All Stories

  1. Risk of first-ever stroke in the 90 days after hospital encounters: A case- crossover study
  2. Process Evaluation of an Effective Multifaceted Quality Improvement Intervention to Improve Acute Stroke Care: Unpacking the Success Factors and Challenges
  3. Statistical analysis plan for Love Your Brain: a multi-arm randomised controlled trial of a stroke prevention digital platform
  4. Comparing inpatient stroke rehabilitation care and outcomes for people with and without aphasia in Australia
  5. The intersection of health information management and clinical registries
  6. Movement-Based Mindfulness vs. Attention Control for Modifying Physiological Risk in Chronic Stroke: Evidence from a Feasibility Trial
  7. Factors influencing self-selected mental health-related recovery goals poststroke: An observational study.
  8. Development of a Health Text Message System to Support Stroke Prevention: A Component of the Love Your Brain Digital Platform
  9. Evaluation of a digital health platform for preventing stroke in the Australian community: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial – Love Your Brain
  10. General Practitioner Coordinated Multidisciplinary Care Improves Long-Term Survival following Stroke with Variation by Impairment
  11. Impact of data sources and ascertainment methods on reporting paediatric genetic condition prevalence: A scoping review
  12. Optimising data quality in a national clinical quality registry: Insights from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry
  13. Quality and Outcomes of Acute Stroke Care for People With and Without Aphasia
  14. Exploration of the role of health information managers in the world of clinical registries
  15. Co‐Designing a Digital Stroke Prevention Platform: Leveraging Lived Experience and Expert Advice
  16. Processes Underpinning Successful Co‐Design: Lessons From a Digital Health Project
  17. Anxiety, Depression, Fatigue, and Quality of Life Outcomes Following a Movement-Based Mindfulness or Social Group Program for Chronic Stroke: A Sub-Study of a Phase II Feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial
  18. Chronic Disease Management to Enhance Medication Adherence Trajectories in Long‐Term Survivors of Stroke: A Population‐Based Cohort Study
  19. Interventions That Support Lifestyle Behavior Change for Secondary Prevention of Stroke: A Scoping Review
  20. Requiring an Interpreter Influences Stroke Care and Outcomes for People With Aphasia During Inpatient Rehabilitation
  21. Quality indicators for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in primary care: A systematic review
  22. From ‘strong recommendation’ to practice: A pre-test post-test study examining adherence to stroke guidelines for fever, hyperglycaemia, and swallowing (FeSS) management post-stroke
  23. Management of people after stroke in 383 Victorian general practices, 2014–2018: analysis of linked stroke registry and general practice data
  24. Impact of quality of care on outcomes in survivors of stroke with aphasia: A linked registry and hospital data observational study
  25. Stroke Is Not an Accident: An Integrative Review on the Use of the Term Cerebrovascular Accident
  26. Establishing Quality Indicators and Implementation Priorities for Post‐Stroke Aphasia Services Through End‐User Involvement
  27. Protocol for a feasibility registry-based randomised controlled trial investigating a tailored follow-up service for stroke (A-LISTS)
  28. Researchers’ perceptions of the trustworthiness, for reuse purposes, of government health data in Victoria, Australia: Implications for policy and practice
  29. Gender-specific aspects of socialisation and risk of cardiovascular disease among community-dwelling older adults: a prospective cohort study using machine learning algorithms and a conventional method
  30. Improving #Hypertension Awareness: Utility of Social Media to Communicate About High Blood Pressure
  31. When two communication differences intersect: Comparing inpatient rehabilitation care and outcomes for people with post-stroke aphasia who do and do not require an interpreter
  32. Learning together for better health using an evidence-based Learning Health System framework: a case study in stroke
  33. Age and Sex Disparities in Cardiovascular Risk Factor Management prior to Stroke: Linked Registry and General Practice Data
  34. Comprehensive quality assessment for aphasia rehabilitation after stroke: protocol for a multicentre, mixed-methods study
  35. Access to inpatient mood management services after stroke in Australian acute and rehabilitation hospitals
  36. The knowledge and reuse practices of researchers utilising government health information assets, Victoria, Australia, 2008–2020
  37. Statistical analysis plan for the Recovery-focused Community support to Avoid readmissions and improve Participation after Stroke randomised controlled clinical trial
  38. Cost-Effectiveness of a Government Policy to Incentivise Chronic Disease Management following Stroke: A Modelling Study
  39. Comparing acute hospital outcomes for people with post-stroke aphasia who do and do not require an interpreter
  40. Risk Factors Associated with Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events after Ischemic Stroke: A Linked Registry Study
