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Dive into the research topics where Peter Crampton is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Crampton.


Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | 1998

NZDep91: A New Zealand index of deprivation

Clare Salmond; Peter Crampton; Frances Sutton

In New Zealand, existing area‐based indices of deprivation were inadequate because of lack of theoretical underpinning and use of comparatively large areas resulting in masking of variation within them. There is growing demand for small area based indices of deprivation for the purposes of resource allocation, research, and community advocacy. This paper describes a new Census‐based index of deprivation based on the smallest possible geographical areas using existing Census boundaries. The index uses deprivation variables selected according to established theory, and derived from the 1991 New Zealand Census. Ten age and gender standardised variables were combined using principal components analysis. Each variable is a standardised proportion of people in a small area with a lack of a defined material or social resource. Age/gender standardisation is important to avoid confounding and to improve the performance of indices in resource allocation formulae. The index correlates highly with mortality, hospital discharges, lung cancer registrations and childhood immunisation status.


Academic Medicine | 2003

Combating effects of racism through a cultural immersion medical education program.

Peter Crampton; Anthony Dowell; Chris Parkin; Caroline Thompson

The purpose of this paper is to provide a perspective from New Zealand on the role of medical education in addressing racism in medicine. There is increasing recognition of racism in health care and its adverse effects on the health status of minority populations in many Western countries. New Zealand nursing curricula have introduced the concept of cultural safety as a means of conveying the idea that cultural factors critically influence the relationship between carer and patient. Cultural safety aims to minimize any assault on the patients cultural identity. However, despite the work of various researchers and educators, there is little to suggest that undergraduate medical curricula pay much attention yet to the impact of racism on medical education and medical practice. The authors describe a cultural immersion program for third-year medical students in New Zealand and discuss some of the strengths and weaknesses of such an approach. The program is believed to have great potential as a method of consciousness raising among medical students to counter the insidious effects of non-conscious inherited racism. Apart from the educational benefits, the program has fostered a strong working relationship between an indigenous health care organization and the medical school. In general, it is hoped that such programs will help medical educators to engage more actively with the issue of racism and be prepared to experiment with novel approaches to teaching and learning. More specifically, the principles of cultural immersion, informed by the concept of cultural safety, could be adapted to indigenous and minority groups in urban settings to provide medical students with the foundations for a lifelong commitment to practicing medicine in a culturally safe manner.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 1999

Asthma prevalence and deprivation: a small area analysis.

Clare Salmond; Peter Crampton; Simon Hales; Simon Lewis; Neil Pearce

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relation between the prevalence of asthma symptoms in adults and deprivation in the area of residence. DESIGN: Two complementary surveys carried out between 1991-1993 yielding adult asthma symptom prevalence throughout New Zealand. Deprivation is measured by the NZDep91 index of deprivation for small areas. SETTING: New Zealand. PARTICIPANTS: A random sample of 25,042 adults aged 20-50 years. MAIN RESULTS: After controlling for possible confounding by age, gender, and ethnicity, the 12 month period prevalence rates of asthma in this representative sample of New Zealand adults are significantly higher in the three most deprived area categories than in the least deprived (tenth) category. The prevalence ratio for the most deprived category compared with the least deprived category is 1.29 with 95% confidence intervals (CI) 1.14, 1.47. There is a linear increase in asthma prevalence with increasing area deprivation (chi 2(1) = 32.20, p < 0.001). Independently, the rates are also 1.41 (95% CI 1.29, 1.54) times higher among Maori and 1.29 (95% CI 1.10, 1.52) times higher among the Pacific Island group than among the remaining, mostly European, respondents. CONCLUSIONS: The relation between asthma in adults and area deprivation is unlikely to be attributable to study biases or confounding. Further work should examine the possible role of modifiable deprivation factors in this relation.


