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Clare Wilkinson

Researcher at Bangor University

Publications -  144
Citations -  6597

Clare Wilkinson is an academic researcher from Bangor University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Health care. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 133 publications receiving 5928 citations. Previous affiliations of Clare Wilkinson include Health Sciences North & RMIT University.

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Clinical and lay preferences for the explicit prioritisation of elective waiting lists: survey evidence from Wales.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a survey of 750 general practitioners, 500 consultants, 29 health authority commissioners and 1000 members of the general public across Wales to elicit the preferences of those involved in the finance, delivery and receipt of elective health care regarding the clinical and social factors that should and should not determine waiting time.
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Health professionals’ perspectives on exercise referral and physical activity promotion in primary care: Findings from a process evaluation of the National Exercise Referral Scheme in Wales

TL;DR: Clinicians’ concerns about expertise, priority setting and time constraints should be addressed to enhance physical activity promotion in primary care to fully understand decision making relating to provision of physical activity advice and use of ERS.
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Efficient literature searching in diffuse topics: lessons from a systematic review of research on communicating risk to patients in primary care

TL;DR: A combination of several databases must be used to maximize recall and to increase the precision of searches on individual databases, thus improving the overall efficiency of the search.
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Psychological response in spinal manipulation (PRISM): a systematic review of psychological outcomes in randomised controlled trials.

TL;DR: There was some evidence that spinal manipulation improved psychological outcomes compared with verbal interventions, and this review was the first to assess whether spinal manipulation was effective in improving psychological outcome.
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Seasonal affective disorder: prevalence, detection and current treatment in North Wales.

TL;DR: Although SAD was found to be common in this general population sample it appeared to be largely underdiagnosed and/or misdiagnosed.