Publications by authors named "Rob Hale"

Though dosimetry has a multitude of treatment modalities, software, and workflows to aid in the treatment planning process, treatment planners are still responsible for several tedious and monotonous tasks that could decrease their planning efficiency. The purpose of this study was to determine if scripting could improve treatment planning efficiency for multiple brain lesion stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) volumetric arc therapy cases by reducing planning time commitment. A script was developed for multiple brain lesion SRS cases using Eclipse scripting application programming interface with the intention of improving treatment planning efficiency by creating optimization structures and importing prescription and suggested OS dose metrics to the optimizer.

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Higher academic institutions in the UK need to drive improvements in equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) through sustainable practical interventions. A broad view of inclusivity is based on an intersectional approach that considers race, geographical location, caring responsibilities, disability, neurodiversity, religion, and LGBTQIA+ identities. We describe the establishment of a diverse stakeholder group to develop practical grass-roots recommendations through which improvements can be advanced.

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Morale among psychiatrists continues to be seriously challenged in the face of recruitment difficulties, unfilled posts, diagnostic controversies, service reconfigurations and public criticism of psychiatric care, in addition to other difficulties. In this article, we argue that the positivist paradigm that continues to dominate British psychiatry has led to an undervaluing of subjectivity and of the role of emotions within psychiatric training and practice. Reintegrating the subjective perspective and promoting emotional awareness and reflection may go some way towards restoring faith in the psychiatric specialty.

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Background: In the United Kingdom, specialist treatment and intervention services for doctors are underdeveloped. The MedNet programme, created in 1997 and funded by the London Deanery, aims to fill this gap by providing a self-referral, face-to-face, psychotherapeutic assessment service for doctors in London and South-East England. MedNet was designed to be a low-threshold service, targeting doctors without formal psychiatric problems.

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