Inquiries
Public inquiries and commissioned studies give the opportunity for all points of view in the community to be heard and considered. All individuals, firms, groups and organisations with an interest in an inquiry can participate in the inquiry.
Fully-matching results
Prof Keith Jacobs (PDF - 84k)
Submission 3 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
Brief submission Please find three reports that were published by the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute as part of an investigation titled 'individualised forms of welfare provision and reform of Australia's housing system'. The link
Date received: 16 May 2016
Robert Kerr (PDF - 76k)
Submission 2 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
Brief comment This submission is a seminar paper given in November 2015 in my capacity as an Honorary Research Fellow with The Brotherhood of St Laurence. It is offered in an individual capacity as it does not necessarily represent the views of the
Date received: 7 May 2016
Dr Arockia Doss (PDF - 87k)
Submission 1 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
Brief comment There is an urgent need to curb escalating and unsustainable health care costs. 1. What are the basic principles to reduce high costs in health care? a) Prevention, early detection, reducing progression of chronic diseases. b)
- Attachment 1: Efficacy of an outpatient musculoskeletal interventional radiology practice model in the treatment of knee osteoarthritis using autologous blood derived growth factors (PDF - 152.2 KB)
- Attachment 2: Non Surgical Repair of Tendon - Cartilage and Neurogenic Conditions (PDF - 4.9 MB)
- Attachment 3: Evaluation of improving a specific problem or system dysfunction in Radiology (PDF - 102.4 KB)
- Attachment 4: Could a disruptive out patient healthcare delivery model reduce escalating in-hospital healthcare costs in knee osteoarthritis (PDF - 166.5 KB)
Date received: 7 May 2016
Dave Crain (PDF - 76k)
Submission 165 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
Brief submission The Public Health system, even though under constant budgetary assault, provides far better health care than the private sector. Nurse patient ratios are always worse in private health facilities &the number of experiences Nursing
Date received: 25 Jan 2016