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Professor Ian Scott
Professor

Ian Scott

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Overview

Background

Ian Scott is the Director of Internal Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology at the Princess Alexandra Hospital and a Professor with the Faculty of Medicine. He is a consultant general physician with clinical interests in in health services evaluation and improvement, clinical guidelines, clinical decision-making, evidence-based medicine, low value care, quality use of medicines, non-invasive cardiology, advance care planning, and older patient care. He chaired the Queensland Clinical Networks Executive 2022-2024, is the inaugural chair of the Australian Deprescribing Network (2014-2023), Metro South Clinical AI Working Group, and Queensland Health Sepsis AI Working Group (both ongoing) and is a founding member of the Australian and New Zealand Affiliate of the US Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine (ANZA-SIDM). He was also a member of Queensland Health System Quality, Safety and Performance Management Committee (2022-2024) and the Quality and Safety Committee (2015-2020) and the Digital Health Advisory Group of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP - ongoing). He is a past President of the Internal Medicine Society of Australia and New Zealand (2003-2005) and past member of the MBS Review Taskforce for Cardiac Services (2017-2019). He has led multi-site quality improvement collaboratives in acute cardiac care including both hospitals and Divisions of General Practice. He has been involved at senior level on various high-level committees in establishing policies for Queensland Health and/or RACP on electronic discharge summaries, clinical handover, clinical indicators, evaluation of physician performance, chronic disease management, perioperative medicine, medical assessment and planning units, and patient flow through emergency departments. He has published over 300 peer-reviewed articles, presented to over 170 national and international meetings, and is a recipient of several NHMRC and government research grants.

Availability

Professor Ian Scott is:
Available for supervision

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Masters (Coursework) of Health Administration, University of New South Wales
  • Postgraduate Diploma in Education, The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Coursework) of Education, The University of Queensland
  • Royal Australasian College of Physicians, Royal Australasian College of Physicians

Research interests

  • Clinical decision making

    Investigation into how clinicians reason, the cognitive biases that may afflict that reasoning and ways for mitigating such bias, and the sociocognitive aspects of decision-making

  • Low value care

    Investigation into the drivers and manifestations of low value care (ie care that is ineffective, harmful or disproportionately costly for marginal benefit) and methods for reducing it

  • Advance care planning

    Investigation into how clinicians and patients can promote and participate in shared decision-making around end of life care which accounts for patient values and preferences and avoids unnecessary or unwanted invasive interventions in the last years of life.

  • Evidence-informed clinical practice

    Investigation into how clinicians can be assisted in ensuring their clinical practice aligns with best available research evidence of the effectiveness and safety of clinical interventions

  • Diagnostic error

    Investigation into the cognitive and system-related factors that predispose clinicians to making diagnostic error which currently affect around 1 in 10 diagnostic decisions, with potential to cause patient harm.

  • Using artificial intelligence to improve clinical decision-making

    Investigation into how predictive analytics using artificial intelligence, in particular machine learning, can be used to improve clinical decision-making.

Research impacts

I have investigated several quality anfd safety improvement (QSI) topics with publications influencing clinical and policy decisions, cited in 93 countries by 160 institutions (including Harvard, Stanford, Johns Hopkins Universities), 23 publications receiving 41 mentions in policy documents, 11 in top 5% of all outputs (Altmetric 2019). I was lead author of the first systematic review of effectiveness of acute medical units (AMU) and co-authored the first operational standards for AMUs in 2006 (with regular updates), both initiatives prompting many Australian hospitals to establish such units. I co-authored the first Cochrane review of early invasive versus conservative strategies for non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndromes in the stent era in 2016, wrote the first evidence-based Australian guide in perioperative medicine, and reported a case-control study suggesting increased cardiac risk with perioperative use of angiotensin antagonists (now being investigated in the first randomised trial). I have led and researched major QSI reforms within a large tertiary hospital which, within 12 months, increased percentage of patients with ED length of stay of <4 hours from 32% (worst in the country) to 62% (near top), decreased in-hospital mortality from 2.3% to 1.7%, and identified novel predictors of better outcomes. We undertook a study, with Health Roundtable and CSIRO, of 11 million acute presentations which validated a national emregency access target of 82%, which was then adopted by QH and subsequently by other states.