Health Education & Behavior | 2000

Socioeconomic Deprivation and Ethnicity are both Important for Anti-tobacco Health Promotion

Peter Crampton; Clare Salmond; Alistair Woodward; Papaarangi Reid

The aim of the study was to explore the relative importance of socioeconomic deprivation and ethnicity for smoking in New Zealand in order to assist with the design and evaluation of health promotion programs. Smoking data were derived from the 1996 census. Socioeconomic deprivation was measured using the NZDep96 index of socioeconomic deprivation for small areas, which combines nine variables from the 1996 census. There was a strong and consistent relationship between area-level socioeconomic deprivation and the proportion of regular smokers. In all age-groups, at each level of deprivation, Mäori smoked more than the “European and Other” ethnic group. The findings of this study support the view that effective tobacco control activities should address ethnic differences in smoking behavior as well as socioeconomic deprivation, and must operate at the levels of populations, places and environments, as well as individuals.


Medical Education | 2001

The first sunrise : an experience of cultural immersion and community health needs assessment by undergraduate medical students in New Zealand

Anthony Dowell; Peter Crampton; Chris Parkin

Cultural factors in health and illness, and an awareness of community health needs analysis, are important issues for medical education. Both have received relatively little recognition in the medical education literature. This paper describes the development of an educational attachment to remote predominantly Maori rural communities in New Zealand. The twin purposes of the programme were to encourage students to adopt broad public health approaches in assessing the health needs of defined communities, and to increase their awareness of the importance of cultural issues.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2005

Do social and economic reforms change socioeconomic inequalities in child mortality? A case study: New Zealand 1981–1999

Caroline Shaw; Tony Blakely; June Atkinson; Peter Crampton

Background: Socioeconomic inequalities in child mortality are known to exist; however the trends in these inequalities have not been well examined. This study examines the trends in child mortality inequality between 1981 and 1999 against the background of the rapid and dramatic social and economic restructuring in New Zealand during this time period. Methods: Record linkage studies of census and mortality records of all New Zealand children aged 0–14 years on census night 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, each followed up for three years for mortality between ages 1–14 years. Socioeconomic position was measured using maternal education, household income, and highest occupational class in the household. Standardised mortality rates, rate ratios, and rates differences as well as regression based measures of inequality were calculated. Results: Mortality in all socioeconomic groups fell between 1981 and 1999. Socioeconomic inequality in child mortality existed by all measures of socioeconomic position, however only trends by income suggested a change over time: the relative index of inequality increased from 1.5 in 1981–84 to 1.8 in 1996–99 (p trend 0.06), but absolute inequality remained stable (slope index of inequality 15/100 000 in 1981–84 and 14/100 000 in 1996–99. Conclusions: Dramatic changes in income in New Zealand possibly translated into increasing relative inequality in child mortality by income, but not by education or occupational class. The a priori hypothesis that socioeconomic inequalities in child mortality would have increased in New Zealand during a period of rapid structural reform and widening income inequalities was only partly supported.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2014

Cancer-specific administrative data–based comorbidity indices provided valid alternative to Charlson and National Cancer Institute Indices

Diana Sarfati; Jason Gurney; James Stanley; Clare Salmond; Peter Crampton; Elizabeth Dennett; Jonathan B. Koea; Neil Pearce

OBJECTIVE We aimed to develop and validate administrative data-based comorbidity indices for a range of cancer types that included all relevant concomitant conditions. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTINGS Patients diagnosed with colorectal, breast, gynecological, upper gastrointestinal, or urological cancers identified from the National Cancer Registry between July 1, 2006 and June 30, 2008 for the development cohort (n=14,096) and July 1, 2008 to December 31, 2009 for the validation cohort (n=11,014) were identified. A total of 50 conditions were identified using hospital discharge data before cancer diagnosis. Five site-specific indices and a combined site index were developed, with conditions weighted according to their log hazard ratios from age- and stage-adjusted Cox regression models with noncancer death as the outcome. We compared the performance of these indices (the C3 indices) with the Charlson and National Cancer Institute (NCI) comorbidity indices. RESULTS The correlation between the Charlson and C3 index scores ranged between 0.61 and 0.78. The C3 index outperformed the Charlson and NCI indices for all sites combined, colorectal, and upper gastrointestinal cancer, performing similarly for urological, breast, and gynecological cancers. CONCLUSION The C3 indices provide a valid alternative to measuring comorbidity in cancer populations, in some cases providing a modest improvement over other indices.


