J
Janice Rattray
Researcher at University of Dundee
Publications - 58
Citations - 3671
Janice Rattray is an academic researcher from University of Dundee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intensive care & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 58 publications receiving 3223 citations. Previous affiliations of Janice Rattray include University of Aberdeen.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Essential elements of questionnaire design and development.
Janice Rattray,Martyn C. Jones +1 more
TL;DR: A critical evaluation of the questionnaire design and development process and demonstrates good practice at each stage of this process, as well as suggesting strategies to demonstrate the reliability and validity of the new and developing measure.
Journal ArticleDOI
The PRaCTICaL study of nurse led, intensive care follow-up programmes for improving long term outcomes from critical illness: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial
Brian H Cuthbertson,Janice Rattray,Marion K Campbell,Melanie Gager,S Roughton,S Roughton,Anne Smith,Alastair M. Hull,Suzanne Breeman,John Norrie,D Jenkinson,Rodolfo Hernández,Marie Johnston,E Wilson,Carl Waldmann +14 more
TL;DR: A nurse led intensive care follow-up programme showed no evidence of being effective or cost effective in improving patients’ quality of life in the year after discharge from intensive care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Increased Hospital-Based Physical Rehabilitation and Information Provision After Intensive Care Unit Discharge: The RECOVER Randomized Clinical Trial
Timothy S. Walsh,Timothy S. Walsh,Lisa Salisbury,Judith L. Merriweather,Judith L. Merriweather,Julia Boyd,David M Griffith,David M Griffith,Guro Huby,Susanne Kean,Simon J. Mackenzie,Ashma Krishan,Stephanie Lewis,Gordon D Murray,John F. Forbes,Joel Smith,Janice Rattray,Alastair M. Hull,Alastair M. Hull,Pam Ramsay,Pam Ramsay +20 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the effect of increasing physical and nutritional rehabilitation plus information delivered during the post-intensive care unit (ICU) acute hospital stay by dedicated rehabilitation assistants on subsequent mobility, HRQOL, and prevalent disabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Predictors of emotional outcomes of intensive care
TL;DR: Subjective interpretation of the intensive care experience emerged as a consistent predictor of adverse emotional outcome, in both the short‐ and the long‐term.
Journal ArticleDOI
The intensive care experience: development of the ICE questionnaire
TL;DR: The development of an intensive care experience questionnaire which aims to identify the domains of such an experience, assess and quantify that experience, and explore its impact on short- and long-term emotional outcome is described.