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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12613001231730
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
30/10/2013
Date registered
8/11/2013
Date last updated
30/10/2015
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Evaluation of weekend allied health services on acute medical / surgical wards
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Scientific title
Do additional weekend allied health services improve efficiency and safety of patient care for acute medical / surgical patients compared to weekday-only services
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Secondary ID [1]
283100
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nil
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
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Trial acronym
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
adults who are acute medical and surgical inpatients
289939
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Condition category
Condition code
Public Health
290314
290314
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0
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Health service research
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Current physiotherapy, occupational therapy, social work, nutrition and speech pathology weekend allied health service delivery. Services delivered are the same as those done on weekdays, although the intensity of weekend services is lower (fewer hours per ward) than weekday services. Services may include mobilization, chest physiotherapy, discharge planning, assessment and prescription of aids and equipment, swallowing assessment, dietary analysis and prescription, and counselling. The duration of this intervention is 6 months: the current model of weekend allied health service delivery will be rolled-in across 6 acute medical and surgical units at Dandenong Hospital, 6 at Western Hospital and 5 at Royal Melbourne Hospital one-by-one on a monthly basis.
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Intervention code [1]
287817
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Treatment: Other
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Comparator / control treatment
No weekend allied health service delivery. The duration of this intervention is 7 months at Dandenong and Western Hospitals, and 6 at Royal Melbourne, as it includes the a month each of gradual removal of services, plus one month with no weekend services in any of the 17 trial wards.
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Control group
Active
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
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Length of hospital stay. This will be analysed as mean length of stay and the proportion of patients who stay longer than their Australian Refined Diagnosis Related Group average “inlier” length of stay according to data published from the previous year.
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Assessment method [1]
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Timepoint [1]
290349
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on patient discharge from acute hospital ward.
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Primary outcome [2]
290350
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Number of unplanned hospital readmissions
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Assessment method [2]
290350
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Timepoint [2]
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at 28 days post patient discharge from hospital.
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Primary outcome [3]
290351
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Rate of adverse events: In-hospital falls, Code Blue / Medical Emergency Team calls, pulmonary embolus, DVT, unexpected death and hospital acquired pressure area, or ICU admission from the ward. These will be analysed as any adverse event and also adverse events within each sub-category. Falls will be analysed as total falls, falls resulting in any injury, and falls resulting in fracture, brain injury, or death.
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Assessment method [3]
290351
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Timepoint [3]
290351
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at point of patient discharge or transfer from the study ward.
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Secondary outcome [1]
304343
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Number of complaints emanating from targeted wards (total and allied health specific) as captured through the hospital RiskMan database
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Assessment method [1]
304343
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Timepoint [1]
304343
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monthly data extraction over the 7 month trial period
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Secondary outcome [2]
304344
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Number of compliments emanating from targeted wards (total and allied health specific) are captured through the hospital RiskMan database
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Assessment method [2]
304344
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Timepoint [2]
304344
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monthly data extraction over the 7 month trial period
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Secondary outcome [3]
304345
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Patient discharge destination
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Assessment method [3]
304345
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Timepoint [3]
304345
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at patient discharge from the study ward
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Secondary outcome [4]
304346
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Patient satisfaction using Victorian Patient Satisfaction Survey - Overall satisfaction domain (on a randomly selected subset of participants)
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Assessment method [4]
304346
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Timepoint [4]
304346
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on day of patient discharge from the study ward
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Secondary outcome [5]
304347
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Patient functional independence using Modified Barthel Index (on a randomly selected subset of participants)
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Assessment method [5]
304347
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Timepoint [5]
304347
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on day of patient discharge from the study ward
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Secondary outcome [6]
304348
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Staff absenteeism (medical, nursing, allied health)
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Assessment method [6]
304348
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Timepoint [6]
304348
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monthly data extraction over 7 month trial period
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
Patients admitted to participating acute medical / surgical wards at Dandenong Hospital, Western Hospital or Royal Melbourne Hospital during trial period
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Minimum age
18
Years
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Maximum age
No limit
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Sex
Both males and females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
Data from patients who are exposed to both control and intervention conditions will be excluded from the analyses.
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
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Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
As this is a stepped-wedge cluster RCT, patients will not be individually randomised. Extensive consultation with the managers and clinicians at participating sites has resulted in a list of wards agreeing to participate in this trial. Placement of each ward into the ward number location will be determined at random by an investigator blinded to ward identity.
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
One investigator will develop pseudonyms for each ward involved in the study. Another investigator, blinded to the true identity of each pseudonym, will use a random number generator in Microsoft Excel to allocate ward number locations to each pseudonym. The first investigator will then be able to reveal which pseudonym represented which ward.
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Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
The people assessing the outcomes
The people analysing the results/data
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Intervention assignment
Other
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Other design features
The design of this trial is a roll-in stepped wedge cluster randomised trial as described by Haines, T, O'Brien, L, McDermott, F, Markham, D, Mitchell, D, Watterson, D, and Skinner, E (2013) A novel research design can aid disinvestment/reallocation from existing health technologies with uncertain effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and/or safety. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology (in press)
Qualitative outcomes:
A small, cross-disciplinary group of health professionals (4-6 per ward) will be sought to provide input on describing the current role of weekend allied health services on their ward, on what they perceive current key demands for allied health services on the weekend are, to help determine what a new model of weekend allied health service should look like on their ward, and to help describe the impact that changing the model of weekend allied health service has had on staff workload and patient care during the trial. This information will be collected at group-interviews. interviews will be conducted with staff members from each ward prior to the trial, and again at the mid-trial and post-trial timepoints. The aim is to explore their satisfaction with and experiences of the different weekend allied health service delivery models. We will also explore differing workplace pressures both during the weekend and on working days experienced under the different models, and also workers' perspectives on and response to being involved in a research program undertaken with a disinvestment focus
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Safety/efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
Stepped-wedge cluster RCT: If the non-inferiority null hypothesis is to be rejected, the upper limit of the CI around the observed difference should be less than the non-inferiority margin. Linear mixed model analyses will be used to construct the 95% confidence intervals that compare effectiveness and safety outcomes between groups. These models will nest patients within wards, treating both as random factors, to account for the clustered nature of this data. “Weekend allied health service delivery model provided” will be treated as a fixed factor. Data distributions will be examined (+/- transformations as indicated) as a part of model building. Data from patients who are exposed to both control and intervention conditions within each phase will be excluded from the analyses. Both non-inferiority and superiority analyses will be conducted. Interim analyses will be conducted as monthly outcome data becomes available to determine if the non-inferiority threshold has been crossed. Data will be analysed at a site-specific level (relevant to this specific trial registration) and in a pre-planned meta-analysis across 6 studies (including this one) being conducted as a part of this research program.
