Types of grants

 

Research Grants

Types of PRF grants

The Physiotherapy Research Foundation has implemented a strategy to identify research activities that will provide specific and relevant evidence-based information that will really make a difference. This strategy focuses on two methods of assigning research grants, these are strategy led activities and researcher led activities.

 

These activities will identify areas of interest that are of importance to the physiotherapy profession. Feedback provided by members will shape these areas and in some cases, we will partner with external parties to initiate and oversee grants. These targeted grants will strengthen the APA’s advocacy and deliver real time, powerful data-driven arguments to decision makers for the effectiveness of physiotherapy treatments for a resilient and thriving private sector. Some examples of these initiatives are the recent Telehealth Project, the PROMs Data Project and the Insurance Commission of WA.

Current Projects:

1. Telehealth Evaluation Project

It was identified in April 2019 that telehealth was a topic of focus and as such an APA Telehealth Advisory Committee was formed in late 2019.  This Committee identified the need to conduct research into the effectiveness of Telehealth by physiotherapists in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Aim: To provide evidence that telehealth physiotherapy is safe, effective and valued by consumers to ensure ongoing funding post COVID-19.

If you are interested in participating in this project please click here for more information. 

2. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs)

The PROMs Data Pilot will investigate the feasibility of our profession to digitally collect patient-reported outcome data on the effectiveness of physiotherapy intervention in private practice.  Patient-reported outcome data is becoming increasingly important in demonstrating the effectiveness of healthcare, so it is important that as a profession we understand our ability to collect this data to enable us to continue to advocate for physiotherapy services and to improve patient outcomes.

Aim: To demonstrate our ability to collect data on the effectiveness of physiotherapy treatments.

We have now gained full approval from Macquarie University Human Research Ethics Committee to proceed and have completed all of our preliminary testing to ensure your data is secure and our processes are robust.

If you already subscribe to Physitrack, simply click here.
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Your participation will help us drive quality improvement and innovation for the profession. 

Designed to support researchers to develop evidence which benefits the profession. These include Seeding Grants and the Beryl Haynes Memorial Fund Grant. 

Seeding Grants

Seeding Grants are to assist new researchers working on new or established research projects.  The purpose of these grants are to help researchers begin their research career. In 2022, six Seeding Grants will be offered with a maximum amount of $12,000 for each.

Beryl Haynes Memorial Fund Grant

The Beryl Haynes Memorial Fund was established in 1992 by the Tasmanian Branch Council to support Tasmanian physiotherapy research in memory of Beryl, a pioneering leader in the Tasmanian Health system over decades. The grant is offered for clinical research conducted in Tasmania. The research can relate to any area of physiotherapy practice and the grant will be awarded on the basis of scientific merit and the relevance of the research. Please note this grant is not offered every year. 

Council is now calling for interested applicants to pitch their research idea via a short, written document describing the background and importance of the project to the Tasmanian community, as well as an overview of their research experience.  Endorsed pitches will then proceed to the Physiotherapy Research Foundation (PRF) and have the opportunity for mentorship to develop their application and form a research team.  

 
There are two grants of up to $15,000 each on offer for physiotherapists working or studying in Tasmania. The research can relate to any area of physiotherapy practice and the grant is designed to support new researchers.  
 
For more information click here or for all enquires please email: jenine.fleming@australian.physio     

 

Applying for a grant

The Physiotherapy Research Foundation funds researcher led grants annually. Physiotherapists interested in enhancing their career and making a valuable contribution to the profession are encouraged to complete an expression of interest form, which is then reviewed by the PRF Review Committee. The Committee provide valuable feedback on each and every application which can be incredibly insightful for first time researchers. Once the EOI’s are reviewed and shortlisted, applicants will be contacted and ask to complete an application form.

The Physiotherapy Research Foundation (PRF) is pleased to announce that up to seven Seeding Grants of $12,000 each will be offered in 2024.

Seeding Grants are for early career researchers working on new or established research projects. Applications are considered predominantly on the basis of scientific merit, significance and team track record.

View the full details. 

Grant recipients

The PRF has awarded over $1.8 million in grants since 1990, funding research across a range of areas including respiratory conditions, incontinence, cerebral palsy, Parkinson’s disease, knee osteoarthritis and more. Some Seeding Grant recipients have successfully entered into research careers within Australian universities and internationally.

2023 Seeding Grants

Dr Heidi Gilchrist APAM - $12,000

Project title: Acceptability and feasibility of the RIPE dance program for preventing falls in people aged 65+: a pilot trial.

Awarded the Nancy Low Choy Memorial Gerontology / Neurology PRF Seeding Grant.

