J
Judy Wright
Researcher at University of Leeds
Publications - 102
Citations - 2085
Judy Wright is an academic researcher from University of Leeds. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Population. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 90 publications receiving 1429 citations. Previous affiliations of Judy Wright include Health Science University & University of Nottingham.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Functionality and feedback: a protocol for a realist synthesis of the collation, interpretation and utilisation of PROMs data to improve patient care
Joanne Greenhalgh,Ray Pawson,Judy Wright,Nick Black,Jose M Valderas,David Meads,Elizabeth Gibbons,Laurence Wood,Charlotte Wood,Chris Mills,Sonia Dalkin +10 more
TL;DR: A realist synthesis of the evidence is executed to understand by what means and in what circumstances the feedback of PROMs data leads to the intended service improvements.
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Faith-adapted psychological therapies for depression and anxiety: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Naomi Anderson,Suzanne Heywood-Everett,Najma Siddiqi,Judy Wright,Jodi Meredith,Dean McMillan,Dean McMillan +6 more
TL;DR: Despite some suggestion that faith-adapted CBT may out-perform both standard CBT and control conditions, the effect sizes identified in this meta-analysis must be considered in the light of the substantial methodological limitations that affect the primary research data.
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How do aggregated patient-reported outcome measures data stimulate health care improvement? A realist synthesis.
Joanne Greenhalgh,Sonia Dalkin,Elizabeth Gibbons,Judy Wright,Jose M Valderas,David Meads,Nick Black +6 more
TL;DR: Although there is only limited research evidence to support some widely held theories of how aggregated patient-reported outcome measures data stimulate quality improvement, several lessons emerge from interventions sharing the same programme theories to help guide the increasing use of these measures.
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Clinical and cost-effectiveness, safety and acceptability of community intravenous antibiotic service models: CIVAS systematic review
TL;DR: There was little difference in duration of OPAT treatment compared with inpatient therapy, and overall OPAT appeared to produce superior cure/improvement rates, however, when models were considered individually, outpatient delivery appeared to be less effective, and self-administration and specialist nurse delivery more effective.