thomas.dakin@sydney.edu.au

About Thomas Dakin

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far Thomas Dakin has created 418 blog entries.

Understanding overuse of diagnostic imaging for patients with low back pain in the Emergency Department: a qualitative study – Johan Blokzijl et al.

2023-01-11T16:20:27+11:00Back pain, Imaging, Low back pain, Publications|

Overuse of lumbar imaging in the Emergency Department is a well-recognised healthcare challenge. Studies to date have not provided robust evidence that available interventions can reduce overuse. For an intervention aimed at reducing imaging to be effective, insight into how both patients and clinicians view [...]

Effect of COVID-19 on management of patients with low back pain in the emergency department – Sweekriti Sharma et al.

2024-02-11T15:19:49+11:00Back pain, COVID-19, Low back pain, Publications|

Patients presenting to Emergency Department (ED) with non-specific low back pain can receive more unnecessary, intensive and costly care than is recommended. The COVID-19 pandemic has provided an unprecedented opportunity to examine how health systems prioritise necessary care that provides clear benefits to patients. The [...]

Appropriateness of Imaging Decisions for Low Back Pain Presenting to the Emergency Department: A Retrospective Chart Review Study – Adrian Traeger et al.

2023-01-11T16:20:41+11:00Back pain, Imaging, Low back pain, Publications|

Imaging for low back pain is widely regarded as a target for efforts to reduce low value care. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of overuse and underuse of lumbar imaging in the Emergency Department. In this study of emergency care there was evidence of [...]

Management of patients presenting with low back pain to a private hospital emergency department in Melbourne, Australia – Rachelle Buchbinder et al.

2023-01-11T16:20:43+11:00Back pain, Low back pain, Publications|

ecent studies suggest many patients with non-specific low back pain presenting to public hospital EDs receive low-value care. The primary aim was to describe management of patients presenting with low back pain to the ED of a private hospital in Melbourne, Australia, and received a [...]

Evaluation of artificial intelligence clinical applications: Detailed case analyses show value of healthcare ethics approach in identifying patient care issues – Wendy Rogers et al.

2021-07-16T13:19:40+10:00AI, Ethical considerations, Publications|

This paper is one of the first to analyse the ethical implications of specific healthcare artificial intelligence (AI) applications, and the first to provide a detailed analysis of AI-based systems for clinical decision support. AI is increasingly being deployed across multiple domains. In response, a [...]

Getting the timing right: Women’s views on the best time to announce changes to cancer screening policy recommendations – Rachael Dodd et al.

2021-07-16T10:25:50+10:00Cancer, Policy, Publications, Screening|

In December 2017, the Australian National Cervical Screening Program (NCSP) changed from 2-yearly cervical cytology to 5-yearly primary human papillomavirus (HPV) testing, starting at age 25 and with an exit test when aged 70–74. Women showed limited awareness of these changes prior to their implementation. [...]

Reporting of screening and diagnostic AI rarely acknowledges ethical, legal, and social implications: a mass media frame analysis – Emma Frost & Stacy Carter

2021-07-16T10:23:35+10:00AI, Ethical considerations, Media, Publications|

Healthcare is a rapidly expanding area of application for Artificial Intelligence (AI). Although there is considerable excitement about its potential, there are also substantial concerns about the negative impacts of these technologies. Since screening and diagnostic AI tools now have the potential to fundamentally change [...]

Terminology Change for Small Low-Risk Papillary Thyroid Cancer As a Response to Overtreatment: Results from Three Australian Community Juries – Patti Shih et al.

2021-07-16T10:21:39+10:00Citizen's juries, Disease labels, Publications|

The majority of small papillary thyroid cancers (sPTCs) are treated surgically, rather than by active surveillance. Patient and clinician preference for surgery may be partially driven by the use of cancer terminology. Some experts propose that changing terminology would better communicate the indolent nature of [...]

Go to Top