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Featured researches published by Ian Hodgson.


BMJ | 2004

Barriers to better care for people with AIDS in developing countries.

Andrew S Furber; Ian Hodgson; Alice Desclaux; David S Mukasa

WHOs “3 by 5” initiative to increase access to antiretroviral drugs to people with AIDS in developing countries is highly ambitious. Some of the biggest obstacles relate to delivering care


Journal of Research in Nursing | 2004

Using ethnography (or qualitative methods) to investigate drug errors: A critique of a published study

Gerry Armitage; Award Holder; Ian Hodgson

The effects of drug errors and any consequent adverse events frequently impact on patients, their relatives and professional carers. Furthermore, the financial cost to the National Health Service is considerable (DoH, 2000; DoH, 2001; DoH, 2004). In a study of two London teaching hospitals, Vincent et al. (2001) found that 10% of patients are exposed to an adverse event, which adds a mean 8.5 days to their hospital stay. Drug errors are recurrently reported to account for between 10 and 20% of all adverse events (DoH, 2004). In response to Department of Health policy, NHS trusts are changing their approach to the management of error to encourage more reporting. The emphasis is on openness and support, and individual and organisational learning rather than blame. Research designed to increase a knowledge of the aetiology and context of drug errors should be carefully constructed and include qualitative methods which, if implemented according to established convention, can reflect the approaches described above. This paper will critique a recently published study that focused on nursing practice and was, in our view, inappropriately described as ethnographic. The study undoubtedly adds to the body of existing knowledge about drug errors and, crucially, if the study contributes to improved patient safety, it must, fundamentally, be valued. Nevertheless, some qualitative research conventions were broken and, as such, it is suggested, some opportunities for a broader understanding and for learning may have been lost. The critique will lead to a range of recommendations about future qualitative studies in this research domain which, it is argued, could produce a fuller picture of the context, culture and, perhaps, even the cause of error.


Journal of Research in Nursing | 2009

Caring for persons with Parkinson’s disease in care homes: Perceptions of residents and their close relatives, and an associated review of residents’ care plans:

Gerry Armitage; Jenny E. Adams; Rob Newell; David Coates; Lucy Ziegler; Ian Hodgson

Abstract Through qualitative in-depth interviews, we collected the views of persons with Parkinson’s disease (pwPD) and their close relatives in care homes to establish their collective views of the effectiveness of care. We also reviewed the corresponding care plans. Drawing on these two forms of data collection, we compared similarities and differences between the qualitative interview data and the care plan analysis to elaborate on the experience of residential care for pwPD. Close relatives of care home residents can be a fruitful source of information for care home staff, throughout the care planning process, especially in relation to the specific needs of a pwPD. Although health and social policy advocate active collaboration between people with long-term conditions, their families, and their formal carers, there is limited evidence of such collaboration in the data examined here. There is an apparent shortfall in the knowledge and understanding of PD among care home staff. There are important pragmatic (e.g. drug administration) as well as psycho-social reasons for flexibility in routine care provision to meet the dynamic needs of pwPD. The findings here support the need for further, larger scale research into the quality of care for pwPD who are care home residents.


Acupuncture in Medicine | 2010

The Mae On Project: using acupuncture for symptom relief and improved quality of life for people living with HIV and AIDS in rural Thailand

Laura Louie; Nopporn Pathanapornpandh; Unchalee Pultajuk; Robert C. Kaplan; Ian Hodgson; Lawrence Maund; Heather Greenlee

Acupuncture in combination with antiretroviral therapies is a potentially useful treatment for HIV-related symptom relief in resource-poor settings. Traditional Chinese medicine has a long history of being used to enhance immune function. In the setting of HIV, Chinese traditional medicine allows for symptom treatment without adding extra medications to a complex drug regime. This paper provides details of a project at Mae On Hospital in rural northern Thailand where allopathic/conventional treatments are used in tandem with acupuncture. A preliminary evaluation of the project suggests that an integrated approach to symptom relief is viewed positively by respondents receiving acupuncture, though further studies are required to confirm the association between acupuncture and symptom relief. The project also demonstrates the feasibility of developing a cost-effective acupuncture programme using local healthcare staff.


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 2006

Empathy, inclusion and enclaves: the culture of care of people with HIV/AIDS and nursing implications

Ian Hodgson


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 1997

Attitudes towards people with HIV/AIDS: entropy and health care ethics

Ian Hodgson


Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research | 2000

Ethnography and Health Care: Focus on Nursing

Ian Hodgson


BMJ | 2011

Exploring the delivery of antiretroviral therapy for symptomatic HIV in Swaziland: threats to the successful treatment and safety of outpatients attending regional and district clinics

Gerry Armitage; Ian Hodgson; John Wright; Kerry A Bailey; Estel Mkhwana


Bulletin of Latin American Research | 2009

Fixing Men: Sex, Birth Control and AIDS in Mexico ‐ by Gutmann, Matthew

Ian Hodgson


African Journal of Medical Practice | 2005

Barriers to better care for people with AIDS in developing countries

Ian Hodgson; Alice Desclaux; David S Mukasa

Collaboration


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Gerry Armitage

Bradford Royal Infirmary

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Alice Desclaux

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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John Wright

Bradford Royal Infirmary

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Rob Newell

University of Bradford

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Robert C. Kaplan

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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