Identifying EHealth Literacy And Readability Issues For Palliative Care Consumers
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$29,375.00
Summary
Access and use of health information can affect a patient’s health experience and potentially their health outcomes. Increasingly health information is being provided and sought through the internet and online resources. Palliative care patients and their carers have specific information needs relating to the nature and progress of their disease, their symptoms and their current and pending quality of life. However, their ability to find and use information relies on many factors such as individ ....Access and use of health information can affect a patient’s health experience and potentially their health outcomes. Increasingly health information is being provided and sought through the internet and online resources. Palliative care patients and their carers have specific information needs relating to the nature and progress of their disease, their symptoms and their current and pending quality of life. However, their ability to find and use information relies on many factors such as individual skills and experiences and how information is presented and made available. eHealth literacy is a measure of the mix of skills required by consumers to successfully access and understand palliative care information. Readability is one aspect of eHealth literacy and readability scales can be used to identify how effective websites are in providing appropriate written information for palliative care consumers. This research will help assess eHealth literacy levels and hence potential intervention needs of palliative care patients and carers as well as determining whether the readability requirement of palliative care websites and information is too high.Read moreRead less
A Randomised Controlled Trial Of A Bowel Cancer Screening Decision Aid For Adults With Low Education And Literacy
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$237,277.00
Summary
The Commonwealth has committed funds for a national bowel cancer screening program. This will involve mailing bowel testing kits direct to eligible consumers at their homes. To minimise inequalities in accessing screening and to ensure effectiveness of the program, information and instructions for testing will have to be accessible to participants from low as well as high educational backgrounds. This project will evaluate communication strategies to achieve this. Reliance on written information ....The Commonwealth has committed funds for a national bowel cancer screening program. This will involve mailing bowel testing kits direct to eligible consumers at their homes. To minimise inequalities in accessing screening and to ensure effectiveness of the program, information and instructions for testing will have to be accessible to participants from low as well as high educational backgrounds. This project will evaluate communication strategies to achieve this. Reliance on written information has rapidly increased within healthcare. In particular, the use of patient decision aids to support and inform health decisions is rapidly increasing. The need to improve information in screening programs has been particularly highlighted and decision aids provide an evidence based approach to achieve this. However, whilst there is level 1 evidence that decision aids improve the decision making process for consumers, research has been carried out almost exclusively among educated participants with high literacy. There is concern that the needs of adults with low education and limited literacy have been ignored. The proposed study is 2 phased. Phase I will test optimal quantitative risk communication formats for adults with low education and literacy. Phase 2 will evaluate a tailored low literacy decision aid for FOBT screening. The trial will test whether the decision aid can increase knowledge of screening, increase involvement in decisions and improve the quality of decision making among adults with low education, and will examine its impact on screening intentions and behaviour. This is a highly significant study. Screening providers need better ways to inform consumers of screening programs that are accessible to a diverse audience and equitable across the target population. This study will have direct implications for use in the national bowel cancer screening program.Read moreRead less
Objectives: 1. Evaluate the benefits of a variety of fish oils, including southern bluefin tuna oil, in preventing coronary heart disease in man & experimental animals 2. To developing a possible market for by-products of the fish processing industry.
Assessing The Nutritional Value Of Australian Barramundi
Funder
Fisheries Research and Development Corporation
Funding Amount
$16,000.00
Summary
The omega‐3 long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (n‐3 LC‐PUFA) and minerals are essential nutrients to the health of humans are a major contributors that fish makes to the human diet. Consumers are increasingly aware of the nutritional requirement for n‐3 LC‐PUFA and are therefore seeking products high in n‐3 LC‐PUFA such as Atlantic salmon and fish oil capsules.
Barramundi has high oil and n‐3 LC‐PUFA. Based on samples collected in 2010, the absolute content of n‐3 LC‐PUFA of farmed ....The omega‐3 long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (n‐3 LC‐PUFA) and minerals are essential nutrients to the health of humans are a major contributors that fish makes to the human diet. Consumers are increasingly aware of the nutritional requirement for n‐3 LC‐PUFA and are therefore seeking products high in n‐3 LC‐PUFA such as Atlantic salmon and fish oil capsules.
Barramundi has high oil and n‐3 LC‐PUFA. Based on samples collected in 2010, the absolute content of n‐3 LC‐PUFA of farmed barramundi was similar to that of Atlantic salmon and four times greater than that of wild barramundi (Nichols et al., 2014). Not only did this information fail to reach food agencies or health organizations but some such as the Australia Heart Foundation (NHFA, 2015) continue to use information generated 15 years ago to categorize farmed barramundi as of inferior quality to farmed salmon or other market competitor species such as Australian snapper. Similarly, the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC, 2017) encourages fish consumption as a major supplier of iron, zinc, iodine, calcium and magnesium to the human diet. However, the mineral content in fillet of fish is poorly documented, differs across species and culture conditions (Antony Jesu Prabhu et al., 2016), and has not been documented for barramundi.
This project will examine the variability in the nutritional value of Australian farmed barramundi and will categorize it in relation to other fish products available to the Australian consumer.
The ABFA will then use the findings as part of their marketing program to sell the nutritional benefits of Australian farmed barramundi to consumers and relevant food agencies. Objectives: 1. To assess the variability in nutrient composition, specifically omega-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 LC-PUFA) and minerals, in the fillet of farmed Australian barramundi (Lates calcarifer). Read moreRead less
Parenting+ Improving Health And Service-use Outcomes Through Health Literacy Training For New Parents: An Effectiveness-implementation Hybrid Trial
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$495,761.00
Summary
The Parenting+ project will evaluate an educational program for socio-economically and culturally diverse new parents. The study will assess the impact of the program on parents' health literacy, parent and infant health and psychosocial outcomes and health service use over one year. It additionally will identify key characteristics and reproducible steps in the successful implementation of the program in order to support wider adoption by other health services.