
Overview
Background
Emma is a Research Fellow, NHMRC Emerging Leader and prior Heart Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow within the Centre for Online Health (Centre for Health Services Research) at the University of Queensland. She provides input into a range of telehealth projects across the centre. She has a particular interest in using telehealth within the care and management of people with cardiovascular disease and other chronic diseases to enhance self-management and reduce barriers to access. Underpinning her work more broadly is an interest in scaling-up effective interventions, monitoring the quality of their delivery and ensuring equitable provision of health services.
Emma completed her PhD (2019) at the University of Melbourne in the School of Population and Global Health as an NHMRC Postgraduate Scholar. Her thesis aimed to understand how the evidence-practice gap in cardiac rehabilitation can be reduced in Australian through enhanced monitoring and evaluation. Emma has also worked across various other research groups including at the University of Oxford at a WHO Collaborating Centre focused on population approaches for non-communicable disease prevention, the Non-Communicable Disease Unit at the University of Melbourne, and a Centre of Research Excellence in Aphasia Rehabilitation (University of Queensland). She has also worked for the Heart Foundation as an academic advisor and also a senior project manager.
Emma has a strong interest in implementation science and sits on the Editorial Board for the journal Implementation Science Communications. She is also part of the Emerging Leaders Committee for the Australian Cardiovascular Alliance (ACvA), and a committee member of the Australian Cardiovascular health and Rehabilitation Association (QLD branch).
Availability
- Dr Emma Thomas is:
- Available for supervision
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Speech Pathology, The University of Queensland
- Masters (Coursework) of Public Health, James Cook University
- Doctor of Philosophy, University of Melbourne
Works
Search Professor Emma Thomas’s works on UQ eSpace
2013
Conference Publication
Synthesizing and translating rehabilitation evidence into practice: the experience of the Australian Aphasia Rehabilitation Team
Thomas, E., Worrall, L., Power, E., Rose, M., Togher, L. and Ferguson, A. (2013). Synthesizing and translating rehabilitation evidence into practice: the experience of the Australian Aphasia Rehabilitation Team. First Global Conference on Research Integration and Implementation, Canberra, ACT, Australia, 8 - 11 September 2013.
2013
Conference Publication
Synthesizing and translating evidence into practice: the experience of the Australian aphasia rehabilitation team
Worrall, L., Thomas, E., Power, E., Rohde, A., Rose, M., Togher, L. and Ferguson, A. (2013). Synthesizing and translating evidence into practice: the experience of the Australian aphasia rehabilitation team. South African Neurological Rehabilitation Association, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa, 28 - 30 August 2013.
2013
Conference Publication
Comprehensiveness of aphasia recommendations within clinical guidelines, a comparison with the Australian Aphasia Rehabilitation Pathway
Worrall, L., Rohde, A., Thomas. E., Hinkley, J., Cruice, M. and Le Dorze, G. (2013). Comprehensiveness of aphasia recommendations within clinical guidelines, a comparison with the Australian Aphasia Rehabilitation Pathway. Speech Pathology Australia Conference, Gold Coast, QLD Australia, 1 June 2013.
2013
Conference Publication
Living successfully with aphasia during the first-year post stroke
Grohn, B., Worrall, L., Simmons-Mackie, N., Brown, K. and Thomas, E. (2013). Living successfully with aphasia during the first-year post stroke. Speech Pathology Australia Conference, Gold Coast, QLD Australia, 1 June 2013.
2013
Conference Publication
Better pathways for people with aphasia
Worrall, L., Thomas, E., Rose, M., Togher, L. and Ferguson, A. (2013). Better pathways for people with aphasia. 43rd Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Tucson, AZ United States, 28 May-2 June 2013.
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Emma Thomas is:
- Available for supervision
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Available projects
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Integrating telehealth into cardiac rehabilitation programs
A scholarship for this project will be adverstised in 2024. If interested, please contact me.
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Improving equity, access, and quality of cardiac rehabilitation services
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Jenna Taylor
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Doctor Philosophy
Integrating telehealth into allied health services
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Elizabeth Ward, Professor Liam Caffery
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Doctor Philosophy
Unpacking the determinants of heart disease in women: a comparative mixed-methods study of Iranian and Australian women
Principal Advisor
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Doctor Philosophy
Filling the gap on cardiovascular health: increasing equity through telehealth
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Anthony Smith, Dr Jaimon Kelly
Media
Enquiries
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