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Dive into the research topics where Steven M. McPhail is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven M. McPhail.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2011

Patient Education to Prevent Falls Among Older Hospital Inpatients: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Terry P. Haines; Anne-Marie Hill; Keith D. Hill; Steven M. McPhail; David Oliver; Sandra G. Brauer; Tammy Hoffmann; Christopher Beer

BACKGROUND Falls are a common adverse event during hospitalization of older adults, and few interventions have been shown to prevent them. METHODS This study was a 3-group randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of 2 forms of multimedia patient education compared with usual care for the prevention of in-hospital falls. Older hospital patients (n = 1206) admitted to a mixture of acute (orthopedic, respiratory, and medical) and subacute (geriatric and neurorehabilitation) hospital wards at 2 Australian hospitals were recruited between January 2008 and April 2009. The interventions were a multimedia patient education program based on the health-belief model combined with trained health professional follow-up (complete program), multi-media patient education materials alone (materials only), and usual care (control). Falls data were collected by blinded research assistants by reviewing hospital incident reports, hand searching medical records, and conducting weekly patient interviews. RESULTS Rates of falls per 1000 patient-days did not differ significantly between groups (control, 9.27; materials only, 8.61; and complete program, 7.63). However, there was a significant interaction between the intervention and presence of cognitive impairment. Falls were less frequent among cognitively intact patients in the complete program group (4.01 per 1000 patient-days) than among cognitively intact patients in the materials-only group (8.18 per 1000 patient-days) (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.51; 95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.93]) and control group (8.72 per 1000 patient-days) (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.43; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.78). CONCLUSION Multimedia patient education with trained health professional follow-up reduced falls among patients with intact cognitive function admitted to a range of hospital wards. Trial Registration anzctr.org.au Identifier: ACTRN12608000015347.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2010

Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system

Anne-Marie Hill; Tammy Hoffmann; Keith D. Hill; David Oliver; Christopher Beer; Steven M. McPhail; Sandra G. Brauer; Terry P. Haines

OBJECTIVES: To compare three different methods of falls reporting and examine the characteristics of the data missing from the hospital incident reporting system.


Medical Care | 2008

Two perspectives of proxy reporting of health-related quality of life using the Euroqol-5D, an investigation of agreement.

Steven M. McPhail; Elaine Beller; Terry P. Haines

Background:Proxy-reporting has been proposed as an alternative to self-report of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for patients with poor cognition. There are 2 possible perspectives from which to complete a proxy-report, answer as the patient would (proxy-patient) or from the proxys own perspective (proxy-proxy). Most research has not differentiated between perspectives. Agreement between patient and proxy-reports from either perspective has not been investigated using the Euroqol-5D (EQ-5D) among elderly hospital patients undergoing rehabilitation. Objectives:Identify agreement levels between proxy-patient and patient self-report as well as proxy-proxy and patient self-report of the EQ-5D and investigate interaction effects of timing (admission vs. discharge) and basic cognition (intact vs. not intact). Research Design:Repeated measures, inter-rater agreement investigation of clinician proxy-report, and patient self-report incorporating; proxy-patient reports (perspective A) and proxy-proxy reports (perspective B). Subjects:Geriatric rehabilitation patients (n = 272) and their proxies (treating physiotherapists n = 29). Measures:EQ-5D for HRQoL and Mini Mental State Examination for cognition. Results:One hundred fifty (89%) proxy-patient and 130 (98%) proxy-proxy datasets were complete, 51 perspective A and 52 perspective B patients did not have basic cognition intact. Proxy-patient assessments had strong agreement with self-report at discharge across all cognition levels (kappa = 0.76–0.95), but at admission had stronger agreement among patients with better cognition (kappa = 0.70–0.86) than patients with lower cognition (kappa = 0.47–0.76). At admission and discharge proxy-proxy assessments generally had moderate agreement with self-report among patients with poor cognition on most domains with proxies giving lower scores than patients (kappa = 0.23–0.81), this is in contrast to proxy-proxy assessments and patients with better cognition (kappa = 0.55–0.95). Conclusions:Clinician (physiotherapist) proxy-reports among this population generally had good agreement with patient self-report though this was affected by proxy perspective, patient cognition, and timing.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2011

Evaluation of the Sustained Effect of Inpatient Falls Prevention Education and Predictors of Falls After Hospital Discharge—Follow-up to a Randomized Controlled Trial

Anne-Marie Hill; Tammy Hoffmann; Steven M. McPhail; Christopher Beer; Keith D. Hill; David Oliver; Sandra G. Brauer; Terrence Peter Haines

BACKGROUND This study aimed to determine (i) risk factors for postdischarge falls and (ii) the effect of inpatient falls prevention education on rates of falls after discharge. METHODS Participants (n = 343) were a prospective cohort nested within a randomized controlled trial (n = 1,206) of falls prevention patient education in hospital compared with usual care. Participants were followed up for 6 months after discharge and falls recorded via a falls diary and monthly telephone calls. Potential falls risk factors were assessed at point of discharge and at 6 months postdischarge using a telephone survey. RESULTS There were 276 falls among 138 (40.2%) participants in the 6 months following discharge (4.52/1,000 person days) of which 150 were injurious falls (2.46/1,000 person days). Pairwise comparisons found no significant differences between groups in rates of falls after adjustment for confounding variables. Independent risk factors for all falls outcomes were male gender, history of falls prior to hospital admission, fall during hospital admission, depressed mood at discharge, using a walking aid at discharge, and receiving assistance with activities of daily living at 6 months following discharge. Receiving assistance with activities of daily living significantly reduced the risk of falls and injurious falls for high risk patients. CONCLUSIONS Older patients are at increased risk of falls and falls injuries following discharge. Education that effectively reduced inpatient falls appears to have no ongoing protective effect after discharge. Independent risk factors for falls in this population differ from both hospital and general community settings.


