All Stories

  1. Deprescribing within English care homes: guidance and recommendations from the STOPPING project
  2. Care homes and primary care in England working together: A multi-method qualitative study
  3. Living Noise to Combat Loneliness Amongst Older UK Adults - First Insights
  4. Guidance for a deprescribing approach that can be implemented in care homes: STOPPING study findings and lessons
  5. Assessing deprescribing tools for implementation in care homes: A qualitative study of the views of care home staff
  6. Data Collection in Care Homes for Older Adults: A National Survey in England
  7. Determinants of implementing deprescribing for older adults in English care homes: a qualitative interview study
  8. Using Online Consultations to Facilitate Health and Social Care Delivery During COVID-19: An Interview Study of Care Home Staff
  9. Models of Care and Relationships with Care Homes: Cross-Sectional Survey of English General Practices
  10. Reablement interventions in care homes: the need for theory and process evaluation
  11. Using video consultation technology between care homes and health and social care professionals: a scoping review and interview study during COVID-19 pandemic
  12. Assessing the fidelity of the independently getting up off the floor (IGO) technique as part of the ReTrain pilot feasibility randomised controlled trial for stroke survivors
  13. Implementation processes in a cognitive rehabilitation intervention for people with dementia: a complexity-informed qualitative analysis
  14. A Culturally Sensitive Social Support Intervention for Chinese American Breast Cancer Survivors (Joy Luck Academy): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial
  15. Behaviour change interventions to increase physical activity in hospitalised patients: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression
  16. A Culturally Sensitive Social Support Intervention for Chinese American Breast Cancer Survivors (Joy Luck Academy): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial (Preprint)
  17. A multi-stakeholder approach to the co-production of the research agenda for medicines optimisation
  18. Reflections on a personalized cognitive rehabilitation intervention: Experiences of people living with dementia and their carers participating in the GREAT trial
  19. Understanding stakeholders’ perspectives on implementing deprescribing for older people living in long-term residential care homes: the STOPPING study protocol
  20. The role of acculturation in the relationship between self-stigma and psychological distress among Chinese American breast cancer survivors
  21. Successful strategies for engaging Chinese breast cancer survivors in a randomized controlled trial.
  22. Independently getting off the floor: a feasibility study of teaching people with stroke to get up after a fall
  23. Abstracts
  24. Benefits of a Psychosocial Intervention on Positive Affect and Posttraumatic Growth for Chinese American Breast Cancer Survivors: A Pilot Study
  25. ABSTRACTS
  26. Relation of social constraints on disclosure to adjustment among Chinese American cancer survivors: A multiprocesses approach
  27. Gerontology’s Political Blind Spot
  28. Relationship between perceptions of ageing and frailty in English older adults
  29. Exploring the Social Needs and Challenges of Chinese American Immigrant Breast Cancer Survivors: a Qualitative Study Using an Expressive Writing Approach
  30. Fear of cancer recurrence and physical well-being among Chinese cancer survivors: the role of conscientiousness, positive reappraisal and hopelessness
  31. Differences in quality of life between American and Chinese breast cancer survivors
  32. Creating psychological connections between intervention recipients: development and focus group evaluation of a group singing session for people with aphasia
  33. Older adults’ perceptions of ageing and their health and functioning: a systematic review of observational studies
  34. ‘Thinking you're old and frail’: a qualitative study of frailty in older adults
  35. Frailty, financial resources and subjective well-being in later life