K
Kate Paton
Researcher at Royal Children's Hospital
Publications - 9
Citations - 71
Kate Paton is an academic researcher from Royal Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 21 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of a Behavioral Sleep Intervention on New School Entrants' Social Emotional Functioning and Sleep: A Translational Randomized Trial.
Harriet Hiscock,Harriet Hiscock,Jon Quach,Jon Quach,Kate Paton,Rebecca Peat,Lisa Gold,Sarah J Arnup,Kah-Ling Sia,Elizabeth Nicolaou,Melissa Wake +10 more
TL;DR: A brief behavioral sleep intervention, delivered by school nurses to children with behavioral sleep problems, does not improve social emotional functioning and approaches that increase intervention dosage may improve outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Screening for Adverse Childhood Experiences in Children: A Systematic Review.
Sarah J Loveday,Teresa Joanne Keys Hall,Leanne Constable,Kate Paton,Lena Sanci,Sharon Goldfeld,Harriet Hiscock +6 more
TL;DR: There is limited evidence that screening for ACEs improves identification of childhood adversity and may improve referrals, and if the hypothesized benefits of ACEs screening on child and parent mental health are to realize, it is essential to understand the barriers for families taking up referrals.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinicians' perceptions of the Australian Paediatric Mental Health Service System: Problems and solutions.
Kate Paton,Lynn Gillam,Lynn Gillam,Hayley Warren,Melissa Mulraney,Melissa Mulraney,David Coghill,David Coghill,Daryl Efron,Daryl Efron,Michael G. Sawyer,Harriet Hiscock,Harriet Hiscock +12 more
TL;DR: Despite substantial investment by governments, the prevalence of mental health disorders in developed countries remains unchanged over the past 20 years as mentioned in this paper, as 50% of mental disorders are undiagnosed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Strengthening care for children with complex mental health conditions: Views of Australian clinicians
TL;DR: While multiple barriers to optimal care for children with complex mental health conditions exist, clinicians identify several enablers including developing networks with other disciplines and empowering parents to advocate for and co-ordinate care.
Posted ContentDOI
Prioritising interventions for preventing mental health problems for children experiencing adversity: a modified nominal group technique Australian consensus study.
TL;DR: The NGT was found to be an effective method for prioritising evidence-based practice interventions in health settings, engaging local stakeholders, and identifying enablers and barriers to implementation.