NobleBlocks

Queensland Department of the Premier and Cabinet

funderBrisbane, Australia

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Queensland Department of the Premier and Cabinet (Australia). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
22
Citations
109
h-index
2
i10-index
2
Also known as
Department of the Premier and CabinetQueensland Department of the Premier and Cabinet

Top-cited papers from Queensland Department of the Premier and Cabinet

Prevalence and predictors of advance directives in <scp>A</scp>ustralia
Ben White, Cheryl Tilse, Jill Wilson, Linda Rosenman +3 more
2014· Internal Medicine Journal94doi:10.1111/imj.12549

BACKGROUND: Advance care planning is regarded as integral to better patient outcomes, yet little is known about the prevalence of advance directives (AD) in Australia. AIM: To determine the prevalence of AD in the Australian population. METHODS: A national telephone survey about estate and advance planning. Sample was stratified by age (18-45 and >45 years) and quota sampling occurred based on population size in each state and territory. RESULTS: Fourteen per cent of the Australian population has an AD. There is state variation with people from South Australia and Queensland more likely to have an AD than people from other states. Will making and particularly completion of a financial enduring power of attorney are associated with higher rates of AD completion. Standard demographic variables were of limited use in predicting whether a person would have an AD. CONCLUSIONS: Despite efforts to improve uptake of advance care planning (including AD), barriers remain. One likely trigger for completing an AD and advance care planning is undertaking a wider future planning process (e.g. making a will or financial enduring power of attorney). This presents opportunities to increase advance care planning, but steps are needed to ensure that planning, which occurs outside the health system, is sufficiently informed and supported by health information so that it is useful in the clinical setting. Variations by state could also suggest that redesign of regulatory frameworks (such as a user-friendly and well-publicised form backed by statute) may help improve uptake of AD.

Making and Changing Wills
Cheryl Tilse, Jill Wilson, Ben White, Linda Rosenman +2 more
2016· SAGE Open14doi:10.1177/2158244016631021

Wills are important social, economic, and legal documents. Yet little is known about current will making practices and intentions. A comprehensive national database on the prevalence of will making in Australia was developed to identify who is or is not most likely to draw up a will and triggers for making and changing wills. A national survey of 2,405 adults aged above 18 years was administered by telephone in August and September 2012. Fifty-nine percent of the Australian adult population has a valid will, and the likelihood of will making increases with age and estate value. Efforts to get organized, especially in combination with life stage and asset changes trigger will making; procrastination, rather than a strong resistance, appears to explain not making a will. Understanding will making is timely in the context of predicted significant intergenerational transfers of wealth, changing demographics, and a renewed emphasis on retirement planning.

Books &amp; Bytes: Technologies for The Hybrid Library
Libby Gregory
2000· Serials Review1doi:10.1080/00987913.2000.10764611

The Victorian Association for Library Automation (VALA) held its tenth biennial conference in Melbourne from February 16 –18, 2000. The major themes of the sessions dealt with strategies for keepin...