About This Document (IRD-28137).

This Microsoft Word document created by the La Trobe University Inclusive Resources Development team within La Trobe Learning and Teaching (LTLT). This document has been created as a transcript of the supplied audio/video and contains only narrative/spoken content. No audio description has been included.

While every care has been taken to accurately transcribe the original material there may still be errors contained in this conversion.

Project Number.

28137.

Student Name.

Online Learning Development.

Reading Information Supplied.

9 x 3min thesis

Subject Code.

Transcription Requests.

Article Title.

P789 Three Minute Thesis - Kate Lawler.

Publication.

P789 Three Minute Thesis.

Publisher.

La Trobe University.

Date of publication.

2014.

Copyright Notice.

Copyright Regulations 1969.

WARNING.

This material has been reproduced and communicated to you by or on behalf of La Trobe University pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further reproduction or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act.

Do not remove this notice.

Start Transcript.

6. KATE LAWLER.

The last straw. The straw that broke the camel's back. That one thing that by itself might seem small but combined with everything else can be enough to tip someone over the edge.But what has this to do with a sleeping grandmother? My research is investigating what I believe is the last straw for many older Australians. I'm looking at a program called "Transition Care".This is for older people, for our parents and grandparents who've been in hospital. Now if they improve they'll go home but sometimes in hospital older people lose their strength, sometimes to a point where there is a question over whether they'll ever be able to manage at home again. This is when they go to transition care to find out whether they can go home or whether they'll be forced to spend the rest of their days shut off from the rest of the world in a place where no one wants to go, inside the walls of a nursing home.

This physical - sorry transition care gives people time to get back on their feet. The difficulty is by the time people reach this program they often need physical assistance to move. This last straw that I speak of is physical inactivity. By this I mean doing literally nothing at a time when people are at high risk of completely their ability to walk. There is good news, physiotherapy can help, the bad news is that in transition care people can be lucky to see a physiotherapist once a week so my research is investigating how we can increase the amount of physiotherapy for people in this program by training their family to help. We know families can be trained to help children with therapy programs. What we don't know is whether this would be appropriate for older people. So to find out I've begun by asking people. I've conducted interviews with people associated with transition care and patients and physiotherapists think it's a good idea but are a little bit worried that it might be a bit stressful for their families. Families, on the other hand, see an opportunity to become equipped to truly help during a very difficult time.

From here I aim to go on and conduct a study where we compare outcomes for people who receive transition care physiotherapy as it is now with people who receive that and help from family and I will find out whether for some of the 18,000 Australians that find themselves in this program each year, for some of our families, whether we can prevent that last straw, get people moving and give them a chance to get back home.

Thank you.

End Transcript.