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Chloe Grimmett
Researcher at RMIT University
Publications - 46
Citations - 1557
Chloe Grimmett is an academic researcher from RMIT University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 46 publications receiving 1091 citations. Previous affiliations of Chloe Grimmett include University of Southampton & University College London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer survivors’ self-efficacy to self-manage in the year following primary treatment
Claire Foster,Matthew Breckons,Phil Cotterell,Denize Barbosa,Lynn Calman,Jessica Corner,Deborah Fenlon,Rebecca J. Foster,Chloe Grimmett,Alison Richardson,Alison Richardson,Peter K. Smith +11 more
TL;DR: Self-efficacy to self-manage problems faced as a consequence of cancer and its treatment can vary widely in the year following treatment, and fatigue may be particularly difficult to manage.
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Lifestyle and quality of life in colorectal cancer survivors
TL;DR: A high proportion of colorectal cancer survivors in the UK have suboptimal health behaviours, and this is associated with poorer QoL, and there was a linear relationship with global QoG, physical function and fatigue.
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Telling Parents Their Child's Weight Status: Psychological Impact of a Weight-Screening Program
TL;DR: Weight feedback was acceptable to the majority of parents participating in an “opt-in” measurement and feedback program; adverse effects were minimal for children and parents, even when feedback indicated overweight.
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Psychological factors, prehabilitation and surgical outcomes: evidence and future directions.
TL;DR: There is an urgent need for high quality, contemporaneous prospective trials with baseline psychological evaluation, well‐described interventions and agreement on the most appropriate psychological, quality of life and physiological outcomes measures.
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Systematic review and meta-analysis of maintenance of physical activity behaviour change in cancer survivors
Chloe Grimmett,Teresa Corbett,Jennifer Brunet,Jonathan Shepherd,Bernardine M. Pinto,Carl May,Claire Foster +6 more
TL;DR: Existing interventions are effective in achieving modest increases in physical activity at least 3 months post-intervention completion, suggesting low-intensity interventions may be sufficient in promoting small changes in behaviour that last beyond intervention completion.