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Kylie Johnston

Researcher at University of South Australia

Publications -  50
Citations -  1273

Kylie Johnston is an academic researcher from University of South Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pulmonary rehabilitation & COPD. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 45 publications receiving 968 citations. Previous affiliations of Kylie Johnston include RMIT University & Princess Margaret Hospital for Children.

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Australian and New Zealand Pulmonary Rehabilitation Guidelines.

TL;DR: The aim of the Pulmonary Rehabilitation Guidelines (Guidelines) is to provide evidence‐based recommendations for the practice of pulmonary rehabilitation specific to Australian and New Zealand healthcare contexts.
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Assessing sedentary behavior with the GENEActiv: introducing the sedentary sphere.

TL;DR: The Sedentary Sphere enables determination of the most likely posture from the wrist-worn GENEActiv, evidenced by the near-perfect agreement with the activPAL.
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Barriers and enablers to physical activity participation in patients with COPD: a systematic review.

TL;DR: The findings from this review may assist health professionals, patients, care givers and the wider community to develop effective strategies to promote participation in PA and PR among people with COPD.
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Barriers to, and facilitators for, referral to pulmonary rehabilitation in COPD patients from the perspective of Australian general practitioners: a qualitative study.

TL;DR: Behaviour change strategies which directly target barriers to referral and incorporate facilitators should make up the key components of interventions to improve referral to PR by general practitioners who care for people with COPD.
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Barriers to and enablers of physical activity in patients with COPD following a hospital admission: a qualitative study.

TL;DR: There are significant barriers which hinder the ability of people with COPD to undertake and continue participation in physical activity and pulmonary rehabilitation, and it is clear that health professionals dealing with people suffering from COPD need to actively recognize and address barriers to physical activityand pulmonary rehabilitation.