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Jill Manthorpe

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  877
Citations -  14866

Jill Manthorpe is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social work & Dementia. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 834 publications receiving 12954 citations. Previous affiliations of Jill Manthorpe include National Institute for Health Research & Royal Society.

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The effectiveness of collaborative care for people with memory problems in primary care: results of the CAREDEM case management modelling and feasibility study

TL;DR: The model of case management developed and evaluated in this feasibility study is unlikely to be sustainable in general practice under current conditions and in the view it would not be appropriate to attempt a definitive trial of this model.

Evaluation of the Individual Budgets Pilot Programme: Final Report

TL;DR: This evaluation is the first robust UK study of the implementation and impact of personalisation approaches in social care.
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Sooner or later? Issues in the early diagnosis of dementia in general practice: a qualitative study

TL;DR: Pupils situate dementia in a family context but do not yet use a disablement model of dementia which might reduce tensions about early diagnosis and the disclosure of the diagnosis, and the term diagnosis could usefully be replaced by recognition, to aid this shift in model.
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Primary care and dementia: 1. diagnosis, screening and disclosure

TL;DR: To write a narrative review of the roles of primary care practitioners in caring for people with dementia in the community, primary care nurses and midwives were asked to provide a history of the practice and recommend improvements.
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Mistreatment of Older People in the United Kingdom: Findings from the First National Prevalence Study

TL;DR: Women were significantly more likely to have experienced mistreatment than men, but there were gender differences according to type of abuse and perpetrator characteristics, and Divergent patterns were found for neglect, financial, and interpersonal abuse.