J
Jeremy Bunker
Researcher at University of New South Wales
Publications - 11
Citations - 330
Jeremy Bunker is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: COPD & Reproductive health. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 288 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeremy Bunker include Sydney South West Area Health Service.
Papers
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Journal Article
Choosing general practice as a career - the influences of education and training.
Jeremy Bunker,Narelle Shadbolt +1 more
TL;DR: This review summarises the influences of medical student selection criteria, curriculum, geographical location, timing and duration of general practice exposure and experience, prevocational experience, and vocational training, on an eventual choice of generalpractice as a career.
Journal Article
Choosing general practice - a review of career choice determinants.
Narelle Shadbolt,Jeremy Bunker +1 more
TL;DR: This review takes a narrative synthesis approach - a systematic approach to interpreting complex evidence - to a broad literature review of the complex issue of medical career decision making.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early intervention for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by practice nurse and GP teams: a cluster randomized trial
Nicholas Zwar,Jeremy Bunker,Helen K. Reddel,Sarah Dennis,Sarah Dennis,Sandy Middleton,Onno C. P. van Schayck,Alan J. Crockett,Iqbal Hasan,Oshana Hermiz,Sanjyot Vagholkar,Wei Xuan,Guy B. Marks,Guy B. Marks +13 more
TL;DR: Intervention uptake was low and had no additional beneficial effect, over usual care, on participants' health-related QoL, and Influenza vaccination was higher in the intervention group than the control group.
Journal ArticleDOI
Health reform: Is routinely collected electronic information fit for purpose?
Siaw-Teng Liaw,Huei Yang Chen,Della Maneze,Jane Taggart,Sarah Dennis,Sanjyot Vagholkar,Jeremy Bunker +6 more
TL;DR: The accuracy of the diagnoses of some chronic diseases in an ED information system, a module of the NSW Health electronic medical record (EMR), and the consistency of the reports generated by the EMR were examined.
Journal ArticleDOI
A pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial of early intervention for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by practice nurse-general practitioner teams: Study Protocol
Jeremy Bunker,Helen K. Reddel,Sarah Dennis,Sandy Middleton,C.P. van Schayck,Alan J. Crockett,Iqbal Hasan,Oshana Hermiz,Sanjyot Vagholkar,Guy B. Marks,Nicholas Zwar +10 more
TL;DR: A pragmatic cluster randomised trial will test the hypothesis that intervention by a practice nurse-general practitioner (GP) team leads to improved health-related quality of life and greater adherence with clinical practice guidelines for patients with newly-diagnosed COPD, compared with usual care.