She wrote an article titled "The Almoner Department in the Royal Newcastle Hospital" in the Australian Journal of Social Work in the year 1950 that detailed the work of an almoner in all areas of medicine, as well as in the community.[3] Parbery worked with geriatrician Richard Gibson in the Hunter Region during the 1950s, specialising in the care of people with multiple sclerosis and the aged with a disability. They produced a report on domiciliary, nursing, and medical care, which was supported by the Christian McCaffrey (RNH) medical superintendent and the hospital board. A model developed by Parbery and Gibson saw aged patients receive care and rehabilitation in their own homes, known as the domiciliary care service and retraining unit. Parbery's social work was crucial in establishing this innovative geriatric service (also known as the ‘Newcastle Experience’), an approach to domiciliary care that influenced practices in Australia and around the world.[4] she was senior medical social worker at the RNH from 1969 until her retirement in 1973.[5]
^Hardy, Ann (2017). "Parbery, Grace Mary". Australian Dictionary of Biographies. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
^Susan Marsden; Cynthia Hunter (2005). "The Royal: A Castle Grand, a Purpose Noble, the Royal Newcastle Hospital 1817–2005". New Lambton, NSW: Hunter New England Area Health Service.
^Parbery, Grace Mary (1950). "The Almoner Department in the Royal Newcastle Hospital". Australian Journal of Social Work. Vol. 3. pp. 1–4.
^R.M. Mason, Hajime Orimo, Kaoru Shimada, Masami Iriki, Daisaku Maeda (1979). "'The Newcastle Experience.' In Recent Advances in Gerontology". Excerpta Media. Amsterdam.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^"Correspondence Files and Miscellanea - Royal Newcastle Hospital". University of Newcastle.