  41. Knowledge of Day and Time Contact Preferences Assists in Successful Telephone Follow-Up
  42. Factors Associated With Transition From Community to Permanent Residential Aged Care Following Stroke: A Linked Registry Data Study
  43. In Search of a Gold Standard Tool for Assessing Knowledge of Stroke: A Systematic Review
  44. Is communication key in stroke rehabilitation and recovery? National linked stroke data study
  45. A documentary analysis of Victorian Government health information assets’ websites to identify availability of documentation for data sharing and reuse in Australia
  46. Fracture Risk Increases After Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack and Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life
  47. Stroke clinical coding education program in Australia and New Zealand
  48. Advances in Stroke: Quality Improvement
  49. The population effect of a national policy to incentivize chronic disease management in primary care in stroke: a population-based cohort study using an emulated target trial approach
  50. Stroke Learning Health Systems: A Topical Narrative Review With Case Examples
  51. Receipt of Mental Health Treatment in People Living With Stroke: Associated Factors and Long-Term Outcomes
  52. Understanding Stroke Guidelines for Aphasia Management
  53. Antihypertensive Medication Adherence and the Risk of Vascular Events and Falls After Stroke: A Real-World Effectiveness Study Using Linked Registry Data
  54. Differences in the pre‐hospital management of women and men with stroke by emergency medical services in New South Wales
  55. A mixed-methods feasibility study of a new digital health support package for people after stroke: the Recovery-focused Community support to Avoid readmissions and improve Participation after Stroke (ReCAPS) intervention
  56. Comparison of comorbidities of stroke collected in administrative data, surveys, clinical trials and cohort studies
  57. Development, implementation, and evaluation of the Australian Stroke Data Tool (AuSDaT): Comprehensive data capturing for multiple uses
  58. Measuring Stroke Quality: Methodological Considerations in Selecting, Defining, and Analyzing Quality Measures
  59. Mixed methods evaluation to explore participant experiences of a pilot randomized trial to facilitate self‐management of people living with stroke: Inspiring virtual enabled resources following vascular events (iVERVE)
  60. Exploring barriers to stroke coordinator roles in Australia: A national survey
  61. Determining the sensitivity of emergency dispatcher and paramedic diagnosis of stroke: statewide registry linkage study
  62. Feedback of aggregate patient-reported outcomes (PROs) data to clinicians and hospital end users: findings from an Australian codesign workshop process
  63. Costs of acute hospitalisation for stroke and transient ischaemic attack in Australia
  64. Towards better reporting of the proportion of days covered method in cardiovascular medication adherence: A scoping review and new tool TEN‐SPIDERS
  65. Advances in Stroke: Quality Improvement
  66. The suitability of government health information assets for secondary use in research: A fit-for-purpose analysis
  67. Factors associated with mental health service access among Australian community-dwelling survivors of stroke
  68. Real-World Effectiveness of Lipid-Lowering Medications on Outcomes after Stroke: Potential Implications of the New-User Design
  69. Benefit of linking hospital resource information and patient-level stroke registry data
  70. Optimal Measures for Primary Care Physician Encounters after Stroke and Association with Survival: A Data Linkage Study
  71. Co-Designing a New Yoga-Based Mindfulness Intervention for Survivors of Stroke: A Formative Evaluation
  72. Treatment with Multiple Therapeutic Classes of Medication Is Associated with Survival after Stroke
  73. Utility of the Hospital Frailty Risk Score Derived From Administrative Data and the Association With Stroke Outcomes
  74. Understanding the Role of External Facilitation to Drive Quality Improvement for Stroke Care in Hospitals
  75. Agreement between pharmaceutical claims data and patient-reported medication use after stroke
  76. Protocol of a randomized controlled trial investigating the effectiveness of Recovery-focused Community support to Avoid readmissions and improve Participation after Stroke (ReCAPS)
  77. Vaccination Against Herpes Zoster and the Potential to Reduce the Global Burden of Stroke
  78. Age-Related Disparities in the Quality of Stroke Care and Outcomes in Rehabilitation Hospitals: The Australian National Audit
  79. Quality Improvement
  80. Factors Associated with Stroke Coding Quality: A Comparison of Registry and Administrative Data
  81. Out of sight, out of mind: long-term outcomes for people discharged home, to inpatient rehabilitation and to residential aged care after stroke
  82. Patterns of use and discontinuation of secondary prevention medications after stroke
  83. Sex differences in quality of life after stroke were explained by patient factors, not clinical care: evidence from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry
  84. Hospital Presentations in Long-Term Survivors of Stroke
