Dr Janet Hanley J.Hanley@napier.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Five year records based follow up of people who participated in the Telescot hypertension and COPD trials
People Involved
Project Description
Five year records based follow up of the participants in two telemonitoring trials will be carried out for the following reasons
1. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is an incurable, progressive lung condition characterised by intermittent acu
Status | Project Live |
---|---|
Funder(s) | Edinburgh Napier Funded |
Value | £0.00 |
Project Dates | Jun 1, 2018 - May 31, 2019 |
You might also like
Nursing & Cardiac or Pulmonary Rehabilitation Aug 1, 2008 - Feb 28, 2011
Remote respiratory rate monitoring in COPD Aug 1, 2013 - Apr 30, 2015
An estimated 3.7 million people live with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in the UK, predicted to increase by one-third by 2030, costing the NHS ?1.2 billion/yr. Over 50% of costs are due to hospital admissions for exacerbations. Early...
Read More about Remote respiratory rate monitoring in COPD.
Public health, nurse-led blood pressure monitoring Feb 1, 2008 - Jul 31, 2012
Scale-up BP: Implementing evidence-based hypertension research at scale Nov 1, 2015 - Oct 31, 2017
To determine the feasibility of carrying out a phase 4 study on the clinical and health economic impact of implementing telemonitoring of BP as routine practice for the majority of patients with raised BP in primary care.
Exploring the use of activity tracking and mobile phone based feedback integrated with health care records to increase activity levels and reduce sedentary behaviour in people with type 2 diabetes Jan 1, 2018 - Mar 31, 2025
The benefits of exercise and reduced sedentary behavior on health and wellbeing are important for the whole population, but for those with type 2 diabetes they have particular benefits in enhancing blood glucose control. This proposal is to explore t...
Read More about Exploring the use of activity tracking and mobile phone based feedback integrated with health care records to increase activity levels and reduce sedentary behaviour in people with type 2 diabetes.