close

Learn more about innovation in aged care

Come along to the next SA Insights Series and discover the story behind the creation of an award winning, globally recognised digital device that improves personalised aged care services.

You will hear about the commercialisation journey of the digital device CareApp from Founder and CEO Allison Nikula. Our ARIIA CEO, Reuben Jacob, will also provide information about opportunities for aspiring innovators and change makers through our grants, partnering and training programs.

We have lift off with ARIIA

Our launch event was hugely successful. Starting with a Welcome to Country and Smoking ceremony with Senior Kaurna men, Uncle Mickey O’Brien and Corrie Tucker, and MC Reuben Jacob, Interim CEO, speeches by Hon Anika Wells, Minster for Aged Care, Judith Leeson, Retired Career Development Professional, Prof Robert Saint, Deputy V/C Flinders University and ARIIA Interim Board member, and Prof Sue Gordon, Research and Workforce Capability Director was also streamed to a virtual audience around Australia.

Making Knowledge Visible

Professor Jennifer Tieman

Director, Knowledge and Implementation Hub & Professor, Palliative and Supportive Services
ARIIA, Flinders University

The new Aged Care Centre for Growth and Translational Research, or ARIIA, has an important role in supporting transformational change in aged care by addressing critical issues relating to evidence, partnership, growth, and translation. There has been much written about the need for change and there is a significant reform agenda that is in place. This runs alongside a period of great stress for the sector as it confronts the reality of Covid-19 as well as workforce and business challenges.

Introducing new programs and resources in this context is not easy. The Knowledge and Implementation Hub is a core part of ARIIA and will act as a central point in bringing together evidence and practical resources that address major issues for the aged care sector. This connection to the sector is important if resources are to be relevant and meaningful. The first four aged care priority topics the Hub has developed were identified in a survey open to aged care consumers, workforce, providers, and industry partners.

The priority topics identified which now have resources are:

So how do you create meaningful resources for such important topics which also encourage use? This was the challenge facing the Knowledge and Implementation Hub project team. We knew it was not sufficient to just provide academic evidence summaries although we knew that solid evidence should underpin translational change and growth. Evidence also needs to be actionable and useful. The strategic approach we have taken can be outlined as follows:

  • Working with the sector to find out what topics are most important to them
  • Using best practice methods to search for, appraise, and synthesise the evidence we find
  • Undertaking a scoping review of the published research evidence and an environmental scan for practical tools and resources for each aged care topic
  • Working with an expert advisory group of end users, aged care staff, and content experts who understand the topic, can assess the quality and value of the evidence, and consider its relevance to the aged care sector
  • Creating online resources that are accessible, interesting, and mobile
  • Setting up an integrated knowledge resource and knowledge dissemination framework to support movement of the knowledge into the sector
  • Building in feedback loops and opportunities for participation.

We are fortunate to have been able to bring to ARIIA and the Knowledge and Implementation Hub, strengths and expertise that has been developed in establishing CareSearch and palliAGED. These are major projects being delivered through the Research Centre for Palliative Care, Death and Dying (RePaDD) at Flinders University. Importantly this prior experience has been instrumental in developing frameworks and quality processes for evidence retrieval and synthesis, online delivery, and digital translation in the new centre.

The next two years will see a rapid expansion in the aged care topics available to support the sector as well as new resources which will provide evidence and resources that support translational and growth issues. To achieve this, we need to bring together evidence, partnership, translation and growth and we invite you to get involved.
 

The views and opinions expressed in Knowledge Blogs are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of ARIIA, Flinders University and/or the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care.