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Jodie Bailie

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  57
Citations -  530

Jodie Bailie is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 44 publications receiving 398 citations. Previous affiliations of Jodie Bailie include Charles Darwin University.

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Determinants of access to chronic illness care: a mixed-methods evaluation of a national multifaceted chronic disease package for Indigenous Australians.

TL;DR: Strategies to improve access to chronic illness care for Indigenous Australians need to be tailored to local circumstances and address the range of dimensions of access on both the demand and supply sides.
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Improving preventive health care in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander primary care settings

TL;DR: While specific strategies to improve the quality of preventive care need to be tailored to local context, these findings reinforce the requirement for multi-level action across the system.
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Comparing and contrasting ‘innovation platforms’ with other forms of professional networks for strengthening primary healthcare systems for Indigenous Australians

TL;DR: This paper compares and contrast the concept of innovation platforms with other types of networks that can be used in efforts to strengthen primary healthcare systems, such as communities of practice, practice-based research networks and quality improvement collaboratives.
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Follow‐up of Indigenous‐specific health assessments ‐ a socioecological analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe patterns of uptake of Indigenous-specifi c health assessments and associated follow-up items, and examine the barriers and enablers to delivery and billing of followup over the first three years of implementation of the Indigenous Chronic Disease Package (ICDP).
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System-Level Action Required for Wide-Scale Improvement in Quality of Primary Health Care: Synthesis of Feedback from an Interactive Process to Promote Dissemination and Use of Aggregated Quality of Care Data.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe stakeholders' perceptions of the barriers and enablers to addressing gaps in Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander chronic illness care and child health, and identify key drivers for improvement.