Research Topics
| Fiona A StevensonSummaryAffiliation: University College London Country: UK Publications
| Collaborators
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Detail Information
Publications
Consultations do not have to be longerLinda Jenkins
BMJ 325:388. 2002
Over-the-counter medicines: professional expertise and consumer discoursesFiona A Stevenson
Primary Care and Population Sciences, University College London, London, UK
Sociol Health Illn 30:913-28. 2008..Further research using a larger dataset to investigate problems in interactions resulting from tensions between pharmaceutical expertise and consumerism is indicated...
Health beliefs before and after participation on an exercised-based rehabilitation programme for chronic knee pain: doing is believingMichael V Hurley
Rehabilitation Research Unit, Kings College London, London, UK
BMC Musculoskelet Disord 11:31. 2010....
Discourses of agency and the search for the authentic self: the case of mood-modifying medicinesFiona Stevenson
University College London, London, UK
Soc Sci Med 66:170-81. 2008....
Information from the Internet and the doctor-patient relationship: the patient perspective--a qualitative studyFiona A Stevenson
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, University College London, Hampstead Campus, Rowland Hill Street, London NW3 2PF, UK
BMC Fam Pract 8:47. 2007..Both doctors and patients may perceive the Internet as a potential challenge to existing therapeutic relationships. Here we examine patients' views of the effect of the Internet on their relationship with doctors...
The relationship between medicine and the public: the challenge of concordanceFiona Stevenson
University College London, UK
Health (London) 9:5-21. 2005....
A systematic review of the research on communication between patients and health care professionals about medicines: the consequences for concordanceFiona A Stevenson
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College School of Medicine, Hampstead, London, UK
Health Expect 7:235-45. 2004..We draw on a systematic review of research on two-way communication between patients and health practitioners about medicines in order to determine the extent to which concordance is, or is not, being put into practice...
Images of nature in relation to mood modifying medicines: a user perspectiveFiona Stevenson
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London NW3 2PF, UK
Health (London) 8:241-62. 2004....
General practitioners' views on shared decision making: a qualitative analysisFiona A Stevenson
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Guy s, King s, and St Thomas School of Medicine, Kings College, London, UK
Patient Educ Couns 50:291-3. 2003..The process outlined is being developed in order to establish whether the techniques could provide a supportive environment in which GPs can make changes to their practice to increase patient participation...
Self-treatment and its discussion in medical consultations: how is medical pluralism managed in practice?Fiona A Stevenson
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Guy s, King s, and St Thomas School of Medicine, Kings College, London SE11 6SP, UK
Soc Sci Med 57:513-27. 2003....
Rejoinder to 'The myth of concordance': a response to ArmstrongFiona Stevenson
University College London, UK
Health (London) 9:29-30. 2005
Developing and using quantitative instruments for measuring doctor-patient communication about drugsLinda Jenkins
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Guy s King s and St Thomas School of Medicine, London, UK
Patient Educ Couns 50:273-8. 2003..The research was developmental and findings suggest that unnecessary prescribing and problems in communication are more likely to lead to poor outcomes in terms of non-adherence and patients having barriers to using their medication...
Internet interventions for long-term conditions: patient and caregiver quality criteriaCicely Kerr
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, University College London, United Kingdom. c.kerr [at] pcps.ucl.ac.uk
J Med Internet Res 8:e13. 2006..CONCLUSIONS: The user-generated quality criteria reported in this paper should help developers and purchasers provide Internet interventions that better meet user needs...