Read more about this research project here

Cassandra Wong APAM - $11,915

Project title: Charting the course of Parkinson’s disease and referral to allied health: Insights from people with Parkinson’s disease.

Read more about this research project here

Narelle Dalwood APAM, MACP - $12,000

Project title: Does the type of pre-portrayal training for peer patients engaged in peer simulation impact student learning outcomes? A mixed methods.

Read more about this research project here

Dr Alisha da Silva APAM - $11,967

Project title: Co-designing a web-based toolkit for intensive care unit survivors.

Read more about this research project here

The PRF acknowledges the legacy of Jill Nosworthy's support of cardiorespiratory research.

Dr Brady Green APAM - $11,650

Project title: Risk factors for calf muscle strain injuries in Australian Football players: A prospective study.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner ASICS.

Read more about this research project here

Alana Dinsdale APAM - $11,985

Project title: Raising consumer awareness on the role of physiotherapy in the management of temporomandibular disorders in Australia.

Read more about this research project here

Dr Stacey Cleary APAM, MACP - $12,000

Project title: CP-Pathfinding ‘Fitness for life’: Proof of concept for a co-designed education module for adolescents and young adults with cerebral palsy.

2022 Seeding Grants

Dr Rachel Nelligan APAM - $12,000

Project title: Effects of a patient-focused e-Learning course about osteoarthritis and its management on knowledge and pain self-efficacy: a randomised controlled trial.

Read more about this research project here.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner Worksafe Victoria.

Dr Matthew King APAM - $12,000

Project title: Can physiotherapist-led targeted strengthening exercise therapy prevent hip osteoarthritis.

Read more about this research project here.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner PAIN AWAY athELITE.

Dr Georgina Clutterbuck APAM - $12,000

Project title: Sports Stars JIA: The feasibility of a physiotherapist-led, peer-group sports intervention for children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis.

Read more about this research project here.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner ASICS.

Dr Peter Nicklen APAM - $8,815

Project title: Remote Alexa-based care versus telehealth (via zoom) and active control for rotator cuff tendinopathy: a pilot and feasibility randomised controlled trial.

Read more about this research project here.

Georgina Whish-Wilson APAM - $11,794

Project title: Co-designing a rehabilitation pathway for people with lung cancer undergoing thoracic surgery.

Read more about this research project here.

2021 Seeding Grants

Sasha Job APAM - $10,000

Project title: Health professional perspectives on the benefits, barriers, and facilitators of beach-based therapy for individuals with mobility limitations.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner Asics.

Read more about this research project here.

Dr Luke Perraton APAM - $10,000

Project title: A novel evidence-based group exercise and education intervention for rotator cuff related shoulder pain: a pilot randomised controlled trial.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner WorkSafe Victoria.

Read more about this research project here.

Angela Burge APAM - $9,300

Project title: REPEAT PR – developing a cost-effectiveness model for repeating pulmonary rehabilitation.

Read more about this research project here.

Zuzana Perraton APAM - $9,959

Project title: Progression of hip osteoarthritis symptoms and structure in young adults: a 5-year prospective study.

This seeding grant is supported by PRF corporate partner Pain Away.

Read more about this research project here.

Leigh Rushworth APAM - $8,673

Project title:  Better management of breathlessness in the ICU (BreatheICU): A staff survey and patient interview study.

Read more about this research project here.

Kate Rawnsley APAM - $10,000

Project title: Agreement of face-to-face versus telehealth delivery of the Alberta Infant Motor Scale.

Read more about this research project here.

Beryl Haynes Memorial Grant

Cate Andrews APAM - $15,000

Project title: Transforming Pelvic Pain Education Through Participatory Action Research.

2020 Seeding Grants   

Dr David Snowdon APAM - $9,976  

Project title: Understanding the effect of an allied health assistant model of care on compliance with hip fracture guidelines: a feasibility randomised controlled trial in physiotherapy 

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Vicky Duong APAM - $8,000 

Project title: Adherence to exercise and physical activity following total knee replacement 

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Lori Forner APAM - $9,867

Project title: Understanding the effects of heavy weightlifting on pelvic organ support in vaginally parous women: a cross-sectional study 

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Frances Coulston APAM - $10,000 

Project title: The Circus Project: A physiotherapy-informed co-designed circus intervention for pre-schoolers born preterm 

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Helen Eason APAM - $9,950

Project title: Investigating non-invasive methods of body composition analysis to enhance the assessment and differential diagnosis of lipoedema

Anita Plaza APAM - $10,000  

Project title: Evaluating the effectiveness of a Home-Based Telehealth rehabilitation model for the delivery of physiotherapy exercise programs following burns injury - a randomised controlled trial  

