and the University of New South Wales.
In the article below, Professor Judith Dwyer from Flinders University and the Lowitja Institute (who chaired the conference session on «courageous questions»), investigates what progress has been made since The overburden report: Contracting for Indigenous health services of 2009.
The case prompted health authorities to act, but Flinders University research Janet Kelly told the 2nd National Conference on Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Primary Health that most remote health practitioners still have stories about health care systems that fail patients who have to travel far from home to hospital.
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