Please join us on Thursday 19 and Friday 20 October 2023 for the Australian Clinical Registry Annual Scientific Meeting. The theme for this year's event is Innovation for Impact leveraging innovation to increase the impact of clinical quality outcome data to continuously improve Australia’s health.
Program
Day One - Thursday 19 October 2023
Conference Rooms, Ground Floor, 553 St Kilda Road
1:30-5:30PM | Conference Workshop 1 – Data to Action: Leveraging automated interactive reporting for CQR About the workshop | Dr Ahmad Reza Pourghaderi Principal Data Science Lead, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University |
1:30-5:30PM | Conference Workshop 2 – Communication approaches to maximize CQR Impact About the workshop | Ms Claudia Lassetter Communications Manager, Registries, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University |
3:30 - 4:00PM | Afternoon tea | |
5:30-8:00PM | Welcome drinks | The View Hotel 562 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne VIC 3004 Phone (03) 9529 8888 |
Day Two - Friday 20 October 2023
Alfred Hospital Innovation & Edcucation Hub
Plenaries | ||
8:00-9:00AM | Registration – Tea and coffee Poster authors set up their posters | Alfred Hospital Innovation & Education Hub – Foyer Note: accessible via 75 Commercial Road |
9:00-9:15AM | Acknowledgement of Country Opening of ASM ACTA Welcome | Professor Sophia Zoungas Head, School of Public Health & Preventive Medicine at Monash University Professor Christopher Reid Incoming Chair, Australian Clinical Trials Alliance |
9:15-9:30AM | Welcome and Introduction to ASM | Professors Susannah Ahern & Stephen McDonald Co-Chairs, CQR Collaboration Hub and ACTA Registry SIG |
9:30-9:45AM | Secondary use of CQR data – linkage, quality and safety reporting, and future plans | Dr Lance Emerson CEO, Victorian Agency for Health Information |
9:45-10:00AM | Surveillance systems as clinical registries | Professor Allen Cheng Director, Monash Infectious Diseases, Monash University |
10:00-10:15AM | Importance of using Standardised data collection tool to submit data for Quality Assurance and Benchmarking | Shaila Chavan ANZICS Adult Patient Database |
10:15-10:30AM | Digital Enablement : realising the vision and value of eCQRS in NSW | Melissa Tinsley Agency for Clinical Innovation NSW Health |
10:30-10:45AM | Leveraging Hospital data to inform Registries | Deepa Kandasamy Cabrini Health |
10:45-11:10AM | Panel Q&A with invited speakers | |
11.10-11.30AM | Morning Tea and Poster Exhibition | Alfred Hospital Innovation & Education Hub Foyer |
11:30-11:50AM | Update on the Framework for Australian CQRs - ensuring CQRs achieve their aims | Suchit Handa Director, Safety and Quality Improvement Systems Dr Heather Buchan Senior Medical Advisor Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care |
11:50-12:05PM | From research projects to registries – adopting the ACSQHC Framework for Clinical Quality Registries | Maggie Johnson Prostate Cancer Outcomes Registry (PCOR) & National Gynaecological Oncology Registry (NGOR) |
12:05-12:20PM | Innovative Value-based Victorian Lung Cancer Registry pilot study shows preference-based health related quality of life is significantly associated with receipt of guideline concordant care | Associate Professor Susan Harden Victorian Lung Cancer Quality Registry (VLCR) |
12:20-2:40PM | An opportunity for national linkage for CQRs | Caitlin Szigetvari Data Custodian, National Integrated Health Services Information (NIHSI) Miriam Lum On Head, Cardiovascular, Diabetes and Kidney Unit Australian Institute of Health and Welfare |
12:40-1:00PM | Panel Q&A with invited speakers | |
1.00-1.45PM | Lunch and Poster Exhibition | Alfred Hospital Innovation & Education Hub Foyer |
Concurrent Sessions | Stream 1 | Stream 2 |
Venue: Main Auditorium Alfred Health Innovation & Education Hub Access via 75 Commercial Road | Venue: Seminar rooms 1&2 Alfred Centre Level 5, 99 Commercial Road | |
1:45-1:57PM | Implementation of rapid quarterly benchmarking of neonatal intensive care units in the Australian and New Zealand Neonatal Network Prudence Creighton Australian and New Zealand Neonatal Network (ANZNN | Development and validation of a new Patient-Reported Outcome Measure for pain in women with pelvic floor disorders Sheymonti Hoque Monash University |
1:57–2:09PM | Evaluating the accuracy of outlier detection methods when benchmarking sites in clinical registries using a simulation study Jessy Hansen Monash University | YourIVFSuccess: A consumer tool using clinical quality registry data Jade Newman Australia and New Zealand Assisted Reproduction Database (ANZARD) |
2:09-2:21PM | Linking pre-hospital and hospital outcome data in STEMI cases Karen Murdoch Ambulance Victoria | A multi-pronged approach to improving Registry Trials education and awareness Duncan Colyer VCCC Alliance |