The economic analysis will be a cost-effectiveness analysis from the hospital perspective that examines the incremental cost per patient treated. These costs will include the “total cost” of patients during their admission plus additional costs from an unplanned admission within 28 days. The primary analysis will examine data from all patients, while a secondary analysis will focus on patients present on a weekend. Data from patients who are transferred between wards in different study periods (ie. one without access to allied health services, one with access to allied health services) will be excluded from the analyses as will data from patients who remain within the same ward over two or more weekends if they are allowed to access weekend allied health services during one weekend, and not allowed to access allied health services on another.
A framework approach will be used for the analysis of qualitative data collected as a part of this study
The sample size in this study is governed by the patient through-put of the participating wards over the trial period. Current data from study wards indicates there will be approximately 7308 patients in total.
We used the approach for conducting power analyses for stepped wedge trials advocated by Hussey and Hughes based upon the Wald statistic. Using this approach, this trial has 96% power, given a 0.03 absolute increase (10% relative increase) non-inferiority margin from 0.30 (40%) for the proportion of patients who exceed their diagnosis specific “inlier” average length of stay.
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Completed
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/02/2014
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Actual
1/02/2014
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/09/2014
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Actual
1/09/2014
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
7300
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Accrual to date
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Final
7909
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Recruitment in Australia
Recruitment state(s)
VIC
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Recruitment hospital [1]
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Dandenong Hospital - Dandenong
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Recruitment hospital [2]
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Western Hospital - Footscray
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Recruitment hospital [3]
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Royal Melbourne Hospital - City campus - Parkville
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
287855
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Government body
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Name [1]
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National Health and Medical Research Council - Partnership Project Grant
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Address [1]
287855
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GPO Box 1421
Canberra ACT 2601
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Country [1]
287855
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Australia
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Primary sponsor type
Government body
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Name
Department of Health, Victoria
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Address
GPO Box 4057
Level 16, 50 Lonsdale Street
Melbourne VIC 3000
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Country
Australia
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
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None
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Name [1]
286584
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Address [1]
286584
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Country [1]
286584
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
289795
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Monash Health Human Research Ethics Committee B
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Ethics committee address [1]
289795
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Research Directorate Monash Health Monash Medical Centre 246 Clayton Road CLAYTON VIC 3168
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Ethics committee country [1]
289795
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
289795
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30/08/2013
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Approval date [1]
289795
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28/11/2013
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Ethics approval number [1]
289795
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EC00383
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Summary
Brief summary
Provision of allied health services over 7 days per week as opposed to 5 days per week for medical and surgical hospital inpatients is a practice inconsistently applied across health services in Australia. Presently, no evidence from randomised trials is available to guide service delivery for this population. These services have developed incrementally and in an ad hoc process at Monash, Western and Melbourne Health, in a similar experience to other health services around the state. It is possible that this is wasting resources that could be used for other purposes within these organisations. This study aims to examine whether removal and provision of weekend allied health services on general medical and surgical wards has an impact on length of stay on those wards, other indicators of quality and safety of service provision, and staff satisfaction. A novel research methodology will be applied using a stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial design to both incrementally remove existing services, then reintroduce services in a structured, stakeholder driven process (the 2nd phase is registered as a separate trial on ANZCTR). At Monash and Western Health, existing weekend allied health services will be incrementally removed across 6 wards over a 7 month period (5 wards over 6 months at Melbourne Health). Outcomes will be collected predominantly through existing data collection processes, although additional data will be collected through staff group and key informant interviews, and random sampling of patients.
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Trial website
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Trial related presentations / publications
Haines, T, O'Brien, L, McDermott, F, Markham, D, Mitchell, D, Watterson, D, and Skinner, E (2013) A novel research design can aid disinvestment/reallocation from existing health technologies with uncertain effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and/or safety. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology (in press)
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Public notes
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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A/Prof Terry Haines
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Address
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Allied Health Research Unit
Monash Health
Kingston Centre
400 Warrigal Road
Cheltenham VIC 3195
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Country
42486
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Australia
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Phone
42486
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+61392651822
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Fax
42486
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Email
42486
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
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Terry Haines
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Address
42487
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Allied Health Research Unit
Monash Health
Kingston Centre
400 Warrigal Road
Cheltenham VIC 3195
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Country
42487
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Australia
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Phone
42487
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+61392651822
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Fax
42487
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Email
42487
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
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Terry Haines
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Address
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Allied Health Research Unit
Monash Health
Kingston Centre
400 Warrigal Road
Cheltenham VIC 3195
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Country
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Australia
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Phone
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+61392651822
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Fax
42488
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Email
42488
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[email protected]
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No information has been provided regarding IPD availability
What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
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