- Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
- Child and Adolescent Health
- Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
- Colorectal Cancer Surgical Treatments
- Empathy and Medical Education
- Disaster Response and Management
- Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
- Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units
- Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes
- Colorectal Cancer Treatments and Studies
- Emergency and Acute Care Studies
Hammersmith Hospital
2025
Imperial College London
2025
University of Exeter
2025
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust
2022
Florence Nightingale Foundation
2008
Person-centred care (PCC) is a fundamental principle in general practice, emphasising practices tailored to individual patient preferences, needs, and values. Despite the importance of PCC, practitioners (GPs) face obstacles effectively implementing it, with associated factors remaining unclear. The PACE GP/FP study aims explore GPs' attitudes towards PCC facilitating or hindering its implementation daily practice across European countries. This paper outlines protocol. cross-sectional...
<h3>Aims</h3> Rates of emergency admissions and attendances for children have been increasing since 2003/2004,with the greatest increase in 0–4 year age group. Resolving this will significant financial benefits as an admission can cost up to five times that a primary care attendance. One study suggests ‘parents went A&E because they believed clinical problem was best dealt with there’. This would support behavioural influence pilot aim identify through collection insights from parents...
The community palliative care team based at Florence Nightingale Hospice comprises clinical nurse specialists (CNSs) covering a patient population of 200,000. has provided 7-day, nine-to-five service, for 6 years. Recent changes to Buckinghamshire’s general practitioner out-of-hours’ and the government’s improved access agenda legislation, permitted non-medical prescribing. This resulted in embracing prescribing role. Since …
Abstract Aim NICE Clinical Guidelines (CG138) specify the importance of involvement family members and carers at key patient care junctures. Furthermore, published literature our own experience reaffirm that ‘low-quality communication causes profound distress to families can affect quality dying bereavement'. There is little evidence on NOK’s for surgical patients, so we sought assess whether NOK details were available they had been contacted peri-operatively patients receiving laparotomies....