2:21-2:33PM | A self-sufficient model of support of a Clinical Qualities Registry by Pharmaceutical Companies (Pharma) Dianna Raad Save Sight Institute | Understanding consumer information needs for the reporting of ANZHFR data Narelle Payne & Jamie Hallen Australian and New Zealand Hip Fracture Registry (ANZHFR) |
2:33-2:45PM | Using REDCap to achieve real-time reporting and benchmarking for Clinical Quality Registries (CQRs): an example from the Australian Dementia Network (ADNeT) Registry Alan Tsui Australian Dementia Network (ADNeT) Registry | Evaluating the Australian Breast Device Registry (ABDR) Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) program for maximum impact Dr Dilinie Herbert Australian Breast Device Registry (ABDR) |
2:45-2:57PM | Effect of aspirin vs enoxaparin on symptomatic venous thromboembolism in patients undergoing hip or knee arthroplasty: the CRISTAL randomised trial Verinder Sidhu Australian Orthopaedic National Joint Replacement RegistryAustralian Orthopaedic National Joint Replacement Registry | Patient perspectives of reporting of centre specific information in kidney failure care: A qualitative study Professor Stephen McDonald ANZDATA Registry |
2:57-3:09PM | Establishing the Upper Gastrointestinal Cancer Registry (UGICR) Liver Cancer Module: Expansion of a multi-modular Clinical Quality Registry Eileen Lam Upper Gastrointestinal Cancer Registry (UGCR) | Response rates in clinical quality registries and databases that collect patient reported outcome measures: a scoping review. Marisa Caruso Senior Coordinator Australian Cystic Fibrosis Data Registry (ACFDR) |
3:09 - 3:35PM | Afternoon tea and Poster Exhibition | Alfred Hospital Innovation & Education Hub Foyer |
Plenary | ||
3:35-3:50PM | Taking diabetes care to new heights: The Australian Diabetes Clinical Quality Registry (ADCQR) | Dr Ella Zomer Senior Research Fellow, Australian Diabetes Clinical Quality Registry (ADCQR) |
3:50-4:30PM | The National CQR Program and the Digital Health Agenda Including Q&A | Allyson Essex Assistant Secretary Jennifer Zacny Director, Digital Health Branch, Medicare Benefits and Digital Health Division Australian Department of Health and Aged Care |
4:30-4:45PM | Variation in acute stroke care: Insights and initiatives from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry | Julie Morrison Australian Stroke Clinical Registry (AuSCR) |
4:25-4:40PM | Panel Q&A with invited speakers | |
4:40-5:00PM | Presentation of CQR Registry SIG Survey Results Presentation of Poster Prize Conference Wrap Up | Professors Susannah Ahern & Stephen McDonald Co-chairs CQR Collaboration Hub and ACTA Registry SIG |
Registration
ASM only | 200 |
ASM only | $100 Full-time student rate |
Workshops | $200 each |
ASM + one workshop attendance | $400 |
Speakers
Professor Stephen McDonald is Director of Dialysis at the Central Northern Adelaide Renal and Transplantation Service, Clinical Director of Renal Services for the SA Rural Support Service and Executive Officer of the ANZDATA Registry. He is chair of the South Australian Renal Community of Practice, and of the National Indigenous Kidney Transplant Taskforce. He co-chairs the Registry Special Interest Group of ACTA.
His research interests centre around the epidemiology of end-stage renal disease. Current areas of focus include how Registry data informs clinical practice; Registry based clinical trials; pregnancy among dialysis and transplant patients; and access to and outcomes of kidney transplantation among Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people.
Professor Susannah Ahern (MBBS (Hons), MBA, FRACMA, PhD) Professor Ahern is a medical administrator and academic in health services research and management at Monash University. As the Head of the Clinical Outcomes Reporting and Research Program, she is the Monash Academic Lead for six national clinical quality registries. She has published over 80 peer-reviewed papers, thirty technical registry reports, and one book chapter. She is currently a member of a number of national committees regarding clinical quality registries and is co-Chair of the Australian Clinical Trial Alliance (ACTA) Registry Special Interest Group (SIG). She has hosted national Clinical Registries meetings in Australia since 2018, and her work informs national registry policy and practice, including the development and implementation of the National Clinical and Virtual Registry Strategy
Dr Heather Buchan is a Senior Medical Advisor for the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality of Health Care. She is a public health physician who has worked in health policy and medical management roles in New Zealand, the United Kingdom and Australia. Her work at the Commission focuses on ways to increase the effectiveness and appropriateness of health care.
