Hope for sick children requiring medication via an intravenous catheter
Hope is on the horizon for sick children requiring intravenous canulation to administer medication
Hope is on the horizon for sick children requiring intravenous canulation to administer medication
A Griffith University-led international collaboration has published the world's first paediatric guidelines for intravenous catheters.
National Health and Medical Research Council funding to improve the experience for thousands who require peripheral intravenous catheters.
Griffith University has joined universities across the country in a new national campaign to tell the stories of everyday Australians...
New ways of improving the effectiveness of dressings and securements for the prevention of peripheral intravenous catheter (PIVC) failure in...
Young university a perfect setting for life of research success
Keeping intravenous catheters (IVs) working is the focus of a new researchprogram aimed at informing best practice in hospitals. Supported...
A Griffith Health Institute (GHI) study into the use of IV drips in hospital wards has the potentialto save the...
Prestigious Fulbright scholarships have been awarded to six talented members of the Griffith University community.
Small changes can make a big difference to improving patient care, as proven in research conducted by Griffith University’s Menzies Health Institute Queensland into the most commonly used hospital medical device.