Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stefanie Plage is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stefanie Plage.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016

What prevents the intravenous to oral antibiotic switch? A qualitative study of hospital doctors' accounts of what influences their clinical practice.

Jennifer Broom; Kate Adams; Stefanie Plage

OBJECTIVES Escalating antimicrobial resistance worldwide necessitates urgent optimization of antimicrobial prescribing to preserve antibiotics for future generations. Early intravenous (iv) to oral switch campaigns are one strategy that hospital-based antimicrobial stewardship programmes can incorporate to minimize inappropriate antibiotic use. Yet, iv antibiotics continue to be offered for longer than is clinically indicated, increasing hospital length of stay, increasing costs and placing patients at risk (e.g. cannula-related infections). This study aims to identify why this inappropriate prescribing trend continues. METHODS Twenty doctors (9 females and 11 males) working at a teaching hospital in north-east England participated in semi-structured interviews about their experiences of antibiotic use. NVivo10 software was used to conduct a thematic content analysis of the full interview transcripts driven by the framework approach. Results are reported according to COREQ guidelines. RESULTS Decisions around the choice of iv over oral antibiotics were influenced by three key issues: (i) consumerism, i.e. participants were concerned about the risk of litigation or complaints if patient expectations were not met; (ii) hierarchy of the medical team structure limited opportunities for de-escalation of antibiotics; and (iii) iv antibiotics were perceived as more potent and having significant mythical qualities, which participants acknowledged were not necessarily evidence based. CONCLUSIONS The iv to oral switch interventions should tailor strategies to demystify iv versus oral antibiotic efficacy, engage consumers around the negative effects of iv antibiotic overuse and examine strategies to streamline team decision-making. Addressing these issues has the potential to reduce inappropriate antibiotic use and resistance.


BMJ Open | 2015

What role do pharmacists play in mediating antibiotic use in hospitals? A qualitative study.

Jennifer Broom; Emma Kirby; Stefanie Plage; Jon Adams

Objective To understand Australian hospital pharmacists’ accounts of antibiotic use, and the potential role of pharmacy in antibiotic optimisation within a tertiary hospital setting. Design, setting and participants Qualitative study, utilising semistructured interviews with 19 pharmacists in two hospitals in Queensland, Australia in 2014. Data was analysed using the framework approach and supported by NVivo10 qualitative data analysis software. Results The results demonstrate that (1) pharmacists’ attitudes are ambivalent towards the significance of antibiotic resistance with optimising antibiotic use perceived as low priority; (2) pharmacists’ current capacity to influence antibiotic decision-making is limited by the prescribing power of doctors and the perception of antibiotic use as a medical responsibility; and, (3) interprofessional and organisational barriers exist that prevent change in the hospital setting including medical hierarchies, limited contact with senior doctors and resource constraints resulting in insufficient pharmacy staffing to foster collaborative relationships and facilitate the uptake of their advice. Discussion While pharmacy is playing an increasingly important role in enhanced antibiotic governance and is a vital component of antimicrobial stewardship in Australia, role-based limitations, interprofessional dynamics and organisational/resource constraints in hospitals, if not urgently addressed, will continue to significantly limit the ability of pharmacy to influence antibiotic prescribing.


Ethnic and Racial Studies | 2017

Cosmopolitan encounters: reflexive engagements and the ethics of sharing

Stefanie Plage; Indigo Willing; Ian Woodward; Zlatko Skrbis

ABSTRACT This study contributes to the growing research on everyday cosmopolitanism in diverse societies. We employ a cosmopolitan encounters framework to explore the reflexive openness people perform and the ethical reasoning they draw on to get along with each other. In particular, we look beyond pleasurable cosmopolitan pursuits to consider encounters that cause frictions or require notable efforts to bridge differences as an occasion for cosmopolitan conviviality. Based on qualitative interviews conducted in Australia, we aim to sharpen the demarcation between cosmopolitan encounters and those in which diversity is strategically negotiated by enacting practices of civility. We argue that cosmopolitanism emerges from interactions in encounters between individuals when they reflect on their positionality within unequal power relationships and their actions are guided by a cosmopolitan ethics. The ethical framework we propose is grounded in reflexive acts of sharing going beyond notions of giving and performing hospitality within a host/guest dyad.


