The Australian Health Research Alliance (AHRA) Wound Care Initiative was a national collaboration involving the Department of Health, Wounds Australia, health and medical research teams, acute care services and primary healthcare. The initiative aimed to create an integrated approach to wound management that would deliver improved patient outcomes and reduce the health and economic cost of wounds in Australia.
Wounds Australia partnered with Health Translation Queensland and the Western Australian Health Translation Network (WAHTN) to oversee the initiative.
The AHRA Wound Care Initiative involved four projects:
In addition to co-leading the overall initiative, Health Translation Queensland partnered with the Queensland University of Technology to deliver project three and four of the AHRA Wound Care Initiative.
Project three aimed to support health professionals build their knowledge and capacity in evidence based wound care through improved access to better integrated training and education.
To achieve this, the following project objectives were attained:
The Wounds Education and Training Directory launched in February 2023 and can be accessed here.
The project team's paper Building wound care capability: The development of an education and training directory for health professionals in Australia was published in the Wound Practice & Research: Journal of the Australian Wound Management Association in September 2022. Read more here.
Project team:
Project four aimed to develop a coordinated program of research, aimed at supporting continuous improvement in wound care nationally.
The objective of stream four activity was to:
The Wounds Research Directory launched in February 2023 and can be accessed here.
Project team:
Project four scoping review protocols:
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