Professor Allen Cheng is Professor/Director of Monash Infectious Diseases at Monash Health and the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash University. He has research interests in clinical infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, influenza and other vaccine preventable diseases and communicable diseases control. He was previously Co-Chair of the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation and the Chair of the Advisory Committee for Vaccines, and during the COVID-19 pandemic was Acting Victorian Chief Health Officer. He is the lead investigator for FluCAN, a sentinel hospital-based surveillance system for influenza and COVID-19.
Dr Lance Emerson is the Chief Executive Officer of the Victorian Agency for Health Information (VAHI), based within the Victorian Department of Health. Lance works with the VAHI team to drive improvements in safety and quality in Victorian health services through the provision of analytics and high quality health service performance information. Lance has a passion for development and maintenance of information systems to improve consumer care and has a PhD in the use of clinical indicators to guide better care and improve health outcomes. He has extensive experience in running specialist health organisations, having most recently been CEO of the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA) and prior to that, CEO of the Australian Research and Alliance for Children and Youth (ARACY). Lance is also a Board Director for Bicycles for Humanity, and the Australian Red Cross Lifeblood (formally Red Cross Blood Service).
Suchit Handa is the Director of Safety and Quality Improvement Systems for the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care. Suchit has extensive experience working as a professional rural and metropolitan hospital executive, with a focus on using data to drive quality improvement
Professor Sophia Zoungas is the Head of the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, a Professor of Diabetes, Vascular Health and Ageing, and the Director of the Monash University Clinical Trials Centre. She is also a consultant Endocrinologist and Physician with clinical appointments at both Monash Health, including the Victorian Heart Hospital, and Alfred Health, Melbourne.
Professor Zoungas is internationally recognised for her expertise in the design and conduct of large multicentre, multinational clinical trials and cohort studies which have impacted directly on public health and clinical care. She has assembled international and national teams in diabetes, cardiovascular and kidney health, including investigator lead projects and large-scale clinical trials. Her significant contribution to the advancement of diabetes research has been recognised through the Kellion Diabetes Award 2022 and induction into the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences in 2022.
Professor Zoungas has over 290 publications in peer-reviewed journals, including the New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, Annals of Internal Medicine, British Medical Journal, and Nature Reviews and she is recognised as the most cited researcher in the field of diabetes.
Allyson Essex is the Assistant Secretary, Health Modelling, Partnerships and Evaluation Branch, Department of Health and Aged Care. Allyson has worked at the Department of Health and Aged Care since 2019. Her current role is Assistant Secretary for the Health Modelling, Partnerships and Evaluation Branch in the Health Economics and Research Division. Allyson is responsible for developing a strategic economic outlook across Australia's health system, including medium to long term sustainability, and identifying ways to improve value from health care and identify opportunities to minimise waste.
Claudia Lassetter is a communications professional with over 20 years of international experience, working for Deloitte, Commonwealth Bank, Procter and Gamble as well the Not for Profit Sector. She has several qualifications at graduate and post graduate level and previously taught at a business school.
Dr Ahmad Reza Pourghaderi (Reza) is a PhD in Heath Service Systems Engineering and a Principal Data Science Lead at Monash University, specialising in AI-driven care optimisation and automated data processes. He led significant initiatives like the Virtual Singapore Emergency Response project and contributed to the award-winning Singaporean COVID-SOS platform.
Accommodation
2023 Australian Clinical Registry ASM Hotels Partners
Preferred and closest hotel: View Hotel, 562 St Kilda Road | www.viewhotels.com.au Book using promo code CQR | Enter via Roy Street. Queen $165 per night (Room Only), City View King Room at $185 per night (room only). Healthy breakfast $22 per person, $19 per night per car (advanced booking recommended). 4-star View Hotel Melbourne is located on leafy St Kilda Road with easy access to the CBD, Chapel Street, St Kilda, Southbank and the Alfred Hospital. Perfectly positioned to enjoy the best of the city with many of Melbourne’s entertainment, lifestyle and dining precincts just a short walk or quick tram ride away, easily connected to Melbourne International Airport, 25 minutes away by taxi. Phone (03) 95298888 |
Ovolo South Yarra, 234 Toorak Road, South Yarra | www.ovolohotels.com Book using promo code Monash | A 15-minute walk from the Alfred Hospital. Contemporary, stylish boutique hotel in the heart of the Chapel Street District with a Good Food Guide 2023 One Hat vegan restaurant. Breakfast is an additional $20, per person. Note the more economical rooms are snug. Phone (03) 9116 2000 |
Cullen Hotel, 164 Commercial Rd, Prahran | http://www.mghotels.com.au Book using promo code CQR | Bold and brash art hotel inspired and named after the late Australian Artist Adam Cullen. Located in the lively party district of Prahran, a 10-minute walk from the Alfred Hospital. Phone (03) 90981555 |