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All Outputs (11)

The Basis of Patient Resistance to Opportunistic Discussions About Weight in Primary Care (2023)
Journal Article
Tremblett, M., Webb, H., Ziebland, S., Stokoe, E., Aveyard, P., & Albury, C. (in press). The Basis of Patient Resistance to Opportunistic Discussions About Weight in Primary Care. Health Communication, https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2023.2266622

Clinicians expect that talking to patients with obesity about potential/future weight loss will be a difficult conversation, especially if it is not the reason that a patient is seeking medical help. Despite this expectation, many governments ask cli... Read More about The Basis of Patient Resistance to Opportunistic Discussions About Weight in Primary Care.

Learning from pandemic precarity: The future of early career researchers in qualitative health research (2023)
Journal Article
Tremblett, M., Tremblett, M., Douglass, T., Joyce, J., Anderson, A., Flint, N., & Spratt, T. (2023). Learning from pandemic precarity: The future of early career researchers in qualitative health research. SSM - Qualitative Research in Health, 4, 100335. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmqr.2023.100335

This commentary is a critical reflection by early career researchers (ECRs) working in qualitative health research (QHR) during the COVID-19 pandemic. The consequences of the pandemic have been acutely felt by ECRs working in QHR. M... Read More about Learning from pandemic precarity: The future of early career researchers in qualitative health research.

Clinician-patient communication about emergency aerial medical evacuation in case of infectious disease (2023)
Journal Article
Albury, C., Tremblett, M., Webb, H., Begh, R., Barnes, R., Lawrence, W., …Patel, D. (2023). Clinician-patient communication about emergency aerial medical evacuation in case of infectious disease. Journal of Travel Medicine, 30(4), Article taad014. https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/taad014

Aerial medical evacuation (AME) refers to the removal of patients from one site to a medical facility elsewhere using medically equipped air ambulances.1 In cases of certain infectious diseases it may be necessary to isolate patients in a patient iso... Read More about Clinician-patient communication about emergency aerial medical evacuation in case of infectious disease.

What advice do general practitioners give to people living with obesity to lose weight? A qualitative content analysis of recorded interactions (2022)
Journal Article
Tremblett, M., Poon, A. Y., Aveyard, P., & Albury, C. (2023). What advice do general practitioners give to people living with obesity to lose weight? A qualitative content analysis of recorded interactions. Family Practice, 40(5-6), 789-795. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cmac137

BACKGROUND: Guidelines recommend general practitioners (GPs) take every opportunity to talk to people living with obesity about their weight, and evidence shows even very brief advice is associated with weight loss. However, little is known about wha... Read More about What advice do general practitioners give to people living with obesity to lose weight? A qualitative content analysis of recorded interactions.

Talking delicately: Providing opportunistic weight loss advice to people living with obesity (2022)
Journal Article
Tremblett, M., Webb, H., Ziebland, S., Stokoe, E., Aveyard, P., & Albury, C. (2022). Talking delicately: Providing opportunistic weight loss advice to people living with obesity. SSM - Qualitative Research in Health, 2, 100162. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmqr.2022.100162

Obesity is a major worldwide public health problem. Clinicians are asked to communicate public health messages, including encouraging and supporting weight loss, during consultations with patients living with obesity. However, research shows that tal... Read More about Talking delicately: Providing opportunistic weight loss advice to people living with obesity.

Communicating COVID‐19: Interdisciplinary perspectives (2022)
Journal Article
Tremblett, M. (2023). Communicating COVID‐19: Interdisciplinary perspectives. Sociology of Health and Illness, 45(3), 705-706. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.13530

Covid-19 has been dominant for the past 2 years. Many will have felt the impact of the pandemic in every area of their lives. Communication shaped, and continues to shape, our experience. Individuals were reportedly glued to the news in initial stage... Read More about Communicating COVID‐19: Interdisciplinary perspectives.

Gender in the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist (2021)
Journal Article
Albury, C., Pope, C., Shaw, S., Greenhalgh, T., Ziebland, S., Martin, S., …Pilbeam, C. (2021). Gender in the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 33(4), https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzab123

We are a group of researchers working in the Medical Sciences division at the University of Oxford. Many of us regularly use Equator’s Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist [1] when reporting results from our stud... Read More about Gender in the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist.

Using joint conversation analysis between clinicians and researchers: Developing reflexivity in community mental health teams (2019)
Book Chapter
Smart, C., Reed, H., Tremblett, M., & Froomberg, N. (2019). Using joint conversation analysis between clinicians and researchers: Developing reflexivity in community mental health teams. In C. Smart, & T. Auburn (Eds.), Interprofessional Care and Mental Health: A Discursive Exploration of Team Meeting Practices (295-317). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98228-1_14

Analysing data in groups is highly beneficial in ensuring the credibility and accuracy of analysis. This chapter detailed how we developed joint Conversation Analysis (CA) groups run with clinicians and researchers. We outline how data groups work wh... Read More about Using joint conversation analysis between clinicians and researchers: Developing reflexivity in community mental health teams.

Healthcare Meetings Where the Service User Is Absent: The Ethical and Values-Based Implications for Research (2019)
Book Chapter
Smart, C., Aikman, L., Tremblett, M., Dickenson, J., & Mhlanga, S. (2019). Healthcare Meetings Where the Service User Is Absent: The Ethical and Values-Based Implications for Research. In C. Smart, & T. Auburn (Eds.), Interprofessional Care and Mental Health: A Discursive Exploration of Team Meeting Practices (57-76). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98228-1_3

The MDTsInAction research problem uniquely integrated three ethical contexts: firstly, the context of qualitative mental healthcare research. This emphasises service user involvement to ensure meaningful research. Challenges of benchmarking ethical s... Read More about Healthcare Meetings Where the Service User Is Absent: The Ethical and Values-Based Implications for Research.

Concern Constructions in Multidisciplinary Team Meetings: Risk or Patient Focused? (2019)
Book Chapter
Tremblett, M. (2019). Concern Constructions in Multidisciplinary Team Meetings: Risk or Patient Focused?. In C. Smart, & T. Auburn (Eds.), Interprofessional Care and Mental Health: A Discursive Exploration of Team Meeting Practices (247-269). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98228-1_12

Risk is a high profile area in the care management of people who need consistent support to live healthily. Professionals in multidisciplinary teams need to work together to solve problems, including the chance of risk relating to a client’s care. If... Read More about Concern Constructions in Multidisciplinary Team Meetings: Risk or Patient Focused?.

Inside the meeting: Discursive approaches as a framework for understanding multidisciplinary team meetings (2018)
Book Chapter
Auburn, T., Smart, C., & Tremblett, M. (2018). Inside the meeting: Discursive approaches as a framework for understanding multidisciplinary team meetings. In C. Smart, & T. Auburn (Eds.), Interprofessional Care and Mental Health: A Discursive Exploration of Team Meeting Practices (29-55). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98228-1_2

The aim of this chapter is to set out the methodological framework which underpinned the research projects described in the other chapters of this book. The Authors describe some background to the development of multidisciplinary teamworking (MDTs) i... Read More about Inside the meeting: Discursive approaches as a framework for understanding multidisciplinary team meetings.