RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE-LITERACY SKILLS AND MENTAL HEALTH
RESEARCHER PROFILE (Filmed April 2024)
Associate Professor Amanda Neil
Select Foundation Principal Research Fellow
Menzies Institute for Medical Research
University of Tasmania &
Health Economics Lead,
Alive National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation
Australia
A/Prof Amanda Neil is a Select Foundation Principal Research Fellow, Menzies Institute for Medical Research, and the health economics lead for the ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation. Amanda commenced work in the field of health economics in 1991, and has worked in academia, government and for industry. She was a Member of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee Economics Sub-Committee between 2000 and 2007.
Since commencing at Menzies in 2013, Amanda has established a research program focused on health services and systems, including innovative funding mechanisms and service provision within Tasmania. In 2019, Amanda established the Menzies Mental Health and Wellbeing Research Group to support university and sector wide mental health research in Tasmania. These efforts now include a collaboration with the recently established Tasmanian Centre for Mental Health Service Innovation, including on the current project.
In an innovative move towards enhancing mental health services, Associate Professor Amanda Neil and team, supported by the RHH Research Foundation, are undertaking a crucial study on language-literacy skills of patients within mental health care settings. This year-long project, which commenced in April 2024, seeks to unravel to what extent, where and for whom language-literacy skills are being considered in Tasmanian mental health service provision.
The current project is one Amanda is very passionate about, given her own experience as the mum of a child who experienced significant delays in learning to speak, read and write. This experience leading to her involvement in the 2017 and 2018 Heart of Literacy Symposiums led by 2017 Tasmanian of the Year, Ms Rosalie Martin. Subsequently, A/Prof Isabelle Bartkowiak-Theron, Tasmanian Institute of Law Enforcement and Amanda received philanthropic funding to establish a research program on language-literacy as a social determinant of health and a pathway to resilience and desistence. The current project is extending this foundational work into the domain of mental health service provision.
You Might also like
-
World-first clinical trial improves patient outcomes for kidney transplants (2023)
A world-first clinical trial conducted at the Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) and at hospitals across Australia and New Zealand has identified the best fluid treatment to reduce the risk of patients requiring dialysis after a kidney transplant.
Around one in three people who receive a kidney transplant suffer delayed graft function, which means the transplant doesn’t work immediately and they require dialysis.
The lead-author of the study, was Royal Adelaide Hospital Nephrologist and University of Adelaide researcher, Dr Michael Collins.
-
Seeking discoveries in earlier bowel cancer detection
Associate Professor Susan Woods is a cancer research focused on eradicating bowel cancer through earlier detection and investigating the DNA related from colorectal cancer cells. She leads the Gut Cancer Research Group at the University of Adelaide and SAHMRI and with her team is researching new treatments for advanced disease.
-
CASE STUDY High blood pressure and shorter sleep may worsen brain decline
People with high blood pressure who also lack sleep may be at increased risk of reduced cognitive performance and greater brain injury, Monash University research has found.
Published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, researchers assessed whether the combined effect of hypertension and short sleep duration had a negative impact on brain health.