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Dive into the research topics where Val J. Robertson is active.

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Featured researches published by Val J. Robertson.


Anz Journal of Surgery | 2006

NO REST FOR THE WOUNDED: EARLY AMBULATION AFTER HIP SURGERY ACCELERATES RECOVERY

Leonie B. Oldmeadow; Elton R Edwards; Lara A Kimmel; Eva Kipen; Val J. Robertson; Michael Bailey

Background:  Level 3 evidence‐based guidelines recommend first walk after hip fracture surgery within 48 h. Early mobilization is resource and effort intensive and needs rigorous investigation to justify implementation. This study uses a prospective randomized method to investigate the effect of early ambulation (EA) after hip fracture surgery on patient and hospital outcomes.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2005

Pilot study using transcutaneous electrical stimulation (interferential current) to treat chronic treatment-resistant constipation and soiling in children.

Janet Chase; Val J. Robertson; Bridget R. Southwell; John M. Hutson; Susie Gibb

Background:  Chronic constipation in children may have organic or behavioral causes. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of treatment with transcutaneous electrical stimulation (using interferential current) in children with chronic treatment‐resistant constipation with proven organic disorders.


Brain Injury | 2005

The high-level mobility assessment tool (HiMAT) for traumatic brain injury. Part 2: Content validity and discriminability

Gavin Williams; Val J. Robertson; K. M. Greenwood; Patricia A. Goldie; Meg E. Morris

Primary objectives: (i) To assess the measurement properties of the high-level mobility assessment tool (HiMAT) for people with traumatic brain injury (TBI), (ii) to measure the extent to which the HiMAT is a uni-dimensional, discriminative hierarchical outcome scale. Research design: The content validity was assessed using a three-stage process of investigating internal consistency, factor analysis and Rasch analysis. The uni-dimensionality of the HiMAT items was also tested. Discriminability was investigated by correlating raw and logit scores obtained from Rasch analysis. The study was conducted at a major rehabilitation facility using a convenience sample of 103 adults with TBI. Main outcomes and results: The internal consistency for the high-level items was very high (Cronbachs α = 0.99). Principal axis factoring identified several balance items as belonging to a second factor not related to high-level mobility, hence these items were excluded. Rasch analysis identified several misfitting items, such as walking around a figure of eight and stopping from a run, which were also excluded. Logit scores were used to exclude clustered and, therefore, redundant items. Raw scores correlated very highly (r = 0.98) with logit scores, indicating that raw scores provided good discriminability and were suitable for use by clinicians. Conclusion: The HiMAT, which assesses higher-level mobility requirements of people with TBI for return to pre-accident social, leisure and sporting activities, is a uni-dimensional and discriminative scale for quantifying therapy outcomes.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2009

Decreased colonic transit time after transcutaneous interferential electrical stimulation in children with slow transit constipation

Melanie C.C. Clarke; Janet Chase; Susie Gibb; Val J. Robertson; Anthony G. Catto-Smith; John M. Hutson; Bridget R. Southwell

PURPOSE Idiopathic slow transit constipation (STC) describes a clinical syndrome characterised by intractable constipation. It is diagnosed by demonstrating delayed colonic transit on nuclear transit studies (NTS). A possible new treatment is interferential therapy (IFT), which is a form of electrical stimulation that involves the transcutaneous application of electrical current. This study aimed to ascertain the effect of IFT on colonic transit time. METHODS Children with STC diagnosed by NTS were randomised to receive either 12 real or placebo IFT sessions for a 4-week period. After a 2-month break, they all received 12 real IFT sessions-again for a 4-week period. A NTS was repeated 6 to 8 weeks after cessation of each treatment period where able. Geometric centres (GCs) of activity were calculated for all studies at 6, 24, 30, and 48 hours. Pretreatment and posttreatment GCs were compared by statistical parametric analysis (paired t test). RESULTS Thirty-one pretreatment, 22 postreal IFT, and 8 postplacebo IFT studies were identified in 26 children (mean age, 12.7 years; 16 male). Colonic transit was significantly faster in children given real treatment when compared to their pretreatment NTS at 24 (mean CG, 2.39 vs 3.04; P < or = .0001), 30 (mean GC, 2.79 vs 3.47; P = .0039), and 48 (mean GC, 3.34 vs 4.32; P = .0001) hours. By contrast, those children who received placebo IFT had no significant change in colonic transit. CONCLUSIONS Transcutaneous electrical stimulation with interferential therapy can significantly speed up colonic transit in children with slow transit constipation.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2009