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Jill Nosworthy Grant 

Associate Professor Bernie Bissett APAM - $24,987 

Project title: Feasibility and patient acceptability of electronic inspiratory muscle training in ICU patients 

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2019 Seeding Grants 

Wei-Ju Chang APAM - $9,511

Project title: Why does Quadriceps Weakness Persist after Total Knee Replacement? An investigation of Neuroplastic Mechanisms

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Udari Colombage APAM - $10,000

Project title: Pelvic floor muscle function in women with or without breast cancer: a matched control study

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Dr Rachel Kennedy APAM - $10,000

Project title: A prospective study of falls in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Caitlyn Payne APAM - $9,952

Project title: A supervised walking program with telephone coaching to increase physical activity following acquired brain injury

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Megan Ross APAM - $9,961.20

Project title: Enhancing physiotherapy care for individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTIQ+)

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Mark Scholes APAM - $9,982

Project title: The immediate effect of running retraining on hip joint pain and biomechanics in people with hip-related pain. A randomised, controlled crossover trial

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Susan Stinton APAM - 9,920.41

Project title: It is safe to drive after wrist fractures and upper limb burns?  Identifying factors that increase the risk of motor vehicle accident after common upper limb injuries.

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2018 Project Grants

Kim Allison APAM - $15,695

Project title: Addressing obesity: physiotherapist delivery of evidence-based care in knee osteoarthritis

Zhiqi Liang APAM - $15,964

Project title: The Nature of Neck Pain in Migraine

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2018 Beryl Hayes Memorial Grant

Joshua Heerey APAM - $10,000

Tasmanian Community Hip Pain (TasCHIP) Cohort Study

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2018 Seeding Grants

Robyn Brennen S18-018 APAM - $12,000

Can pre- and post-operative pelvic floor muscle training reduce pelvic floor dysfunction in patients undergoing gynaecological cancer treatment? A pilot randomised controlled trial

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Gabrielle Street APAM - $11,845

Internet-based management of rotator cuff tendinopathy with remote physiotherapist led support: a pilot and feasibility randomised controlled trial

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Kate Cameron APAM - $7,255

A dance participation intervention for extremely preterm children with motor impairment at preschool age: a feasibility trial

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2017 Project Grants 

Helena Frawley FACP - $17,000

Project title: Pelvic floor dysfunction in women with gynaecological cancer

Dr Annemarie Lee - $16,980

Project title: Does listening to self-selected music during pulmonary rehabilitation enhance clinical outcomes?

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Kevin Wernli APAM - $16,820

Project title: Does changing movement matter? Understanding the relationship between changes in movement, pain, activity limitation and psychological factors in persistent low back pain

Read more about this research project here.

2017 Seeding Grants 

Joshua Bishop APAM - $10,000

Effect of a pulmonary rehabilitation program of eight weeks duration compared to 12 weeks on exercise capacity in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (PuRe Duration): A randomised controlled trial

Read more about this research project here.

Jodie Dakic APAM - $9,997

Are pelvic floor disorders a barrier to women's participation in their chosen exercise and how do physiotherapists screen and manage them?

Alison Hodges APAM - $9,820

Barriers to physical activity and risks of sedentary behaviour at 12 months following total knee replacement surgery: a mixed methods study.

2016 Seeding Grants 

Bernadette Brady APAM - $8,456

The inequities of chronic pain – responding with culturally responsive physiotherapy

Read more about this research project here.

Megan Banky APAM - $9,970

Better assessments for better outcomes – determining the ecological validity of the Modified Tardieu scale

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Sonia Wing Mei Cheng APAM - $7,418

The effectiveness and feasibility of a behaviour-change intervention to reduce sedentary time in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a pilot randomised controlled trial

Katrina Li APAM - $9,973

Respiratory health in adult children of people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Rachel Toovey APAM - $10,000

Effectiveness of a novel approach to training bike skills in ambulant children with cerebral palsy: a model for promoting participation

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

2016 Tagged Grants

Samantha Bunzli, APAM - $13,200

It looks good but it feels bad. Understanding ´failed’ Total Knee Replacement from the perspectives of patients

Breanne Kunstler, APAM - $8,026

Discovering the determinants of, and the behaviour change techniques (BCTs) used when, promoting non-treatment physical activity (NTPA) in Australian physiotherapy practice.

Read more about this research project here.

