St John of God Health Care announces inaugural Fellowship recipients

07 Jul 2022

By Contributor

Emily Bennett and Soumaia Low
St John of God Health Care Clinical and Research Fellowship awardees Emily Bennett and Soumaia Lowery. Photo: Supplied.

St John of God Health Care, one of Australia’s largest Catholic providers of health care, has today announced it has awarded fellowships to four caregivers to undertake research in their clinical areas.

The inaugural St John of God Health Care Clinical and Research Fellowship, which is a partnership with the University of Notre Dame Australia, enables successful recipients to study a Master of Philosophy, while remaining on full pay and receiving necessary leave and support to complete their studies.

The successful candidates are:

  • Amy Ekin – Senior Dietitian, St John of God Mt Lawley Hospital
  • Emily Bennett – Senior Dietitian, St John of God Midland Public and Private Hospitals
  • Karen Sheehan – Occupational Therapist, St John of God Geelong Hospital
  • Soumaia Lowery – Quality Officer and Registered Nurse, St John of God Midland Public and Private Hospitals

St John of God Health Care Group Director Workforce Carla Bonev said the successful candidates were carefully selected out of a pool of exceptional applicants.

St John of God Health Care Clinical and Research Fellowship awardee Karen Sheehan. Photo: Supplied.

“Amy, Emily, Karen and Soumaia demonstrated their commitment and dedication to both their research and making strong and positive contributions to the life of St John of God Health Care,” she said.

“I extend my heartfelt congratulations to each of them for their exceptional applications and I look forward to seeing their research benefit our community in the future.

“The Fellowship is one of the ways we are recognising and rewarding performance excellence, supporting career development and professional growth and helping foster a positive and satisfying work culture.”

Ms Bonev said the Fellowship was designed to remove some of the barriers that might otherwise prevent clinical caregivers from undertaking further study and forms part of the organisation’s strategy to attract and retain exceptional caregivers.

“Our clinical caregivers play a valuable role in our organisation and it’s important we invest in and support them to advance their careers,” she said.

“The Fellowship aims to develop excellence in patient care, a strategic focus area, while also strengthening our commitment to clinical research and showcasing St John of God Health Care as a leader in health care and research.

“We look forward to seeing the research outcomes that come from this as well as supporting more caregivers through this fellowship in the future.”

St John of God Health Care Clinical and Research Fellowship awardee Amy Ekin. Photo: Supplied.

Notre Dame University’s National Head of the School of Nursing, Midwifery, Health Sciences and Physiotherapy Professor Karen Clark-Burg said the University was very pleased to be partnering with St John of God Health Care, and looked forward to welcoming the successful candidates in the very near future.

“As research students, they will be working at the leading edge of their professions, helping to grow our knowledge and understanding in ways that could improve health outcomes for the entire community,” Professor Clark-Burg said.

“Our expert staff are very much looking forward to supporting them on that journey over the next 18 months to help them achieve their goals.”

The successful candidates will start their studies through Notre Dame in August.

Chosen topics:

Amy Ekin – Senior Dietitian, St John of God Mt Lawley Hospital

Topic: Does routine oral nutrition supplementation provided to geriatric fracture patients aged 65 years and over, reduce length of stay and improve functional status?

Emily Bennett – Senior Dietitian, St John of God Midland Public and Private Hospitals

Topic: Nutrition in patients receiving non-invasive ventilation – does oral intake increase as respiratory support decreases – is it enough?

Karen Sheehan – Occupational Therapist, St John of God Geelong Hospital

Topic: Explore the PDQ-39 (PROM) results from our Parkinson’s Early Intervention (Blue) group to identify dimensions with best and worst change results. Are these results accurately reflecting therapist perceptions of change? If not, is an alternate PROM more effective? Do these results indicate areas requiring improved intervention?

Soumaia Lowery – Quality Officer and Registered Nurse, St John of God Midland Public and Private Hospitals

Topic: Delirium screening in an acute hospital setting: a study to identify the challenges and barriers facing health care professionals performing routine delirium assessments