G
Gavin D. Leslie
Researcher at Curtin University
Publications - 162
Citations - 2763
Gavin D. Leslie is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intensive care & Health care. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 157 publications receiving 2250 citations. Previous affiliations of Gavin D. Leslie include University of Western Australia & Cooperative Research Centre.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Health-related quality of life and physical recovery after a critical illness: a multi-centre randomised controlled trial of a home-based physical rehabilitation program
Doug Elliott,Sharon McKinley,Jennifer A. Alison,Leanne M. Aitken,Madeleine King,Gavin D. Leslie,Patricia Kenny,Penny Taylor,Rachel Foley,Elizabeth Burmeister +9 more
TL;DR: This individualised eight-week home-based physical rehabilitation program did not increase the underlying rate of recovery in this sample, with both groups of critically ill survivors improving their physical function over the 26 weeks of follow-up.
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Using a web-based survey tool to undertake a Delphi study: Application for nurse education research
TL;DR: The experience and value of using web-survey software to conduct an eDelphi study to develop Australian critical care course graduate practice standards is reported on, with high response rates and an increased level of data quality.
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Nurse resilience: A concept analysis
TL;DR: A concept analysis was undertaken to examine nurse resilience using a priori selected analysis framework and key attributes of nurse resilience were social support, self-efficacy, work-life balance/self-care, humour, optimism, and being realistic.
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Determining risk factors for surgical wound dehiscence: a literature review.
TL;DR: This review provides an overview of the available research and provides a basis for more rigorous analysis of factors that contribute to surgical wound dehiscence.
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A review of the nursing care of enteral feeding tubes in critically ill adults: part I
TL;DR: Generally, there was little high quality evidence to support practice recommendations leaving significant scope for further research by nurses in the management of patients with enteral tubes.