S
Shannon Clark
Researcher at University of Canberra
Publications - 18
Citations - 205
Shannon Clark is an academic researcher from University of Canberra. The author has contributed to research in topics: District nurse & Health policy. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 17 publications receiving 184 citations. Previous affiliations of Shannon Clark include Australian National University & University of Toronto.
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How surgeons design treatment recommendations in orthopaedic surgery
TL;DR: This paper examines how orthopaedic surgeons skilfully design treatment recommendations to display awareness of what individual patients are anticipating or seeking, and suggests limits to those efforts, and shows how patients are co-implicated in their accomplishment.
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Aged care nurse practitioners in Australia: evidence for the development of their role
TL;DR: Evidence is reported on from systematic reviews and international studies that show that nurse practitioners improve healthcare outcomes, particularly for hard to service populations, and also maps out the limited Australian evidence on the impact of nurse practitioners' care in aged care settings.
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Clinicians' accounts of communication with patients in end-of-life care contexts: A systematic review.
Brett Scholz,Liza Goncharov,Nathan Emmerich,Vinh Nhat Lu,Michael Chapman,Shannon Clark,Tracey Wilson,Diana Slade,Imogen Mitchell +8 more
TL;DR: Clinicians need more training to address the lack of skills to overcome interactional difficulties and attention is also needed to address issues in the organisational contexts in which such communication occurs.
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Contesting facts about wind farms in Australia and the legitimacy of adverse health effects
TL;DR: It is shown how stake, interest and legitimacy are particularly relevant for participants’ competing descriptions about the ‘facts’ of wind turbine health effects and how people build and undermine divergent arguments about wind-farm health effects.
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‘I’ve heard wonderful things about you’: how patients compliment surgeons
TL;DR: Using conversation analysis, it is demonstrated that both the placement and design of compliments are consequential for how surgeons hear and respond to them, and of the resources patients use to pursue desired outcomes in encounters with healthcare professionals.