  85. Hospital admissions prior to primary intracerebral haemorrhage and relevant factors associated with survival
  86. Changes in the prevalence of chronic disability in China: evidence from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study
  87. Assuming one dose per day yields a similar estimate of medication adherence in patients with stroke: An exploratory analysis using linked registry data
  88. Dementia is Associated With Poorer Quality of Care and Outcomes After Stroke: An Observational Study
  89. Factors Associated With 90-Day Readmission After Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack
  90. Chest infection within 30 days of acute stroke, associated factors, survival and the benefits of stroke unit care: Analysis using linked data from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry
  91. Hospital organizational context and delivery of evidence-based stroke care: a cross-sectional study
  92. Maximising data value and avoiding data waste: a validation study in stroke research
  93. The Crohn’s & Colitis Australia Inflammatory Bowel Disease Audit: Measuring the quality of care in Australia
  94. Stroke survivor follow-up in a national registry: Lessons learnt from respondents who completed telephone interviews
  95. Weekend hospital discharge is associated with suboptimal care and outcomes: An observational Australian Stroke Clinical Registry study
  96. Factors influencing self-reported anxiety or depression following stroke or TIA using linked registry and hospital data
  97. Development of an electronic health message system to support recovery after stroke: Inspiring Virtual Enabled Resources following Vascular Events (iVERVE)
  98. Data quality: “Garbage in – garbage out”
  99. Knowledge of risk factors for diabetes or cardiovascular disease (CVD) is poor among individuals with risk factors for CVD
  100. Treatment and Outcomes of Working Aged Adults with Stroke: Results from a National Prospective Registry
  101. Improving stroke knowledge through a ‘volunteer-led’ community education program in Australia
  102. Victorian Stroke Telemedicine Project: implementation of a new model of translational stroke care for Australia
  103. Readmissions after stroke: linked data from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry and hospital databases
  104. The relationship between caregiver impacts and the unmet needs of survivors of stroke
  105. Comparison of two methods for assessing diabetes risk in a pharmacy setting in Australia
  106. Understanding Long-Term Unmet Needs in Australian Survivors of Stroke
  107. Are Patients with Intracerebral Haemorrhage Disadvantaged in Hospitals?
  108. Evaluation of Rural Stroke Services: Does Implementation of Coordinators and Pathways Improve Care in Rural Hospitals?
  109. Outcomes for people with atrial fibrillation in an Australian national audit of stroke care
  110. Factors Associated With 28-Day Hospital Readmission After Stroke in Australia
  111. The Know Your Numbers (KYN) Program 2008 to 2010: Impact on Knowledge and Health Promotion Behavior among Participants
  112. Adherence to Clinical Guidelines Improves Patient Outcomes in Australian Audit of Stroke Rehabilitation Practice
  113. Hospital Management and Outcomes of Stroke in Indigenous Australians: Evidence from the 2009 Acute Care National Stroke Audit
  114. A Phase II Multicentered, Single-Blind, Randomized, Controlled Trial of the Stroke Self-Management Program
  115. Metropolitan-rural divide for stroke outcomes: do stroke units make a difference?
  116. Feasibility of a Pilot Programme to Increase Awareness of Blood Pressure as an Important Risk Factor for Stroke in Australia
  117. The INTERPHONE study: design, epidemiological methods, and description of the study population
  118. The prevalence of common skin conditions in Australian school students: 4 Tinea pedis
  119. The prevalence of common skin conditions in Australian school students: 2. Atopic dermatitis
  120. Maryborough skin health survey: Prevalence and sources of advice for skin conditions
  121. The prevalence of common skin conditions in Australian school students: 3. Acne vulgaris
  122. The prevalence of common skin conditions in Australian school students: 1. Common, plane and plantar viral warts
  123. The prevalence of seborrhoeic keratoses in an Australian population: does exposure to sunlight play a part in their frequency?
  124. Descriptive epidemiology of acne vulgaris in the community
  125. Role of pharmacies and general practitioners in the management of dermatological conditions
  126. Mycosis fungoides: An Australian experience
  127. How useful are the oral retinoids in the management of psoriasis? Results of a survey of dermatologists practising in Australia
  128. The descriptive epidemiology of tinea pedis in the community
  129. The descriptive epidemiology of warts in the community
  130. Advice about management of skin conditions in the community: Who are the providers?
  131. The frequency and nature of skin conditions seen in a private dermatology practice in Central Victoria, 1991?95
  132. Ethnic differences in the incidence of the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) in Victoria, Australia 1985–1989