In response to the growing problem of potentially inappropriate polypharmacy (PIP) in older patients, I co-authored two literature reviews and four prevalence studies, and established the multidisciplinary Australian Deprescribing Network (ADeN) in 2014 (currently >400 colleagues). In 2015 we published a sentinel paper (560 citations to date, top 1% cited paper worldwide), detailing a method (CEASE protocol) for ceasing or dose reducing inappropriate medications – a process called deprescribing - which has been accepted as the international standard. I have co-authored a systematic review of enablers and barriers to deprescribing by clinicians and published papers that prove the efficacy of CEASE in hospital and primary care settings, the latter in a successful controlled trial involving 5 general practices (world first). In addition to Australian authorities (Aust Medicines Handbook), CEASE has been adopted by US advocates (Lown Institute among others), New Zealand (NZ Health), UK (NHS), Taiwan and Singapore (respective health ministries), and China (Guangdong Pharmaceutical Association). I have recently published a review of EMR-enabled tools for minimising polypharmacy, and am now researching means for identifying patients at high risk of medication harm and machine learning methods to predict better drug dosing.

I have proposed clinician-led strategies for minimising low value care (LVC) later endorsed by the Productivity Commission and the Australian Medical Association. I have researched the extent of LVC in Australian hospitals and, in a landmark paper, exposed the cognitive biases underpinning it, which has informed QH Value-based Care group and NSW Health. I have authored reviews of advance care planning (ACP) detailing its process and benefits, evaluated ACP implementation in a tertiary hospital, and assessed integration into nursing homes.

I have co-authored a review of the impacts of electronic medical records (EMR) in hospital practice and formulated an evidence-based EMR implementation checklist that is assisting other hospitals in their digital transformation (344 reads). More recently, I have established two clinical working groups targeting machine learning models aimed at early detection of sepsis and optimising drug dosing.

Works

Search Professor Ian Scott’s works on UQ eSpace

353 works between 1986 and 2025

241 - 260 of 353 works

2010

Journal Article

Cautionary tales in the interpretation of clinical studies involving older persons

Scott, IA and Guyatt, GH (2010). Cautionary tales in the interpretation of clinical studies involving older persons. Archives of Internal Medicine, 170 (7), 387-395. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.18

Cautionary tales in the interpretation of clinical studies involving older persons

2010

Journal Article

Whole-of-hospital response to admission access block: The need for a clinical revolution

Scott, Ian A. and Henley, John W. (2010). Whole-of-hospital response to admission access block: The need for a clinical revolution. Medical Journal of Australia, 192 (6), 355-356.

Whole-of-hospital response to admission access block: The need for a clinical revolution

2010

Journal Article

The paradox of readmission: Effect of a quality improvement program in hospitalized patients with heart failure

Mudge, A, Denaro, C, Scott, I, Bennett, C, Hickey, A and Jones, MA (2010). The paradox of readmission: Effect of a quality improvement program in hospitalized patients with heart failure. Journal of Hospital Medicine, 5 (3), 148-153. doi: 10.1002/jhm.563

The paradox of readmission: Effect of a quality improvement program in hospitalized patients with heart failure

2010

Journal Article

Early invasive versus conservative strategies for unstable angina and non-ST elevation myocardial infarction in the stent era

Hoenig, Michel R., Aroney, Constantine N. and Scott, Ian A. (2010). Early invasive versus conservative strategies for unstable angina and non-ST elevation myocardial infarction in the stent era. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (3) CD004815. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004815.pub3

Early invasive versus conservative strategies for unstable angina and non-ST elevation myocardial infarction in the stent era

2010

Journal Article

Public hospital bed crisis: too few or too misused?

Scott, Ian A. (2010). Public hospital bed crisis: too few or too misused?. Australian Health Review, 34 (3), 317-324. doi: 10.1071/AH09821

Public hospital bed crisis: too few or too misused?

2009

Journal Article

Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: A systematic review

Scott, Ian, Vaughan, Louella and Bell, Derek (2009). Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: A systematic review. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 21 (6) mzp045, 397-407. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzp045

Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: A systematic review

2009

Journal Article

The NHHRC final report: View from the hospital sector

Scott, Ian A. (2009). The NHHRC final report: View from the hospital sector. Medical Journal of Australia, 191 (8), 450-453.

The NHHRC final report: View from the hospital sector

2009

Journal Article

Thigh circumference and risk of heart disease and premature death: the strength of the association needs further research

Scott, Ian A. (2009). Thigh circumference and risk of heart disease and premature death: the strength of the association needs further research. BMJ: British Medical Journal, 339 (7723), 704-705. doi: 10.1136/bmj.b3302

Thigh circumference and risk of heart disease and premature death: the strength of the association needs further research

2009

Journal Article

Errors in clinical reasoning: Causes and remedial strategies

Scott, Ian (2009). Errors in clinical reasoning: Causes and remedial strategies. BMJ: British Medical Journal, 339 (7711), 22-25. doi: 10.1136/bmj.b1860

Errors in clinical reasoning: Causes and remedial strategies

2009

Journal Article

Health care workforce crisis in Australia: Too few or too disabled?

