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Mark Ashworth

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  279
Citations -  6537

Mark Ashworth is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 245 publications receiving 5284 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Ashworth include University of Cambridge.

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Journal ArticleDOI

PSYCHLOPS – a psychometric outcome measure that is finding a niche

TL;DR: Ashworth et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed PSYCHLOPS (Psychological Outcome Profiles), a new psychometric outcome measure, which measures the effect of psychotherapy on patients.
Posted ContentDOI

Suspected COVID-19 in primary care: how GP records contribute to understanding differences in prevalence by ethnicity.

TL;DR: Black and south Asian ethnicity remain as predictors of community cases of COVID-19, with levels of risk similar to hospital admission cases, using data in GP records.
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Primary care funding entrenches health inequalities: time for a rethink.

TL;DR: The inverse care law is alive and well as discussed by the authors and it has been used to describe the mismatch between healthcare provision and healthcare need, and it is a factor that perpetuates disparity.
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The psychometric properties of PSYCHLOPS, an individualized patient-reported outcome measure of personal distress.

TL;DR: In this article, the psychometric properties of individualized patient-reported outcome measures (I-PROMs) combining traditional analysis and item response theory (IRT) were reported, and PSYCHLOPS functioned as a measure of a single latent trait, which was described as "personal distress."
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COVID-19 lockdown impact on the physical activity of adults with progressive muscle diseases

TL;DR: Findings can infer specific evidence-based recommendations about how to redress inactivity secondary to COVID-19 restrictions for adults with progressive muscle diseases and are likely to be generalisable to other groups who are vulnerable to functional decline secondary to prolonged inactivity.