BMC Health Services Research | 2015

A qualitative study of hospital pharmacists and antibiotic governance: negotiating interprofessional responsibilities, expertise and resource constraints

Stefanie Plage; Jennifer Broom; Emma Kirby; Jon Adams

BackgroundAntibiotic treatment options for common infections are diminishing due to the proliferation of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The impact of Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) programs seeking to preserve viable antibiotic drugs by governing their use in hospitals has hitherto been limited. Pharmacists have been delegated a critical role in antibiotic governance in AMS teams within hospitals but the experience of pharmacists in influencing antibiotic use has received limited attention. In this study we explore the experiences of pharmacists in antibiotic decision-making in two Australian hospitals.MethodsWe conducted 19 semi-structured interviews to explore hospital-based pharmacists’ perceptions and experiences of antibiotic use and governance. The analysis was conducted with NVivo10 software, utilising the framework approach.ResultsThree major themes emerged in the pharmacist interviews including (1) the responsibilities of pharmacy in optimising antibiotic use and the interprofessional challenges therein; (2) the importance of antibiotic streamlining and the constraints placed on pharmacists in achieving this; and (3) the potential, but often under-utilised expertise, pharmacists bring to antibiotic optimisation.ConclusionsPharmacists have a critical role in AMS teams but their capacity to enact change is limited by entrenched interprofessional dynamics. Identifying how hospital pharmacy’s antibiotic gatekeeping is embedded in the interprofessional nature of clinical decision-making and limited by organisational environment has important implications for the implementation of hospital policies seeking to streamline antibiotic use. Resource constraints (i.e. time limitation and task prioritisation) in particular limit the capacity of pharmacists to overcome the interprofessional barriers through development of stronger collaborative relationships. The results of this study suggest that to enact change in antibiotic use in hospitals, pharmacists must be supported in their negotiations with doctors, have increased presence on hospital wards, and must be given opportunities to pass on specialist knowledge within multidisciplinary clinical teams.


Health Sociology Review | 2017

Cancer on the margins: experiences of living with neuroendocrine tumours

Stefanie Plage; Alexandra Gibson; Matthew Burge; David Wyld

ABSTRACT Cancer is a multifaceted entity with recent developments in treatment only increasing this diversification. Yet, some cancers are less common, less well understood, and receive less attention. Taking neuroendocrine tumours (NETs) as a case study, we explore the lived experience of people with a type of cancer that is virtually unknown among the general population. Drawing on interviews with 30 people living with NETs in Australia, we explored how their experiences are shaped by social and cultural understandings of cancer, and the tensions between chronicity and terminality. We found that people with NETs draw on common narratives around cancer to make sense of their diagnosis. However, NETs were understood as atypical, because they are often incurable, slowly progressing and not associated with treatment side effects such as hair or weight loss. The embodied effects of NETs made them unrecognisable as cancer to participants and community. The specificities of the NET illness experience resulted in the need to reframe narratives around agency and positivity. This hindered social recognition but also provided opportunities to bracket illness and gain some control over the illness experience. The findings of this study highlight the importance of recognising multiple modes of living with cancer.


Journal of Sociology | 2017

Australianness as fairness: implications for cosmopolitan encounters

Stefanie Plage; Indigo Willing; Zlatko Skrbis; Ian Woodward

This article provides an account of interwoven and often competing repertoires of cosmopolitanism and nationalism on which Australians draw when encountering diversity. Using interview and focus group data the article first explores how the notion of Australianness grounded in civic virtues such as fairness, openness and egalitarianism effectively enhances cosmopolitan outlooks. It identifies the mechanisms through which these same virtues are mobilized to rationalize the failure to actualize cosmopolitanism in everyday practice. We argue that Australianness understood as the popular ‘fair-go’ principle at times conceptually overlaps with cosmopolitan ethics. However, it also bears the potential to hinder cosmopolitan practices. Ultimately national and cosmopolitan ethical frameworks have to be interrogated simultaneously when applied to micro-level interactions.


Journal of Hospital Infection | 2016

Barriers to uptake of antimicrobial advice in a UK hospital: a qualitative study

Jennifer Broom; Stefanie Plage; Kate Adams; Jeffrey J. Post


Social Science Research | 2017

Losing ground, losing sleep: Local economic conditions, economic vulnerability, and sleep

Francisco Perales; Stefanie Plage


Family matters | 2016

Doing Gender Overnight? Parenthood, Gender and Sleep Quantity and Quality in Australia

Stefanie Plage; Francisco Perales; Janeen Baxter


Archive | 2015

Losing ground, losing sleep: economic vulnerability, local economic conditions and sleep quantity

Francisco Perales; Stefanie Plage

Collaboration


Dive into the Stefanie Plage's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennifer Broom

University of the Sunshine Coast

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Wyld

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emma Kirby

University of New South Wales

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Indigo Willing

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew Burge

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zarnie Lwin

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexandra Gibson

University of New South Wales

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge