1. APPLICATION PROCESS
Applications for the inclusion of a study in the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit (APSU) reporting scheme are considered by the APSU Scientific Review Panel (SRP). The SRP will give fair and impartial consideration to all applications. Where appropriate, the advice of independent referees will be sought. The panel may also make inquiries to help avoid duplication or possible conflict with the work of other researchers in the same field. Principal investigators may be invited to a meeting of the SRP to discuss their proposal.
Researchers interested in applying for the inclusion of their study are encouraged to first make informal enquiries to the APSU Executive, who will be prepared to discuss protocols at the design stage.
Once preliminary suitability has been established applicants will be asked to submit an Expression of Interest form. This is a one-page form reviewed by the SRP for feasibility and appropriateness to the APSU mechanism.
Formal application should be made on the APSU study application form (Word file: 61KB).
When planning their study, investigators are asked to take into account the following:
2. ELIGIBILITY
A study is eligible for participation in the scheme if:
Condition means in this context, any definable problem or event normally leading to a child coming under the care of a paediatrician. The condition of interest need not be infectious or a disease. (For a list of past and present conditions please see Studies)
Child normally implies an upper age limit of 15 years. The SRP wishes to maintain consistency in this respect.
Mailing list refers to all clinicians who are sent the monthly APSU report card. This group is comprised of paediatricians, paediatric sub-specialists, paediatric general surgeons and other clinicians working predominantly with children.
Adequate funding or organisational arrangements must have been obtained for the completion of the research.
All fees must be paid prior to the inclusion of the study on the APSU monthly report card.
The APSU are happy to negotiate the fee amount dependent on the nature of the study, the organisation through which it is run and the investigator's funding circumstances.
5.1 Investigators are asked to declare that they will acknowledge both the assistance of the APSU and the contributors to the APSU in any manscripts submiited for publication.
5.2 The APSU does not exercise any control whatsoever over when or where research workers publish their results, nor does it require being included in authorship.
5.3 APSU is part funded by the following: Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing, Royal Australasian College of Physicians, Division of Paediatrics and Child Health and the NHMRC. These funding bodies and any other sources of funding received by the Investigators for their study must be acknowledged in any publications or presentations. Suggested acknowledgement:
"The activities of the APSU are funded in part by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing and NHMRC Enabling Grant 402784, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Sydney, and the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, Division of Paediatrics and Child Health."
5.4 The APSU also requires a copy of published articles and abstracts presented at meetings and information about any other relevant presentations, publications or media interviews.
5.5 Regular feedback to reporting clinicians is important to encourage their full co-operation with the scheme. Accordingly, participating investigators are asked to contribute short reports each year and on completion of their project for the APSU Annual Research Report. They may also be invited to participate in any APSU Annual Scientific meetings or workshops and to occasionally supply periodic reports and review articles, as requested.
5.6 The SRP would like to remind investigators who are not themselves paediatricians, that the success of the scheme depends on the goodwill of the RACP members. Submission of articles to the Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health as an alternative to a journal apropriate to the investigator's speciality ,such as genetics or microbiology, should at least be considered.
5.7 Once you study has been approved by the Scientific Review Panel (SRP) you will be required to sign an Investigator Agreement.