Daily transabdominal electrical stimulation at home increased defecation in children with slow-transit constipation: a pilot study

Khairul A. Ismail; Janet Chase; Susie Gibb; Melanie C.C. Clarke; Anthony G. Catto-Smith; Val J. Robertson; John M. Hutson; Bridget R. Southwell

PURPOSE Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TES) (3 sessions/wk) over the abdomen stimulated bowel functions in a randomized controlled trial. This pilot study assessed whether daily TES at home with a safe, portable machine would be possible and more efficacious than trial results. METHODS Eleven patients (6 male/5 female; mean age, 14 years; range, 12-18 years) with slow-transit constipation who relapsed or responded poorly in the trial were recruited (11 +/- 5 months later). An EPM-IF-4160 (Fuji Dynamics, Hong Kong) portable machine (sine waveform, 4 kHz carrier frequency, 80-160 Hz beat frequency, intensity <33 mA) delivering interferential current (2 electrodes over epigastrium + 2 over kidneys) was applied 1 hour daily at home. Continence diaries were kept for 1 month before and 2 months during treatment. RESULTS All children completed more than 1 month of treatment after baseline recording. Defecation increased in 9 of 11 children, and soiling decreased in 4 of 11 children. There was a significant increase in total episodes of defecation per week (mean +/- SD, 2.5 +/- 2.1 vs 6.7 +/- 4.4; P = .008) and a nonsignificant decrease in soiling (3.8 +/- 1.6 vs 1.1 +/- 0.5 episodes/wk, P = .1). Daily stimulation does not affect abdominal pain. No adverse events occurred. CONCLUSIONS Daily TES at home is safe and significantly improved bowel function in children who did not respond to 3 times per week of TES. Home TES may be a novel treatment of intractable slow transit constipation, avoiding hospital visits.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2011

Long-term effects of transabdominal electrical stimulation in treating children with slow-transit constipation

Leanne C.Y. Leong; Yee Ian Yik; Anthony G. Catto-Smith; Val J. Robertson; John M. Hutson; Bridget R. Southwell

AIMS Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TES) was used to treat children with slow-transit constipation (STC) for 1 to 2 months in a randomized controlled trial during 2006 to 2008. We aimed to determine long-term outcomes, hypothesizing that TES produced sustained improvement. METHODS Physiotherapists administered 1 to 2 months of TES to 39 children (20 minutes, 3 times a week). Fifteen continued to self-administer TES (30 minutes daily for more than 2 months). Mean long-term follow-up of 30 of 39 patients was conducted using questionnaire review 3.5 years (range 1.9-4.7 years) later. Outcomes were evaluated by confidence intervals or paired t test. RESULTS Seventy-three percent of patients perceived improvement, lasting more than 2 years in 33% and less than 6 months in 25% to 33%. Defecation frequency improved in 30%. Stools got wetter in 62% after stimulation and then drier again. Soiling improved in 75% and abdominal pain in 59%. Laxative use stopped in 52%, and 43% with appendicostomies stopped washouts. Soiling/Holschneider continence score improved in 81% (P = .0002). Timed sits switched to urge-initiated defecations in 80% patients. Eighty percent of relapsed patients elected to have home stimulation. CONCLUSION TES holds promise for STC children. Improvement occurred in two thirds of children, lasting more than 2 years in one third, whereas symptoms recurred after 6 months in one third of children.


Physiotherapy Theory and Practice | 2009

A national study of the availability and use of electrophysical agents by Australian physiotherapists

