D. Candelaria
University of Sydney
29 Papers
6 Citations
D. Candelaria is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of D. Candelaria include National Heart Foundation of Australia.
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Papers
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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Shorter Wait Times to Cardiac Rehabilitation Associated With Greater Exercise Capacity Improvements: A MULTISITE STUDY.
TL;DR: This study confirms that greater exercise capacity improvements occur with shorter wait times, and Coordinators should prioritize implementing strategies to shorten wait time to optimize the benefits of CR.
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CSANZ COVID-19 Cardiovascular Nursing Care Consensus Statement: Executive Summary.
Sally C. Inglis,Carolyn Naismith,Kevin White,Jeroen M.L. Hendriks,Janet Bray,Louise D. Hickman,C. Aldridge,Kimberley Bardsley,Jan Cameron,D. Candelaria,Susie Cartledge,Huiyun Du,Caleb Ferguson,L. Martin,Terina Selkow,Xiaoyue Xu,Rochelle Wynne,Andrea Driscoll,Robyn Gallagher,Robyn Clark,Patricia M. Davidson +20 more
TL;DR: This dissertation aims to provide a history of post-graduate education in Australia and New Zealand for the period from 1989 to 2002, with a focus on the period between 1991 and 2002.
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Online Health Information-Seeking Behaviours and eHealth Literacy among First-Generation Chinese Immigrants
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper examined online health information-seeking behaviours, eHealth literacy and its predictors among first-generation Chinese immigrants living in Australia and found that most Chinese immigrants used online information as useful (61.6%) and important (56.2%), health resources (44.9%), diseases (36.0%), and medications (30.9%).
Remote-delivered cardiac rehabilitation during COVID-19: a prospective cohort comparison of health-related quality of life outcomes and patient experiences
D. Candelaria,Ann Kirkness,Maura Farrell,Kellie Roach,L T Gooley,Ashlee Fletcher,Sarah Ashcroft,H. Glinatsis,Christian Bruntsch,Jayne Louise Roberts,Sue Randall,Janice Gullick,Laila Akbar Ladak,Keith Soady,Robyn Gallagher +14 more
TL;DR: Remote-delivered CR implemented during COVID-19 had equivalent, sometimes better, HRQL outcomes than in-person, and shorter wait times.