J
Julia Simons
Researcher at University of Cambridge
Publications - 3
Citations - 39
Julia Simons is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Public health. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 13 citations.
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Education for the Anthropocene: Planetary health, sustainable health care, and the health workforce.
TL;DR: This paper analyze how HPE can help decarbonize the healthcare sector to address both climate change and inequity in health outcomes and proposes simple learning objectives to equip HPE graduates with the knowledge, skills, and values to create a sustainable health system.
Posted ContentDOI
Adjusting to Disrupted Assessments, Placements and Teaching (ADAPT): a snapshot of the early response by UK medical schools to COVID-19
Anmol Arora,Georgios Solomou,Soham Bandyopadhyay,Julia Simons,Alex Osborne,Ioannis Georgiou,Catherine Dominic,Shumail Mahmood,Shreya Badhrinarayanan,Syed Rayyan Ahmed,Jack Wellington,Omar Kouli,Robin J Borchert,Joshua Feyi-Waboso,Scott Dickson,Savraj Kalsi,Dimitrios Karponis,Timothy Boardman,Harmani Kaur Daler,Abbey Boyle,Jessica Speller,Conor S Gillespie,Jie Man Low,Ratnaraj Vaidya,Ngan Hong Ta,Steven Aldridge,Jonathan Coll Martin,Natasha Douglas,Mary Goble,Tayyib Abdel-Hafiz Goolamallee,Emma Jane Norton,Andre Chu,Inshal Imtiaz,Oliver P. Devine +33 more
TL;DR: The approaches taken by medical schools have differed substantially, though there has been universal disruption to teaching and assessments, and the status of future elective cancellations and UK Foundation Programme Office (UKFPO) educational performance measure (EPM) decile calculations remains unclear.
Journal ArticleDOI
Disorders of gut‐brain interaction: Highly prevalent and burdensome yet under‐taught within medical education
Julia Simons,Umair Shajee,Olafur S. Palsson,Magnus Simren,Ami D. Sperber,Hans Törnblom,William E. Whitehead,Imran Aziz +7 more
TL;DR: Individuals with DGBI were significantly more likely than those without DGBI to have increased GI‐related healthcare visits, medication use, surgical interventions, non‐GI somatic symptoms, and reduced quality of life.