Risk Management and Healthcare Policy | 2016

Multimorbidity in chronic disease: impact on health care resources and costs

Steven M. McPhail

Effective and resource-efficient long-term management of multimorbidity is one of the greatest health-related challenges facing patients, health professionals, and society more broadly. The purpose of this review was to provide a synthesis of literature examining multimorbidity and resource utilization, including implications for cost-effectiveness estimates and resource allocation decision making. In summary, previous literature has reported substantially greater, near exponential, increases in health care costs and resource utilization when additional chronic comorbid conditions are present. Increased health care costs have been linked to elevated rates of primary care and specialist physician occasions of service, medication use, emergency department presentations, and hospital admissions (both frequency of admissions and bed days occupied). There is currently a paucity of cost-effectiveness information for chronic disease interventions originating from patient samples with multimorbidity. The scarcity of robust economic evaluations in the field represents a considerable challenge for resource allocation decision making intended to reduce the burden of multimorbidity in resource-constrained health care systems. Nonetheless, the few cost-effectiveness studies that are available provide valuable insight into the potential positive and cost-effective impact that interventions may have among patients with multiple comorbidities. These studies also highlight some of the pragmatic and methodological challenges underlying the conduct of economic evaluations among people who may have advanced age, frailty, and disadvantageous socioeconomic circumstances, and where long-term follow-up may be required to directly observe sustained and measurable health and quality of life benefits. Research in the field has indicated that the impact of multimorbidity on health care costs and resources will likely differ across health systems, regions, disease combinations, and person-specific factors (including social disadvantage and age), which represent important considerations for health service planning. Important priorities for research include economic evaluations of interventions, services, or health system approaches that can remediate the burden of multimorbidity in safe and cost-effective ways.


BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2011

Work related musculoskeletal disorders amongst therapists in physically demanding roles: qualitative analysis of risk factors and strategies for prevention

Leanne Passier; Steven M. McPhail

BackgroundPhysiotherapy and occupational therapy are two professions at high risk of work related musculoskeletal disorders (WRMD). This investigation aimed to identify risk factors for WRMD as perceived by the health professionals working in these roles (Aim 1), as well as current and future strategies they perceive will allow them to continue to work in physically demanding clinical roles (Aim 2).MethodsA two phase exploratory investigation was undertaken. The first phase included a survey administered via a web based platform with qualitative open response items. The second phase involved four focus group sessions which explored topics obtained from the survey. Thematic analysis of qualitative data from the survey and focus groups was undertaken.ResultsOverall 112 (34.3%) of invited health professionals completed the survey; 66 (58.9%) were physiotherapists and 46 (41.1%) were occupational therapists. Twenty-four health professionals participated in one of four focus groups. The risk factors most frequently perceived by health professionals included: work postures and movements, lifting or carrying, patient related factors and repetitive tasks. The six primary themes for strategies to allow therapists to continue to work in physically demanding clinical roles included: organisational strategies, workload or work allocation, work practices, work environment and equipment, physical condition and capacity, and education and training.ConclusionsRisk factors as well as current and potential strategies for reducing WRMD amongst these health professionals working in clinically demanding roles have been identified and discussed. Further investigation regarding the relative effectiveness of these strategies is warranted.


BMC Medicine | 2013

Cost effectiveness of patient education for the prevention of falls in hospital : economic evaluation from a randomized controlled trial

Terry P. Haines; Anne-Marie Hill; Keith D. Hill; Sandra G. Brauer; Tammy Hoffmann; Christopher Etherton-Beer; Steven M. McPhail

BackgroundFalls are one of the most frequently occurring adverse events that impact upon the recovery of older hospital inpatients. Falls can threaten both immediate and longer-term health and independence. There is need to identify cost-effective means for preventing falls in hospitals. Hospital-based falls prevention interventions tested in randomized trials have not yet been subjected to economic evaluation.MethodsIncremental cost-effectiveness analysis was undertaken from the health service provider perspective, over the period of hospitalization (time horizon) using the Australian Dollar (A


BMC Geriatrics | 2009

Evaluation of the effect of patient education on rates of falls in older hospital patients: Description of a randomised controlled trial

Anne-Marie Hill; Keith D. Hill; Sandra G. Brauer; David Oliver; Tammy Hoffmann; Christopher Beer; Steven M. McPhail; Terry P. Haines

) at 2008 values. Analyses were based on data from a randomized trial among n = 1,206 acute and rehabilitation inpatients. Decision tree modeling with three-way sensitivity analyses were conducted using burden of disease estimates developed from trial data and previous research. The intervention was a multimedia patient education program provided with trained health professional follow-up shown to reduce falls among cognitively intact hospital patients.ResultsThe short-term cost to a health service of one cognitively intact patient being a faller could be as high as A


World Journal of Pediatrics | 2012

Practical physical activity measurement in youth: a review of contemporary approaches.

Jerome N. Rachele; Steven M. McPhail; Tracy L. Washington; Thomas F. Cuddihy

14,591 (2008). The education program cost A


BMC Health Services Research | 2013

Factors influencing research engagement: research interest, confidence and experience in an Australian speech-language pathology workforce

Emma Finch; Petrea Cornwell; Elizabeth C. Ward; Steven M. McPhail

526 (2008) to prevent one cognitively intact patient becoming a faller and A

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Emma Finch

University of Queensland

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Jerome N. Rachele

Australian Catholic University

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Thomas F. Cuddihy

Queensland University of Technology

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Tracy L. Washington

Queensland University of Technology

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Leon Flicker

University of Western Australia

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