Mark S. Hawley
University of Sheffield
123 Papers
869 Citations
Mark S. Hawley is an academic researcher from University of Sheffield. The author has contributed to research in topics: Telecare & Health care. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 117 publications. Previous affiliations of Mark S. Hawley include Royal Hallamshire Hospital & Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.
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Papers
Understanding the care and support needs of older people: a scoping review and categorisation using the WHO international classification of functioning, disability and health framework (ICF)
TL;DR: It is highlighted that older people living with chronic conditions have unmet care needs related to their physical and psychological health, social life, as well as the environment in which they live and interact.
Factors affecting front line staff acceptance of telehealth technologies: a mixed-method systematic review.
TL;DR: If telehealth is to be implemented, studies indicate that the lack of acceptance of this new way of working may be a key barrier, however, recommendations have not moved beyond barrier identification to recognizing solutions that might be implemented by front-line staff.
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Interventions employing mobile technology for overweight and obesity: an early systematic review of randomized controlled trials.
TL;DR: There is consistent strong evidence across the included multiple high‐quality RCTs that weight loss occurs in the short‐term because of mobile technology interventions, with moderate evidence for the medium‐term.
Video based technology for ambient assisted living: A review of the literature
Fabien Cardinaux,Deepayan Bhowmik,Charith Abhayaratne,Mark S. Hawley +3 more
- 01 Aug 2011
TL;DR: A comprehensive survey of the scope of the domain, the existing technical solutions and the challenges to be faced is presented, including the development of systems that are robust in the real-world and are accepted by users, carers and society.
Smartphone Apps to Support Self-Management of Hypertension: Review and Content Analysis.
TL;DR: Only a small number of apps supporting hypertension self-management in the most popular app stores are likely to be effective, and many apps lack security measures as well as a clear theoretical basis and do not provide any evidence concerning their effectiveness and usability.