K. Howard
University of South Australia
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Featured researches published by K. Howard.
Trials | 2015
Allison Tong; Braden Manns; Brenda Hemmelgarn; David C. Wheeler; Peter Tugwell; Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer; Wim Van Biesen; Sally Crowe; Peter G. Kerr; Kevan R. Polkinghorne; K. Howard; Carol A. Pollock; Carmel M. Hawley; David W. Johnson; Stephen P. McDonald; Martin Gallagher; Rachel Urquhart-Secord; Jonathan C. Craig
BackgroundChronic kidney disease is a significant contributor to mortality and morbidity worldwide, and the number of people who require dialysis or transplantation continues to increase. People on dialysis are 15 times more likely to die than the general population. Dialysis is also costly, intrusive, and time-consuming and imposes an enormous burden on patients and their families. This escalating problem has spurred a proliferation of trials in dialysis, yet health and quality of life remain poor. The reasons for this are complex and varied but are attributable in part to problems in the design and reporting of studies, particularly outcome selection. Problems related to outcomes include use of unvalidated surrogates, outcomes of little or no relevance to patients, highly variable outcome selection limiting comparability across studies, and bias in reporting outcomes. The aim of the Standardised Outcomes in Nephrology-Haemodialysis (SONG-HD) study is to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials, to improve the quality of reporting, and the relevance of trials conducted in people on haemodialysis.Methods/designSONG-HD is a five-phase project that includes the following: a systematic review to identify outcomes that have been reported in haemodialysis systematic reviews and trials; nominal group technique with patients and caregivers to identify, rank, and describe reasons for their choices; qualitative stakeholder interviews with patients, caregivers, clinicians, researchers, and policy makers to elicit individual values and perspectives on outcomes for haemodialysis trials; a three-round Delphi survey with stakeholder groups to distil and generate a prioritised list of core outcomes; and a consensus workshop to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials.DiscussionEstablishing a core outcome set to be consistently measured and reported in haemodialysis trials will improve the integrity, transparency, usability, and contribution of research relevant to patients requiring haemodialysis; ensure that outcomes of relevance to all stakeholders are consistently reported across trials; and mitigate against outcome reporting bias. Ultimately, patients will be more protected from potential harm, patients and clinicians will be better able to make informed decisions about treatment, and researchers and policy makers will be more able to maximise the value of research to the public
BMJ Open | 2016
Angelique F. Ralph; Ali Alyami; Richard D. M. Allen; K. Howard; Jonathan C. Craig; Steve Chadban; Michelle Irving; Allison Tong
Objectives To describe the beliefs and attitudes to organ donation in the Arabic-speaking community. Design Arabic-speaking participants were purposively recruited to participate in 6 focus groups. Transcripts were analysed thematically. Participants 53 participants, aged 19–77u2005years, and originating from 8 countries, participated in 1 of 6 focus groups. Participants identified as Christian (73%), Islam (26%), Buddhist (2%) or did not identify with any religion (2%). Results 6 themes (with subthemes) were identified; religious conviction; invisibility of organ donation; medical suspicion; owning the decision; and reciprocal benefit. Conclusions Although organ donation is considered a generous life-saving ‘gift’, representative members of the Arabic-speaking community in Australia were unfamiliar with, unnerved by and sceptical about the donation process. Making positive decisions about organ donation would likely require resolving tensions between respecting family, community and religious values versus their individual autonomy. Providing targeted education about the process and benefits of organ donation within the Arabic community may clarify ambiguities surrounding cultural and religious-based views on organ donation, reduce taboos and suspicion towards donation, and in turn, lead to increased organ donation rates.
Nephrology | 2015
Gabrielle Williams; Allison Tong; Braden J. Manns; Brenda R. Hemmelgarn; David C. Wheeler; Peter Tugwell; Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer; W. Van Biesen; Peter G. Kerr; K. R. Polkinghorne; K. Howard; Carol A. Pollock; Carmel M. Hawley; David W. Johnson; Stephen P. McDonald; Martin Gallagher; Rachel Urquhart-Secord; Jonathan C. Craig
Archive | 2018
M. Howell; K. Howard
Archive | 2017
Germaine Wong; K. Howard; Jonathan C. Craig
Nephrology | 2017
M. Howell; Benedicte Sautenet; Angela Ju; Andrea K. Viecelli; Germaine Wong; K. Howard; Jonathan C. Craig; Allison Tong
Archive | 2016
Rachel Urquhart-Secord; Jonathan C. Craig; Brenda R. Hemmelgarn; Helen Tam-Tham; Braden Manns; M. Howell; K. R. Polkinghorne; Peter G. Kerr; David C.H. Harris; Stephanie Thompson; Kara Schick-Makaroff; David C. Wheeler; Wim Van Biesen; Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer; David W. Johnson; K. Howard; Nicole Evangelidis; Allison Tong
Injury Prevention | 2016
Stefanie Mikolaizak; Stephen R. Lord; Anne Tiedemann; Paul Simpson; K. Howard; Gideon A. Caplan; Jacqueline C. T. Close
Archive | 2015
Rachael C. Walker; Camilla S. Hanson; Suetonia C. Palmer; K. Howard; Rachael L. Morton; Mark R. Marshall; Allison Tong
Archive | 2014
Catherine Sherrington; Stephen Lord Lord; Beatrice John; Noeline Monaghan; K. Howard