Aim: The aim of this paper is to describe the implementation of a strategic plan, ‘Health Gain for Children and Youth of Central Sydney”, over a 10 year period to December 2005. Methods: Descriptive information was obtained from the records and minutes of all relevant committees, interviews with key workers who were involved with the committees, managers and senior health professionals, and from the involvement of the authors throughout the process of the implementation. Results: An implementation steering committee was established to oversee the implementation of the plan. Rather than adopting a uniform approach to assigning responsibility for the implementation of each strategy in the plan or developing specific costs and time frames for ...
Child health is taking the back seat in development strategies. In summarising a newly released coll...
Efforts to improve program management in public health have proliferated across New South Wales (NSW...
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Inter...
This chapter examines the key priorities facing child health practitioners and policymakers to build...
More than 4,000 children and young people take part in consultations to tell the NSW Government what...
Background Health services and systems research (HSSR) strategies dedicated to paediatric health car...
Over the last decade it has been clearer that improvements in population health require different st...
Objectives: This paper reflects on characteristics that have supported state-wide scale-up, implemen...
The strategic planning department at Nationwide Children’s Hospital works to plan and make decisions...
In November 2008, the NSW Premier agreed to NSW’s participation in the National Partnership Agreemen...
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Li...
BackgroundPopulation health information, collected using soundly-designed methodologies, is essentia...
Key points • A performance monitoring framework to track implementation (reach) and impacts (change ...
Introduction: Three peak organisations in Queensland, Australia partnered with consumers and other h...
The papers in this publication have been developed from presentations made at a workshop held at the...
Child health is taking the back seat in development strategies. In summarising a newly released coll...
Efforts to improve program management in public health have proliferated across New South Wales (NSW...
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Inter...
This chapter examines the key priorities facing child health practitioners and policymakers to build...
More than 4,000 children and young people take part in consultations to tell the NSW Government what...
Background Health services and systems research (HSSR) strategies dedicated to paediatric health car...
Over the last decade it has been clearer that improvements in population health require different st...
Objectives: This paper reflects on characteristics that have supported state-wide scale-up, implemen...
The strategic planning department at Nationwide Children’s Hospital works to plan and make decisions...
In November 2008, the NSW Premier agreed to NSW’s participation in the National Partnership Agreemen...
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Li...
BackgroundPopulation health information, collected using soundly-designed methodologies, is essentia...
Key points • A performance monitoring framework to track implementation (reach) and impacts (change ...
Introduction: Three peak organisations in Queensland, Australia partnered with consumers and other h...
The papers in this publication have been developed from presentations made at a workshop held at the...
Child health is taking the back seat in development strategies. In summarising a newly released coll...
Efforts to improve program management in public health have proliferated across New South Wales (NSW...
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Inter...