Scott, Ian A. (2009). Health care workforce crisis in Australia: Too few or too disabled?. Medical Journal of Australia, 190 (12), 689-692.

Health care workforce crisis in Australia: Too few or too disabled?

2009

Journal Article

What are the most effective strategies for improving quality and safety of health care?

Scott, I. (2009). What are the most effective strategies for improving quality and safety of health care?. Internal Medicine Journal, 39 (6), 389-400. doi: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.2008.01798.x

What are the most effective strategies for improving quality and safety of health care?

2009

Journal Article

Measurement for improvement: Getting one to follow the other

Scott, I. and Phelps, G. (2009). Measurement for improvement: Getting one to follow the other. Internal Medicine Journal, 39 (6), 347-351. doi: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.2009.01966.x

Measurement for improvement: Getting one to follow the other

2009

Journal Article

Non-inferiority trials: Determining whether alternative treatments are good enough

Scott, Ian A. (2009). Non-inferiority trials: Determining whether alternative treatments are good enough. Medical Journal of Australia, 190 (6), 326-330. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2009.tb02425.x

Non-inferiority trials: Determining whether alternative treatments are good enough

2009

Journal Article

Evaluating cardiovascular risk assessment for asymptomatic people

Scott, Ian A. (2009). Evaluating cardiovascular risk assessment for asymptomatic people. BMJ: British Medical Journal, 338 (7687), 164-168. doi: 10.1136/bmj.a2844

Evaluating cardiovascular risk assessment for asymptomatic people

2009

Journal Article

Quality of drug prescribing in older patients: is there a problem and can we improve it?

Scott, I. and Jayathissa, S. (2009). Quality of drug prescribing in older patients: is there a problem and can we improve it?. Internal Medicine Journal, 41 (1), 7-18. doi: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.2009.02040.x

Quality of drug prescribing in older patients: is there a problem and can we improve it?

2008

Journal Article

Pay for performance programs in Australia: A need for guiding principles

Scott, Ian A. (2008). Pay for performance programs in Australia: A need for guiding principles. Australian Health Review, 32 (4), 740-749. doi: 10.1071/AH080740

Pay for performance programs in Australia: A need for guiding principles

2008

Journal Article

Standards for health care: A necessary but unknown quantity

Brand, Caroline A., Ibrahim, Joseph E., Cameron, Peter A. and Scott, Ian A. (2008). Standards for health care: A necessary but unknown quantity. Medical Journal of Australia, 189 (5), 257-260. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2008.tb02017.x

Standards for health care: A necessary but unknown quantity

2008

Journal Article

Why we need a national registry in interventional cardiology

Scott, Ian A. (2008). Why we need a national registry in interventional cardiology. Medical Journal of Australia, 189 (4), 223-227.

Why we need a national registry in interventional cardiology

2008

Journal Article

Health services under siege: The case for clinical process redesign

Brand, Caroline A., Cameron, Peter A., Greenberg, Peter and Scott, Ian A. (2008). Health services under siege: The case for clinical process redesign. Medical Journal of Australia, 189 (4), 239-239.

Health services under siege: The case for clinical process redesign

2008

Journal Article

Reply to Laking and Ewald

Scott, I. (2008). Reply to Laking and Ewald. Internal Medicine Journal, 38 (7), 615-616. doi: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.2008.01706.x

Reply to Laking and Ewald

Funding

Current funding

  • 2023 - 2028
    RELEASE+: REdressing Long-tErm Antidepressant uSE in general practice
    NHMRC Partnership Projects
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2027
    Optimising medicine information handover after discharge (REMAIN HOME 2.0)
    MRFF Quality, Safety and Effectiveness of Medicine Use and Medicine Intervention by Pharmacists
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2019 - 2021
    Personalised Medicine in action: Applying machine learning to develop personalised medication dosing (MSHHS Research Support Scheme grant administered by MSHHS)
    Metro South Hospital and Health Service
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2022
    Safety, effectiveness of care and resource use among Australian hospitals (Safer Hospitals) (The Hospital Research Foundation grant administered by The University of Adelaide)
    University of Adelaide
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2018
    Measuring low-value health care for targeted policy action (NHMRC Project Grant administered by The University of Sydney)
    University of Sydney
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2018
    Telehealth in residential aged care facilities: a pragmatic randomised control trial
    NHMRC Project Grant
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    A new prescribing technology for older patients
    PA Research Foundation Private Practice Trust Fund Research Support Grants
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Ian Scott is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

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communications@uq.edu.au