Research, education and clinical practice form the cornerstone of the medical profession. Practising clinicians should appreciate the role of research and actively participate in knowledge generation.
Patient health literacy is a barrier to both management of familial hypercholesterolaemia and cascade testing.
An explainer on health economic concepts relevant to current general practice funding reform debates.
This article investigates skin health in urban-living Aboriginal children and young people presenting to primary care.
This study aimed to understand how gout is currently managed in Australian primary care and to assess the level of interest in changing the delivery of care for gout.
This study examines the confidence of general practice registrars in managing paediatric consultations and whether confidence varies by prevocational training type.
Farewell to Stephen Margolis, Australian Journal of General Practice Editor-in-Chief.
This article uses a research prioritisation exercise to identify cancer research priorities in Australian general practice.
This article provides an overview of the process of planning, drafting and submitting a paper for first-time authors.
Improving general practice-based research will enable the development of contextually relevant evidence-based medicine and recommendations in general practice, ultimately benefitting Australians.
This study explores one theoretical framework, Normalisation Process Theory, to understand how it can be used in general practice research.
A study that identifies a set of general practice research priorities to guide resource allocation and to inform a research agenda that optimises best patient care.
This paper aims to equip GPs with evidence-based strategies to prevent and mitigate heat‑related illnesses.
There is concerning evidence that people with mental illness have poorer physical health and lower life expectancies than those without mental illness.
GPs do not routinely discuss sexual health with older patients, and they believe the responsibility for initiation of such discussions rests with the patients themselves.