2015 Tagged Grants 

Brooke Howells, APAM – Beryl Haines Memorial research grant - $9,600

Feasibility of a randomised clinical trial for physiotherapy intervention in patients at high risk of early-onset knee osteoarthritis and symptomatic decline following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction

Michelle Kahn, APAM – APA National Groups research grant - $9,934

The development of a gold standard assessment of arm disability following brain injury

Cherie Wells, APAM – Physiotherapists Registration Board of Western Australia research grant - $10,000

Enhancing the readiness of new graduate physiotherapists for private practice: Academic, employer and graduate perspectives.

Read more about this research project here or listen to an interview with Errol Lim and Cherie Wells here.

2015 Seeding Grants

Dr Brenton Hordacre APAM - $9,089

Read more about this research project featured in InMotion here.

Philippa Nicolson APAM - $9,420

Towards improving adherence to home exercise in knee osteoarthritis

Charlotte Ganderton APAM - $10,000

Does female sex hormone supplementation (FSHS), exercise or a combination of both improve pain and function in post-menopausal women with greater trochanteric pain syndrome (GTPS)?

Elise Gane APAM - $9,974

Identifying risk factors for poor functional recovery of the neck and shoulder after neck dissection surgery in patients with head and neck cancer

David Harvie APAM - $10,000

Un-training the brain: extinguishing learned pain responses through pain-free, illusory movement

2014 Tagged Grants 

Joanne Kemp – Jill Nosworthy Research Grant - $9,998

Risk factors for early hip osteoarthritis: a longitudinal cohort study

Andrew Briggs – Physiotherapy Registration Board of Western Australia Research Grant - $20,000

Development of a ‘readiness’ and ‘success’ evaluation framework for Australian musculoskeletal models of care

Read more about this research project here.

2014 Seeding Grants 

Kim Allison – Geoffrey Maitland Seeding Grant for Musculoskeletal Research - $9,089

Biomechanical and neuromuscular impairments in individuals with greater trochanteric pain syndrome

Nicole Sheers - $10,000

Lung volume recruitment in neuromuscular disorders: can breath-stacking manoeuvres improve lung function, respiratory symptoms and quality of life in people with neuromuscular conditions?

Jason Rogers - $10,000

Clinical, metabolic and imaging prognostic factors in chronic plantar heel pain: a 12-month longitudinal follow-up study

2013 Tagged Grants 

Kate Young - $9,994

An exploration of the feasibility of a randomised trial for physiotherapy in early hip osteoarthritis following hip arthroscopic surgery

Elizabeth Dylke - $10,000

Determination of normatively-based diagnostic thresholds for unilateral and bilateral lower limb lymphoedema

Claire Baldwin - $ 16,700

Pattern of physical activity and sedentary time in survivors of a critical illness during a hospital admission

2013 Seeding Grants 

Rebekah Das - $10,000

Assessing the sensation of ‘desire to void’: development of a new instrument

Stephanie Filbay - $9,049

Early onset knee osteoarthritis following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: the impact on health-related quality of life, work participation and health costs

For more information please read the full research study published in the Journal of Physiotherapy here.

Oliva Rawson - $10,000

A randomised cross-over trial of the effect of positive expiratory pressure during nebulised delivery of medication on aerosol deposition in people with cystic fibrosis

Lucy Lewis - $9,720

Sedentary behaviour in people with cardiovascular disease: a pilot randomised controlled trial

Janice Taylor - $9,936

Evaluating a physiotherapist-led training program to improve residents’ mobility care in nursing homes

Read more about this research project here.

2012 Tagged Grants 

Dr Helena Frawley – Jill Nosworthy Research Grant - $10,000

Development of a digital palpation scale for assessing muscle tension in the pelvic floor using the MyotonPro® device as the ‘gold standard’ objective measure

Associate Professor Shane Patman – Physiotherapists’ Registration Board of WA Research Grant - $25,000

Professional Practice Standards – cardiorespiratory critical care

Read more about this research project here.

2012 Seeding Grants 

Yaheli Bet-Or - $6,834

Is there a difference in scapular kinematics between healthy controls and people with chronic mechanical neck pain?

Kelly Bower - $8,548

Embracing technology in physiotherapy practice: can the Wii Balance Board™ and Microsoft Kinect™ provide clinically useful information about balance performance post-stroke?

Andrea Bruder - $10,000

Does exercise following distal radius fracture improve activity? A phase I/II randomised controlled trial

Looking to promote research?

The APA supports our members participating in evidence-based research from which the profession can draw insights. If you wish to promote your research project, you can apply via email.

To maximise awareness of your research, you may find it useful to publish a short article about your research in InMotion. InMotion has a two month lead time. Contact the editor here.

Please note that your research must have approval from a Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) registered with Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Council prior to the APA promoting it.