Research Topics
| Jane B HopkinsonSummaryAffiliation: University of Southampton Country: UK Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
The prevalence of concern about weight loss and change in eating habits in people with advanced cancerJane B Hopkinson
Macmillan Research Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton, Hampshire, United Kingdom
J Pain Symptom Manage 32:322-31. 2006..Further work is needed to establish if concerns are amenable to interventions that translate into meaningful outcomes for patients and their families...
How people with advanced cancer manage changing eating habitsJane B Hopkinson
Macmillan Research Unit, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, Hampshire, UK
J Adv Nurs 59:454-62. 2007..This paper is a report of a study to explore the management of changing eating habits in people with advanced cancer...
Everyday death: how do nurses cope with caring for dying people in hospital?Jane B Hopkinson
Macmillan Research Unit, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, Hampshire, UK
Int J Nurs Stud 42:125-33. 2005..On the basis of the theory, interventions are proposed that could help support nurses in their work with dying people...
Seeking new methodology for palliative care research: challenging assumptions about studying people who are approaching the end of lifeJane B Hopkinson
Macmillan Research Unit, University of Southampton, Highfield, UK
Palliat Med 19:532-7. 2005....
Exploring the experience of weight loss in people with advanced cancerJane Hopkinson
Macmillan Research Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
J Adv Nurs 54:304-12. 2006..This paper reports a study of the experience of and concerns about weight loss described by patients with advanced cancer, their caregivers and nurse specialists...
Helping patients with advanced cancer live with concerns about eating: a challenge for palliative care professionalsJane Hopkinson
School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, Hampshire, United Kingdom
J Pain Symptom Manage 31:293-305. 2006..Eating-related concerns present nurses and other health care professionals with the challenge of supporting differing patient preferences for living with the symptom, which can include the expectation of support for self-action...
The effectiveness of patient-family carer (couple) intervention for the management of symptoms and other health-related problems in people affected by cancer: a systematic literature search and narrative reviewJane B Hopkinson
University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
J Pain Symptom Manage 43:111-42. 2012..Cancer is widely acknowledged to impact on the whole family. Yet, we do not know if there is benefit (or harm) from patient-family carer interventions in the context of cancer care...
Caring for dying people in hospitalJane B Hopkinson
Senior Research Fellow, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Southampton University, Southampton, UK
J Adv Nurs 44:525-33. 2003..Therefore, there is little evidence on which to base supportive strategies at the level of individual nurses...
What to eat when off treatment and living with involuntary weight loss and cancer: a systematic search and narrative reviewJane B Hopkinson
School of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Support Care Cancer 19:1-17. 2011..The aim of this study was to report a systematic search and narrative review of the evidence base that can inform dietary advice for patients off treatment living with cancer cachexia syndrome (CCS)...
The emotional aspects of cancer anorexiaJane B Hopkinson
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Curr Opin Support Palliat Care 4:254-8. 2010..To discuss the psychosocial support of people affected by cancer anorexia, drawing on recent publications...
How to involve cancer patients at the end of life as co-researchersDavid N M Wright
Macmillan Research Unit, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Palliat Med 20:821-7. 2006..Recommendations are made to facilitate successful collaboration with palliative care service users in end of life research...
The hidden benefit: the supportive function of the nursing handover for qualified nurses caring for dying people in hospitalJane B Hopkinson
Winchester and Eastleigh NHS Trust, Winchester, UK
J Clin Nurs 11:168-75. 2002..6. The role of the nursing handover in providing emotional support for nurses has been little studied and is a potentially useful area of future research, especially if it can be related to patient experiences and outcomes...
The deliverability, acceptability, and perceived effect of the Macmillan approach to weight loss and eating difficulties: a phase II, cluster-randomized, exploratory trial of a psychosocial intervention for weight- and eating-related distress in people wiJane B Hopkinson
School of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
J Pain Symptom Manage 40:684-95. 2010....
