Monday Lunch Live
13 May 2024
In conjunction with International Nurses Day, two nurse researchers discuss their important work, demonstrating how investment in nursing can bring considerable economic benefits to care and improved patient outcomes.
This special event celebrates International Nurses Day by showcasing how nurse-led research is contributing to the economic power of care.
Chair
Prof Mei Krishnasamy RGN BA(Hons) DipN MSC PhD
Professor of Nursing, the University of Melbourne; VCCC Alliance Research & Education Lead, Cancer Nursing; Honorary Professor of Cancer Nursing, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
Prof Krishnasamy is the program champion for the VCCC Alliance Nurse-led Research Program and believes that the development of cancer nursing research capability has the potential to enhance patient care, health outcomes and health services. She provides strategic direction and coordinates development of nurse-led research opportunity and implementation-of-evidence to address recognised knowledge and practice gaps across the alliance's seven clinical partners.
A key element of building capability is centred around the Nurse-led Research Hub. The hub aims to improve research literacy, overcome barriers, provide resources, and facilitate networks for education and support opportunities. Prof Krishnasamy leads a program of supportive care research that focuses on improving access to and coordination of care for adults with cancer, addressing the impact of social determinants of health on patient outcomes, and development and evaluation of nurse-led interventions. Her research is informed by embedded consumer engagement and encompasses the breadth of patient care from diagnosis to treatment and follow-up.
Ms Elizabeth Crone
Liz is a specialist cancer nurse with over ten years’ experience in surgical oncology, operating suite, and anaesthetics nursing. She is an emerging health services researcher with a passion for health outcomes research, equity in cancer care and digital health equity. Liz will be presenting on a current study examining missed nursing care, or care left undone or unfinished. This two-phase study is exploring factors that influence missed nursing care and the impact it has on quality and safety of care, healthcare costs, patient and nurse experiences, and nursing workforce retention.
Alison Lemoh
Alison completed her Postgraduate Critical Care studies for her ICU training at RPA Hospital, Sydney in 2005 and then later completed the Graduate Certificate in Cancer Nursing through Peter Mac and University of Melbourne. She was awarded an Australian Legion of Ex-Servicemen and Women scholarship by the Australian Nurses Memorial Centre to complete her Master of Advanced Nursing Practice. Her PhD focus investigates the role of nurses and nursing leadership in the early recognition and management of sepsis across high and low-resourced clinical settings. It also explores how clinical team dynamics, cultural and linguistic diversity amongst staff, and psychological safety in organisational culture impacts on how nurses communicate concern and escalate care in response to patient deterioration.