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Dive into the research topics where Peter Jones is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Peter Jones.


Emergency Medicine Australasia | 2007

Evidence-based implementation of adult asthma guidelines in the emergency department: A controlled trial

Steven Doherty; Peter Jones; Lin Davis; Nicholas Ryan; Verity Treeve

Objective:u2002 To determine if an evidence‐based implementation (EBI) strategy could lead to the successful implementation of guidelines for the management of adult asthma in a large rural ED.


Pediatric Pulmonology | 1998

Chemotherapy for malignancy induces a remission in asthma symptoms and airway inflammation but not airway hyperresponsiveness

Peter Jones; Richard L. Henry; Peter G. Gibson; Robyn Hankin; Kellie Carty

Inflammation with infiltrations of eosinophils and mast cells into the walls of airways is considered to increase airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), which in turn characterizes asthma. We present a child with AHR in whom the clinical course of asthma was related to eosinophilic bronchitis. Our patient was admitted at age 6 months with bronchiolitis and at age 4 years with asthma. Inhaled corticosteroids were begun at age 7 years. At age 8 he developed a meningeal sarcoma. While on chemotherapy, his asthma symptoms resolved and he no longer required prophylactic asthma treatment. After 14 months off all chemotherapy, he again had mild episodic asthma. While receiving chemotherapy for malignancy, he had an admission with a coagulase negative staphylococcal bacteremia. During sputum induction with 4.5% saline, he developed cough, wheeze, and a 20% reduction in peak expiratory flow (220 to 180 L/min) that reversed after treatment with salbutamol. The sputum cell count was 1.7 × 106/ml with 1.1 × 106 being neutrophils. Two weeks later and prior to the induction of the second sputum, a 21% increase in FEV1 was recorded after bronchodilator inhalation (82% to 99% of predicted). The second sputum contained 2.7 × 106/ml cells with 1.6 × 106/ml neutrophils. Neither eosinophils nor mast cells were identified in the sputum. A third sputum obtained 14 months after the cessation of chemotherapy showed a sputum cell count of 16 × 106/ml, with 11.6 × 106 neutrophils and 0.4 × 106 eosinophils; no mast cells were detected. A reversible 15% reduction in FEV1 was detected on hypertonic saline challenge testing.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2005

Interleukin-10 gene expression in acute virus-induced asthma

Terry V. Grissell; Heather Powell; Darren R. Shafren; Michael Boyle; Michael J. Hensley; Peter Jones; Bruce Whitehead; Peter G. Gibson


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2001

The Tolerability, Safety, and Success of Sputum Induction and Combined Hypertonic Saline Challenge in Children

Peter Jones; Robyn Hankin; Jodie L. Simpson; Peter G. Gibson; Richard L. Henry


Medical Hypotheses | 2000

The prevalence of asthma appears to be inversely related to the incidence of typhoid and tuberculosis: hypothesis to explain the variation in asthma prevalence around the world

Peter Jones; Peter G. Gibson; Richard L. Henry


Rural and Remote Health | 2006

Use of an 'evidence-based implementation' strategy to implement evidence-based care of asthma into rural district hospital emergency departments

Steven Doherty; Peter Jones


Rural and Remote Health | 2007

GP perceptions of workforce shortage in a rural setting

Jennifer May; Peter Jones; Rodney J Cooper; Michael Morrissey; Graeme Kershaw


Rural and Remote Health | 2007

Child abuse and the 'little children are sacred' report: a rural paediatrician's perspective.

Peter Jones


Rural and Remote Health | 2015

Peer mentoring: Evaluation of a new model of clinical placement in the Solomon Islands undertaken by an Australian medical school

Janie Dade Smith; Peter Jones; James Fink


Rural and Remote Health | 2008

The future, our rural populations and climate change: A special issue of Rural and Remote Health

Peter Jones; Ann Larson; Ian Couper

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Richard L. Henry

University of New South Wales

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Ann Larson

University of Western Australia

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Robyn Hankin

University of Newcastle

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Jennifer May

University of Newcastle

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