Lucinda S Chipchase; Marie Williams; Val J. Robertson

Electrophysical agents (EPAs) are a core part of physiotherapy practice and entry level education. With the increase in the number of EPAs over time, their availability and use in contemporary physiotherapy practice is an important consideration when determining entry level curricula. Thus, the aim of the study was to ascertain the current availability and usage of EPAs in Australian physiotherapy practice. A purpose-designed questionnaire was mailed to all registered physiotherapists in Australia. A response rate of 27% was obtained (n=3,538). Nonresponder analyses indicated that the results were representative of the total population of Australian physiotherapists. Over 70% of respondents had access to ultrasound, cold packs/ice, heat packs, electrical stimulation for sensory stimulation, and interferential therapy. Two main groups of EPAs were used relatively frequently. The first group was used daily or monthly by 60% of respondents (ultrasound, hot packs, and cold packs/ice), and a second group (electromyographic and pressure biofeedback, interferential therapy, and electrical stimulation for sensory stimulation) was used on a daily or monthly basis by between 30% and 45% of the sample. A group of EPAs, including ultraviolet light, microwave, and shortwave diathermy, was not used by over 90% of the sample. The study has provided contemporary national data on EPA availability and use in Australia.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2012

Transabdominal electrical stimulation increases colonic propagating pressure waves in paediatric slow transit constipation

Melanie C.C. Clarke; Anthony G. Catto-Smith; Sebastian K. King; Philip G. Dinning; Ian J. Cook; Janet Chase; Susan Gibb; Val J. Robertson; Di Simpson; John M. Hutson; Bridget R. Southwell

BACKGROUND AND AIMS In slow-transit constipation (STC) pancolonic manometry shows significantly reduced antegrade propagating sequences (PS) and no response to physiological stimuli. This study aimed to determine whether transcutaneous electrical stimulation using interferential current (IFC) applied to the abdomen increased colonic PS in STC children. METHODS Eight children (8-18 years) with confirmed STC had 24-h colonic manometry using a water-perfused, 8-channel catheter with 7.5 cm sidehole distance introduced via appendix stomas. They then received 12 sessions (20 min/3× per week) of IFC stimulation (2 paraspinal and 2 abdominal electrodes), applied at a comfortable intensity (<40 mA, carrier frequency 4 kHz, varying beat frequency 80-150 Hz). Colonic manometry was repeated 2 (n=6) and 7 (n=2) months after IFC. RESULTS IFC significantly increased frequency of total PS/24h (mean ± SEM, pre 78 ± 34 vs post 210 ± 62, p=0.008, n=7), antegrade PS/24h (43 ± 16 vs 112 ± 20, p=0.01) and high amplitude PS (HAPS/24h, 5 ± 2:10 ± 3, p=0.04), with amplitude, velocity, or propagating distance unchanged. There was increased activity on waking and 4/8 ceased using antegrade continence enemas. CONCLUSIONS AND INFERENCES Transcutaneous IFC increased colonic PS frequency in STC children with effects lasting 2-7 months. IFC may provide a treatment for children with treatment-resistant STC.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2009

Slow-transit constipation in children: our experience

John M. Hutson; Janet Chase; Melanie C.C. Clarke; Sebastian K. King; Jonathan Sutcliffe; Susie Gibb; Anthony G. Catto-Smith; Val J. Robertson; Bridget R. Southwell

Constipation is a common problem in children, with childhood prevalence estimated at between 1 and 30%. It accounts for a significant percentage of referrals to paediatricians and paediatric gastroenterologists. It commonly runs in families, suggesting either an underlying genetic predisposition or common environmental factors, such as dietary exposure. The peak age for presentation of constipation is shortly after toilet training, when passage of hard stools can cause pain on defecation, which then triggers holding-on behaviour in the child. At the time of the next call to stool the toddler may try to prevent defecation by contraction of the pelvic floor muscles and anal sphincter. Unless the holding-on behaviour is quickly corrected by interventions to soften faeces and prevent further pain, the constipation can very rapidly become severe and chronic. Until recently, this mechanism was thought to be the only significant primary cause of constipation in childhood. In this review, we will summarise recent evidence to suggest that severe chronic constipation in children may also be due to slowed colonic transit.


The Australian journal of physiotherapy | 2003

Taking charge of change: A new career structure in physiotherapy

Val J. Robertson; Leonie B. Oldmeadow; Jean E Cromie; Margaret J. Grant

Once again physiotherapy is at a crossroads in Australia, or rapidly approaching it. And once again the issue concerns our identity. This is nothing new in physiotherapy (Rothstein 2003). But recent changes in the Australian health care and education systems demand that we consider the future carefully and develop and implement a career structure that supports physiotherapists.

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John M. Hutson

Royal Children's Hospital

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Janet Chase

Royal Children's Hospital

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Susie Gibb

Royal Children's Hospital

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