J
John Mallett
Researcher at Ulster University
Publications - 61
Citations - 1218
John Mallett is an academic researcher from Ulster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social work & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 51 publications receiving 892 citations.
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Reducing loneliness amongst older people: a systematic search and narrative review
TL;DR: Investigation of the effectiveness of recent social therapeutic interventions to reduce loneliness in older people found three studies reporting on new technologies and one on a group work intervention identified significant reductions in loneliness.
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The importance of context specificity in work stress research: A test of the Demand-Control-Support model in academics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how the Demand Control-Support (D-C-S) model applied in a well-defined occupational group and found that it accounted for 26, 6, and 8% of the variance in job satisfaction, psychological distress and burnout, respectively, among 166 academics in a UK university.
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Measuring young people's attitudes to breastfeeding using the Theory of Planned Behaviour
TL;DR: A questionnaire to measure young people's attitudes to breastfeeding using the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) proved to be reliable, and preliminary analysis provided strong support for the predictive power of the TPB.
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Childhood adversity and hallucinations: a community-based study using the National Comorbidity Survey Replication
TL;DR: Findings indicating that adverse events in childhood may be causally related to subsequent psychosis are supported and repeated recommendations concerning routine enquiry about adverse experiences in childhood receive support.
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The Role of Coping in the Wellbeing and Work-Related Quality of Life of UK Health and Social Care Workers during COVID-19.
Paula McFadden,Jana Ross,John Moriarty,John Mallett,Heike Schroder,J.M Ravalier,Jill Manthorpe,Denise Currie,Jaclyn Harron,Patricia Gillen +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between coping strategies and wellbeing and quality of working life in nurses, midwives, allied health professionals, social care workers and social workers who worked in health and social care in the UK during its first wave of COVID-19.