R
Rod S Taylor
Researcher at Robertson Centre for Biostatistics
Publications - 558
Citations - 46254
Rod S Taylor is an academic researcher from Robertson Centre for Biostatistics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 104, co-authored 524 publications receiving 39332 citations. Previous affiliations of Rod S Taylor include Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry & United Nations Industrial Development Organization.
Papers
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Case note review
John Campbell,Emily Fletcher,Nicky Britten,Colin Green,Tim Holt,Valerie Lattimer,David Richards,Suzanne H Richards,Chris Salisbury,Rod S Taylor,Raff Calitri,Vicky Bowyer,Katherine Chaplin,Rebecca Kandiyali,Jamie Murdoch,Linnie Price,Julia Roscoe,Anna Varley,Fiona C Warren +18 more
Journal Article
Audit of cardiac rehabilitation in light of the National Service Framework for coronary heart disease
FC Taylor,Andrew D Beswick,Jackie Victory,Karen Rees,Ingolf Griebsch,Robert West,Rod S Taylor,Jackie Brown,Margaret Burke,Shah Ebrahim +9 more
TL;DR: In England, cardiac rehabilitation audit data collection is uncoordinated despite the standards set out in the NSF and a national and policy-driven standardised audit tool and appropriate facilities, staff and funding could facilitate the identification of eligible patients and the following of patients through rehabilitation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Home based cardiac rehabilitation could improve outcomes
TL;DR: Denvir and Zamvar as discussed by the authors cite practical problems in attending cardiac rehabilitation after cardiac surgery as a barrier for uptake in poorer patients, and two recent randomised controlled trials show that this is a common problem.
Journal ArticleDOI
Factors Hindering Cardiac Rehabilitation in Low- and Middle-Income Countries, by Level and Setting.
Journal ArticleDOI
The clinical and cost effectiveness of adapted dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) for bipolar mood instability in primary care (ThrIVe-B programme): a feasibility study.
Kim Wright,Alyson Dodd,Fiona C Warren,Antonieta Medina-Lara,Rod S Taylor,Steven Jones,Christabel Owens,Mahmood Javaid,Barney Dunn,Julie E Harvey,Alexandra Newbold,Thomas R. Lynch +11 more
TL;DR: This feasibility study is a phase II evaluation of a dialectical behavioural therapy-informed approach (Therapy for Inter-episode mood Variability in Bipolar) to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a future definitive trial evaluating the clinical and cost effectiveness of the ThrIVe-B programme.