18 Papers
3 Citations
C. Ferry is an academic researcher from National Heart Foundation of Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications.
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Papers
Australian Cardiovascular Health and Rehabilitation Association (ACRA) core components of cardiovascular disease secondary prevention and cardiac rehabilitation 2014.
Stephen Woodruffe,Lis Neubeck,Lis Neubeck,Robyn Clark,Kim Gray,C. Ferry,Jenny Finan,Sue Sanderson,Tom Briffa +8 more
TL;DR: Five core components for quality delivery and outcomes of services were identified and are recommended and Clinicians should use these core components to guide effective service delivery and promote high quality evidence based care.
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A Smartphone-Based Model of Care to Support Patients With Cardiac Disease Transitioning From Hospital to the Community (TeleClinical Care): Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Praveen Indraratna,Uzzal Biswas,James McVeigh,Andrew A Mamo,J. Magdy,Dominic Vickers,E. Watkins,Andreas Ziegl,Huei Ming Liu,N. Cholerton,Joan Li,Katie Holgate,Jennifer Fildes,Robyn Gallagher,C. Ferry,Steven Han,Nancy Briggs,Guenter Schreier,Stephen J. Redmond,E. Loh,Jennifer Yu,Nigel H. Lovell,Sze-Yuan Ooi +22 more
TL;DR: TCC was feasible and safe for inpatients with either ACS or HF and long-term benefits were demonstrated, including fewer readmissions over 6 months, improved medication adherence, and improved cardiac rehabilitation completion.
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Evaluation of an mHealth-Based Adjunct to Outpatient Cardiac Rehabilitation
Michael B. Del Rosario,Nigel H. Lovell,Jennifer Fildes,Katie Holgate,Jennifer Yu,C. Ferry,Günter Schreier,Sze-Yuan Ooi,Stephen J. Redmond +8 more
TL;DR: A pilot study to determine if a smartphone-based adjunct to standard care could increase the completion rate of a cardiac rehabilitation program (CRP) found no significant differences between the treatment groups for the measurements taken at baseline and prior to discharge from the CRP.
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Design and rationale of the MyHeartMate study: a randomised controlled trial of a game-based app to promote behaviour change in patients with cardiovascular disease.
Robyn Gallagher,Clara K Chow,Helen M. Parker,Lis Neubeck,David S. Celermajer,Julie Redfern,Geoffrey H. Tofler,Thomas Buckley,Tracy L. Schumacher,C. Ferry,Alexandra Whitley,Lily Chen,Gemma A. Figtree +12 more
TL;DR: This study aims to evaluate the impact of a game-based mobile app, MyHeartMate, which is designed to motivate engagement in secondary prevention behaviours for cardiovascular risk factors in patients with coronary heart disease.
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Evaluation of Cardiac Rehabilitation Performance and Initial Benchmarks for Australia: An Observational Cross-State and Territory Snapshot Study.
TL;DR: Evidence of inequitable access to higher performing programs was present with substantially higher odds for participants living in major cities and with every decade younger age and lower odds for principal referral hospital-based services.
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