Current Projects
A list of current projects for the Queensland Centre for Intellectual and Developmental Disability is shown below. A list of Completed Projects is also available.
Title:
Passports to advantage: Health and capacity building as a basis for social integration
Duration:
2007 - 2012
Members:
Lennox, N. G., Jamrozik, K. D., Haswell-Elkins, M. R., Williams, G. M., Alati, R., Ober, A., Boyle, F. M., Vlack, S. A., Richards, A.
Fundors:
National Health And Medical Research Council
Title:
RCT of an Intervention to Improve the Health of Adolescents with Intellectual Disability.
Duration:
2006 - 2010
Members:
Lennox, N. G., Bain, C. J., Carrington, S., Williams, G. M., O'Callaghan, M., Harley, D., Purdie, D., Tonge, J., Einfeld, S., Emerson, E.
Fundors:
National Health and Medical Research Council
Title:
Developmental Disability Unit - Enhanced Service Model
Duration:
2002 - 2009
Members:
Fundors:
Queensland Health
Title:
Developmental Disability Unit - Service Agreement
Duration:
1996 - 2010
Members:
Fundors:
Department Families, Youth & Community Care QLD
The ASK Project
QCIDD has been funded by the Australian Government (via an NH&MRC grant)
to undertake The Ask Project. This five year project aims to improve the
health of young people with intellectual disability (ID) by implementing
and evaluating the effectiveness of a combined education and health
intervention package.
The health of young people with ID is often substandard. High levels of
unrecognised (and hence untreated) disease coupled with inadequate
health screening and health promotion are commonly cited as contributing
to the poor health outcomes of this group relative to the general
population. Research shows that barriers to good health care for people
with ID include communication difficulties, impaired recall of important
health information, negative social attitudes, and inadequate training
in disability for health service providers.
The Ask Project intervention package aims to minimise these barriers by
using evidence-based strategies for:
- * Performing a comprehensive health review on the young person
- * Developing a strong relationship with the young person's general practitioner
- * Teaching the young person real-life communication and practical self-advocacy skills in relation to their health
- * Educating parents, teachers, and general practitioners about the specific health problems and related support needs of young people with
ID (e.g., how to manage the transition from paediatric to adult health services)
- * Improving health information systems (e.g., methods for the young person to organise their medical records)
In particular, The Ask Project intervention package includes:
- * An educational component-the Ask (Advocacy Skills Kit) Health
Diary used by the young person to collect and store personal health
information and to learn self-advocacy skills. This component of the
intervention will be school-based and taught as part of the young
person's regular education program. A curriculum support guide offering
ideas for teaching the material in the Ask Diary will be provided to the
young person's teachers.
- * A health component-a comprehensive health review (the CHAP)
performed on the young person by their general practitioner.
The Ask Project aims to determine:
- If young people with ID using this package receive better health
care (e.g., health screening) and improved health outcomes
- If using the package improves health advocacy by young people
with ID and their parents, and
- If the package is acceptable to young people with ID and their
families.
Materials being used in the project have been adapted from those already
tested and found to be successful for adults with ID. In addition, a
trial of the intervention package was conducted in 2004 at Darling Point
Special Education School in order to refine the teaching materials and
ensure age-appropriateness of the curriculum.
To find out more about The Ask Project please contact Lyn McPherson,
Tel: +61 7 3163 8267, Email: l.mcpherson@uq.edu.au