M
Martin Basedow
Researcher at University of South Australia
Publications - 6
Citations - 194
Martin Basedow is an academic researcher from University of South Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medical record. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 148 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin Basedow include Flinders University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Assessing appropriateness of osteoarthritis care using quality indicators: a systematic review.
TL;DR: The quality of OA care as assessed by a meta-analysis of QI pass rates across studies was suboptimal for all treatment domains, indicating the wide divergence between evidence and consensus-based recommended care and practice has been reaffirmed.
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Australian GP management of osteoarthritis following the release of the RACGP guideline for the non-surgical management of hip and knee osteoarthritis
Martin Basedow,Martin Basedow,Helena Williams,E. Michael Shanahan,William B. Runciman,William B. Runciman,William B. Runciman,Adrian Esterman,Adrian Esterman +8 more
TL;DR: GPs generally demonstrated a conservative approach to the treatment of OA, however, the increased recommendations for more potent opioids warrants further investigation.
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Australians with osteoarthritis; the use of and beliefs about complementary and alternative medicines
Martin Basedow,Martin Basedow,William B. Runciman,William B. Runciman,William B. Runciman,Lyn March,Adrian Esterman +6 more
TL;DR: As CAM use is a key component of the self-management strategies for a substantial proportion of Australians with OA, users need to be more fully informed about evidence of efficacy.
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Australian general practitioner attitudes to clinical practice guidelines and some implications for translating osteoarthritis care into practice.
TL;DR: General practitioner attitudes towards CPGs, in general and specifically for osteoarthritis (OA), with the implications for translating OA care into practice are explored.
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Australians with osteoarthritis: satisfaction with health care providers and the perceived helpfulness of treatments and information sources
TL;DR: The study showed that although patients with OA were generally satisfied with their health care providers, there was notable variation in the perceived helpfulness of therapeutic options.