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Nikki Percival
Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney
Publications - 13
Citations - 149
Nikki Percival is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health promotion. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 108 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Continuous Quality Improvement and Comprehensive Primary Health Care: A Systems Framework to Improve Service Quality and Health Outcomes
Janya McCalman,Ross Bailie,Roxanne Bainbridge,Roxanne Bainbridge,Karen McPhail-Bell,Nikki Percival,Deborah A. Askew,Ruth Fagan,Komla Tsey +8 more
TL;DR: A systems framework is provided that includes strategies and conditions to facilitate evidence-based and local decision making by primary health-care services and describes the integration of CQI vertically to improve linkages with governments and community members and horizontally with other sectors to influence the social and cultural determinants of health.
Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluating Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health promotion activities using audit and feedback.
Lynette R. O'Donoghue,Nikki Percival,Alison Laycock,Janya McCalman,Komla Tsey,Christine Armit,Ross Bailie +6 more
TL;DR: It was found that facilitated participatory processes were important for the collection of locally relevant information and for contributing to improving PHC practitioners' knowledge and understanding of best practice health promotion.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic review of approaches to improve practice, detection and treatment of unhealthy alcohol use in primary health care: a role for continuous quality improvement.
Monika Dzidowska,K. S. Kylie Lee,K. S. Kylie Lee,Claire E. Wylie,Jodie Bailie,Nikki Percival,James H. Conigrave,Noel Hayman,Noel Hayman,Noel Hayman,Katherine M. Conigrave,Katherine M. Conigrave +11 more
TL;DR: Utilizing CQI methods in implementation research would appear to be well-suited to drive improvements in service delivery for unhealthy alcohol use, although the body of literature describing such studies is still small.
Journal ArticleDOI
Application of the i-PARIHS framework for enhancing understanding of interactive dissemination to achieve wide-scale improvement in Indigenous primary healthcare
Alison Laycock,Gillian Harvey,Nikki Percival,Frances C. Cunningham,Jodie Bailie,Veronica Matthews,Kerry Copley,Louise Patel,Ross Bailie +8 more
TL;DR: Findings broaden the notion of facilitation and support the utility of the i-PARIHS framework for planning participatory knowledge translation research at a system level and exploring facilitation in system-level interventions.