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Sue Mawson

Researcher at University of Sheffield

Publications -  90
Citations -  1881

Sue Mawson is an academic researcher from University of Sheffield. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rehabilitation & Health care. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 88 publications receiving 1614 citations. Previous affiliations of Sue Mawson include Ulster University & University of Derby.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Telerehabilitation: enabling the remote delivery of healthcare, rehabilitation, and self management.

TL;DR: The issue ofSelf-care in rehabilitation and self-management will be discussed along with the rationale for how telerehabilitation can be used to promote client self-care and self -management.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Motivating mobility: designing for lived motivation in stroke rehabilitation

TL;DR: The experiences of building systems that motivate people to engage in upper limb rehabilitation exercise after stroke are presented and design guidelines that can inform a toolkit approach to support both scalability and personalisability are identified.
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Rehabilitation after two-part fractures of the neck of the humerus

TL;DR: It is shown that patients with two-part fractures of the proximal humerus who begin immediate physiotherapy, experience less pain and gains in shoulder function persist at 52 weeks which suggests that patients do not benefit from immobilisation before beginning physiotherapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

The reality of homes fit for heroes: design challenges for rehabilitation technology at home

TL;DR: This work carried out a series of visits to homes of people living with stroke and photographed their homes to provide a set of sensitivities that will help shape and frame ongoing design work for the successful deployment of rehabilitation technologies in real homes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A self-managed single exercise programme versus usual physiotherapy treatment for rotator cuff tendinopathy: A randomised controlled trial (the SELF study)

TL;DR: This study does not provide sufficient evidence of superiority of one intervention over the other in the short-, mid- or long-term and hence a self-management programme based around a single exercise appears comparable to usual physiotherapy treatment.