This paper presents the findings of a study of the support and service needs of older Chinese people in Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland, Australia. There were two specific objectives: to ascertain the problems encountered by older Chinese-Australians in their daily lives and social activities; and to develop policy and service development recommendations, with a view to mitigating their problems, meeting their unmet needs, improving their quality of life, and enhancing their participation in Australian society. The study used multiple methods, including a literature review, focus group meetings, and a community survey. The findings indicate that older Chinese people, and particularly women, experience significant restrictions in their activity patterns, social isolation and loneliness. Their lack of proficiency in the English language, and the difficulties they have in accessing language-support and interpretation services, limit their autonomous mobility and make them heavily dependent on their adult children, not least for transport. Their physical and psychological wellbeing is affected further by strained relations with their adult children, and these are compounded by financial concerns. The implications of the findings for welfare policy and practice are discussed at the end of the paper.
demonstrated multiple-drug resistance. The incidence of positive culture in revision hip patients was 59%, 46% of which were MRSA. All 13 revision hips with positive cultures showed chronic sepsis: 4 occurred within one year and 10 occurred 2 or more years after the index arthroplasty. The incidence of positive culture in revision knee patients was 57%, 46% of which were MRSA. All 8 revision knees with positive cultures showed chronic sepsis: 3 occurred within one year, 5 occurred 2 or more years after the index arthroplasty. Only one patient, who was infected with gram-negative bacilli, required a second revision for residual sepsis. Harris hip scores for the revision hip patients improved from a mean of 65 (range, 55-75) to 85 (range, 75-90). Knee Society knee scores of the revision knee patients improved from a mean of 68 (range, 55-75) to 80 (range, 70-85). There were no radiological signs suggestive of loosening in the 2 groups at the latest follow-up. Conclusion. This study found a definite increase in multiple-drug-resistant bacteria isolated from periprosthetic infections around total hip and knee prostheses.
Given a good surgical technique in component placement and debridement of the peripatella synovium, the design of a total knee prosthesis has a strong bearing on the incidence of the patella clunk syndrome. The natural history of the patella clunk syndrome reveals that for as yet uncertain reasons about 50% will improve with time even when given conservative treatment.
Purpose. To assess treatment outcomes of young patients with medial epicondylar fracture of the elbow using standard operative protocols. Methods. 24 consecutive patients with medial humeral epicondylar fracture underwent surgery by one of the 3 methods: (1) 2 parallel Kirschner wires, (2) 2 parallel Kirschner wires plus a tension-band wire, and (3) a screw plus an anti-rotation Kirschner wire. Fractures displaced less than 5 mm were treated conservatively (casting for 3 weeks). Outcome was assessed clinically and radiologically. The Mayo Clinic Elbow Performance Index was measured. Results. The 3 patients with undisplaced fractures had good radiological results and scores. One patient with a displaced fracture refused surgery and subsequently developed pseudarthrosis and cubitus valgus. All operatively treated patients had good scores, but 2 treated with 2 parallel Kirschner wires alone developed pseudarthrosis. Surgery 2007;15(2):170-3 this group needed longer rehabilitation to attain a functional range of movement than those in other groups (treated together with a tension-band wire or screw). Conclusion. Surgery is recommended for children with displaced medial epicondylar fractures of more than 5 mm. The use of a tension-band wire, instead of a screw, together with Kirschner wires is the preferred treatment for younger children.
Journal of Orthopaedic
This paper juxtaposes the actual areas of settlement and settlement activities of Chinese migrants in Brisbane's southern suburbs since the mid-1980s, with the concomitant, Ôgovernment planned' construction of the city's Chinatown as an Ôexotic,' Ôethnic,' and Ôcosmopolitan' landmark. It argues that while the latter, as with Chinatowns in other Australian and world cities, has continued to appropriate the symbols of so-called ÔChineseness' to sell the locale to non-Chinese, the former, in recalling the notion of Ôethnoburbia,' significantly evinces actual Chinese migrants' agency and role in place-making. In the process, these migrants have not only established a local, ethnically meaningful environment, but also challenged the still current metonymic Western image of the Chinese as preferring life in Ôethnic' urban enclaves that had its origin from early Chinese settlement and fundamentally detached from the lives of other ethnic groups per se. Indeed greater recognition and comprehension of such locales may go a long way to illustrate that many Chinese living in Australia today do not fit the territorial, place-based identity often associated with them in the imagination of mainstream society.Successive waves of Chinese migration to Australia since the mid-1980s, and the settlement patterns of Chinese migrants in major East coast cities such as Brisbane, have engendered a good deal of interdisciplinary research on both the instigative factors behind their immigration, and their activities and experiences on settling (Ip
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