Utilising the RISE Framework to implement birthing services for First Nations families.

[1]  S. Moore,et al.  Birthing on Country for the best start in life: returning childbirth services to Yolŋu mothers, babies and communities in North East Arnhem, Northern Territory , 2022, The Medical journal of Australia.

[2]  C. Chamberlain,et al.  Translating evidence into practice: Implementing culturally safe continuity of midwifery care for First Nations women in three maternity services in Victoria, Australia , 2022, EClinicalMedicine.

[3]  J. Lavoie,et al.  A call for action that cannot go to voicemail: Research activism to urgently improve Indigenous perinatal health and wellbeing. , 2021, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[4]  S. Kruske,et al.  Effect of a Birthing on Country service redesign on maternal and neonatal health outcomes for First Nations Australians: a prospective, non-randomised, interventional trial. , 2021, The Lancet. Global health.

[5]  A. Lowell,et al.  Caring for Mum On Country: Exploring the transferability of the Birthing On Country RISE framework in a remote multilingual Northern Australian context. , 2020, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[6]  Jyai Allen,et al.  Implementing Birthing on Country services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families: RISE Framework. , 2019, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[7]  C. Chamberlain,et al.  Change is in the air: Reclaiming ancestral wisdom through Birthing on Country in Australia. , 2019, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[8]  S. Tracy,et al.  Reducing preterm birth amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander babies: A prospective cohort study, Brisbane, Australia , 2019, EClinicalMedicine.

[9]  Sue Kildea,et al.  Maternity services for rural and remote Australia: barriers to operationalising national policy. , 2017, Health policy.

[10]  S. Tracy,et al.  Risk factors for preterm, low birthweight and small for gestational age births among Aboriginal women from remote communities in Northern Australia. , 2017, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[11]  S. Tracy,et al.  The motivation and capacity to go 'above and beyond': Qualitative analysis of free-text survey responses in the M@NGO randomised controlled trial of caseload midwifery. , 2017, Midwifery.

[12]  D. Donoghue,et al.  The distribution of maternity services across rural and remote Australia: does it reflect population need? , 2017, BMC Health Services Research.

[13]  Sue Kildea,et al.  Reconceptualising risk: Perceptions of risk in rural and remote maternity service planning. , 2016, Midwifery.

[14]  S. Kruske,et al.  Remote links: Redesigning maternity care for Aboriginal women from remote communities in Northern Australia - A comparative cohort study. , 2016, Midwifery.

[15]  Jyai Allen,et al.  How does group antenatal care function within a caseload midwifery model? A critical ethnographic analysis. , 2015, Midwifery.

[16]  S. Belton,et al.  Improving Aboriginal maternal and infant health services in the ‘Top End’ of Australia; synthesis of the findings of a health services research program aimed at engaging stakeholders, developing research capacity and embedding change , 2014, BMC Health Services Research.

[17]  S. Tracy,et al.  A cost-consequences analysis of a midwifery group practice for Aboriginal mothers and infants in the top end of the Northern Territory, Australia. , 2014, Midwifery.

[18]  Amanda Forti,et al.  Caseload midwifery care versus standard maternity care for women of any risk: M@NGO, a randomised controlled trial , 2013, The Lancet.