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Kathy Murphy

Researcher at National University of Ireland, Galway

Publications -  98
Citations -  7554

Kathy Murphy is an academic researcher from National University of Ireland, Galway. The author has contributed to research in topics: Qualitative research & Dementia. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 98 publications receiving 6636 citations. Previous affiliations of Kathy Murphy include John Radcliffe Hospital & Oxford Brookes University.

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‘Seeing me through my memories’: a grounded theory study on using reminiscence with people with dementia living in long‐term care

TL;DR: This study found that reminiscence enhanced the experience of living in long-term care for residents with dementia and working in long -term care settings for staff.
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Using case study within a sequential explanatory design to evaluate the impact of specialist and advanced practice roles on clinical outcomes: the SCAPE study

TL;DR: This aim of this paper is to use The SCAPE Study: Specialist Clinical and Advanced Practitioner Evaluation in Ireland to illustrate how case study was used to strengthen a Sequential Explanatory Design.
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Participants’ perceptions of the factors that influence Diabetes Self‐Management Following a Structured Education (DAFNE) programme

TL;DR: Five factors that influenced participants' self-management of their diabetes following dose adjustment for normal eating were identified and these were knowledge, support, motivation, relationship shift and empowerment, and all related to the core category, 'Being in Control'.
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A concept analysis of autonomy for older people in residential care.

TL;DR: A concept analysis of residential autonomy to identify its attributes and reveal the antecedents and consequences to enable this concept to be operationalised in practice is undertaken.
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The impact of reminiscence on the quality of life of residents with dementia in long‐stay care

TL;DR: There is increasing recognition of the potential use of reminiscence in maintaining or improving the quality of life of people with dementia, despite being used widely in dementia care.