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Hikari Ando

Researcher at Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Publications -  14
Citations -  493

Hikari Ando is an academic researcher from Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Natalizumab. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications receiving 347 citations. Previous affiliations of Hikari Ando include Walton Centre & Liverpool Hope University.

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Achieving saturation in thematic analysis: development and refinement of a codebook.

TL;DR: This exploratory study was conducted to demonstrate a rigorous approach to reaching saturation through two-stage establishment of a codebook used for thematic analysis through inductive analysis and refinement of the coding system.
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Why don't they accept non-invasive ventilation?: insight into the interpersonal perspectives of patients with motor neurone disease.

TL;DR: The findings suggest the importance of understanding the psychological dimension involved in decision-making regarding uptake of NIV and a need for sensitive holistic evaluation if NIV is declined.
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Experience of long-term use of non-invasive ventilation in motor neuron disease: an interpretative phenomenological analysis

TL;DR: It is suggested that a positive coping style, adaptation and hope are key factors for psychological well-being and better adherence to NIV.
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Determinants of accepting non-invasive ventilation treatment in motor neurone disease: a quantitative analysis at point of need.

TL;DR: Patients who tolerated NIV treatment had family caregivers who cope through finding meaning and purpose in their situation, and Regression analyses, forcing MND symptoms to enter the equation first, found caregiver resilience:commitment the strongest predictor of uptake of Niv treatment adding 22% to the 56% explained variance.
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Experience of telehealth in people with motor neurone disease using noninvasive ventilation

TL;DR: The findings suggest this approach is empowering and effective in promoting patients’ well-being, while potentially reducing unnecessary clinical contact in patients with MND on noninvasive ventilation on NIV.