International Journal of Health Services | 2005

Does Community-Governed Nonprofit Primary Care Improve Access to Services? Cross-Sectional Survey of Practice Characteristics

Peter Crampton; Peter Davis; Roy Lay-Yee; Antony Raymont; Christopher B. Forrest; Barbara Starfield

This study compared community-governed nonprofit and for-profit primary care practices in New Zealand to test two hypotheses: (1) nonprofits reduce financial and cultural barriers to access; and (2) nonprofits do not differ from for-profits in equipment, services, service planning, and quality management. Data were obtained from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey of GPs. Practices were categorized by ownership status: private community-governed nonprofit or private for-profit. Community-governed nonprofits charged lower patient fees per visit and employed more Maori and Pacific Island staff, thus reducing financial and cultural barriers to access compared with for-profits. Nonprofits provided a different range of services and were less likely to have specific items of equipment; they were more likely to have written policies on quality management, complaints, and critical events, and to carry out locality service planning and community needs assessments. The findings support the shift to nonprofit community governance occurring in New Zealand and elsewhere.


Journal of Health Services Research & Policy | 2004

Comparison of private for-profit with private community-governed not-for-profit primary care services in New Zealand

Peter Crampton; Peter Davis; R Lay-Yee; Antony Raymont; Christopher Forrest; Barbara Starfield

Objective To compare the characteristics of patients, their disease patterns, and the investigation and referral patterns in private community-governed not-for-profit and private for-profit primary care practices in New Zealand. Methods Observational study using a representative survey of visits to general practitioners in New Zealand. Practices were categorised according to their ownership: private for-profit or private community-governed not-for-profit. Patient socio-demographic characteristics, treated prevalence and other characteristics of presenting problems, morbidity burden, numbers of investigations and referral patterns were compared. Results Compared with for-profit practices, community-governed not-for-profit practices served a younger, largely non-European population, nearly three-quarters of whom had a means-tested benefit card (community services card), 10.5% of whom were not fluent in English, and the majority of whom lived in the 20% of areas ranked as the most deprived (by the NZDep2001 index of socio-economic deprivation). Patients visiting not-for-profit practices were diagnosed with more problems, including higher rates of asthma, diabetes and skin infections, but lower rates of chest infections. The duration of visits was also significantly longer. No differences were observed in the average number of laboratory tests ordered. The odds of specialist referral were higher in for-profit patients when confounding variables were controlled for. Conclusions Community-governed not-for-profit practices in New Zealand serve a poor, largely non-European population who present with somewhat different rates of various problems compared with patients at for-profit practices. The study highlights for communities, policy-makers and purchasers the importance of community-governed not-for-profit practices in meeting the needs of low-income and minority population groups.


Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | 2003

More deprived areas need greater resources for mental health

Melanie Abas; Jane Vanderpyl; Elizabeth Robinson; Peter Crampton

Objective: This study set out to investigate the relationship in New Zealand between the newly developed small area index of socio-economic deprivation, NZDep96, and measures of psychiatric bed utilisation. It aims to contribute to the debate on resource allocation and to estimate the distribution of beds required in relation to levels of deprivation. Method: A cohort study of 872 persons admitted to the psychiatric in-patient unit within Counties Manukau, involving 1299 episodes of in-patient care between 1998 and 2000. The annual period prevalence of admission and the rate of total occupied bed days were calculated for the different deciles of deprivation, standardized for age and gender. Results: There was a three-fold gradient in admission prevalence and in total occupied bed days between persons living in the most and least deprived areas. Conclusions: Mental health services need to be organized and funded in ways that take account of the high use of in-patient care among those living in deprived areas. Further research is required to explore the relationship between socio-economic deprivation and use of community mental health services.

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Peter Davis

University of Auckland

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Jackie Cumming

Victoria University of Wellington

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Gordon Becket

University of Central Lancashire

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