Publications by authors named "N Goodfellow"

Background: Sub-optimal medicines use is a challenge globally, contributing to poorer health outcomes, inefficiencies and waste. The Medicines Optimisation Innovation Centre (MOIC) was established in Northern Ireland by the Department of Health (DH) in 2015 to support implementation of the Medicines Optimisation Quality Framework.

Aim: To demonstrate how MOIC informs policy and provides support to commissioners to improve population health and wellbeing.

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This article presents a comprehensive and multistage approach to the development of the user experience (UX) for an mHealth application targeting older adult patients with chronic diseases, specifically chronic heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The study adopts a mixed methods approach, incorporating both quantitative and qualitative components. The underlying hypothesis posits that baseline medicine adherence knowledge (measured by the MARS questionnaire), beliefs about medicines (measured by the BMQ questionnaire), and level of user experience (measured by the SUS and UEQ questionnaires) act as predictors of adherence change after a period of usage of the mHealth application.

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Background: The shift toward online recruitment methods, accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, has brought to the forefront the growing concern of encountering fraudulent participants in health care research. The increasing prevalence of this issue poses a serious threat to the reliability and integrity of research data and subsequent findings.

Objective: This study aims to explore the experiences of health care researchers (HCRs) who have encountered fraudulent participants while using online recruitment methods and platforms.

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Objective: Aberrant Rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) activity is implicated in several vascular and immunologic disorders. We previously demonstrated increased ROCK activity in histopathologically negative temporal artery biopsies (TABs) in subjects with clinical giant cell arteritis (GCA) compared to those without GCA. This current study aimed to examine ROCK activity in a larger cohort of biopsy-negative GCA subjects and to validate the prior findings.

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Despite growing evidence that mirror therapy (MT) is effective for improving lower-extremity (LE) function in patients with stroke, it is not commonly used by physiotherapists. The purpose of this study was to determine whether change would occur in physiotherapists' knowledge of, confidence in performing, and willingness to use MT for LE stroke rehabilitation after participating in a 1-hour educational module. A convenience sample of physiotherapists working in neurorehabilitation was recruited for a single-group quasi-experimental pre-post study.

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