CP-Achieve Webinar Series
Date and time
Location
Online event
Podcast: Australian Centre for Health, Independence, Economic Participation and Value Enhanced Care for adolescents and young adults with CP
About this event
Join us on January 31st at 5pm!
1. Register your interest on Eventbrite
2. On January 31st at 5pm: CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE EVENT
In this 30-minute webinar, Stephanie will be speaking about Implementation Research, looking at getting what we know we should be doing into practice!
Stephanie is a qualitative and mixed methods health services researcher currently embedded with Australian Genomics at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne. At MCRI she is working with clinicians, service leads and community advocates leading research into the implementation of genomics in clinical practice. Other active research interests include international collaborations examining areas such as professional identity, interprofessional working and coproduction.
FAQ:
What is CP-Achieve?
The Centre of Research Excellence: Australian Centre for Health, Independence, Economic Participation and Value Enhanced Care for adolescents and young adults with cerebral palsy (CP-Achieve). CP-ACHIEVE is a five year, NHMRC funded Centre of Research Excellence project that supports collaborative research and development in cerebral palsy research. The team consists of a multidisciplinary group of adolescents and young adults with cerebral palsy, families, clinicians, researchers and students that are all working together to fulfil CP-Achieve’s aims. CP-Achieve commenced in February 2020 and will finish in 2025.
What does CP-Achieve do?
CP-ACHIEVE fosters health care access and promotes healthy lifestyle interventions to improve community participation. Two overarching aims guide the research program: to improve physical and mental health, and to build supportive family, community and health service environments. The outcomes of CP-Achieve are to establish rigorous population-based data about the scope of health and participation problems, best practices and guidelines for health and disability service providers, means to empower adolescents and young adults with cerebral palsy to use health and community services, and models of cost-effectiveness to inform policy and practice, and drive value-enhanced care.