Philippa Olive
University of Central Lancashire
18 Papers
35 Citations
Philippa Olive is an academic researcher from University of Central Lancashire. The author has contributed to research in topics: Domestic violence & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 14 publications. Previous affiliations of Philippa Olive include Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
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Papers
Care for emergency department patients who have experienced domestic violence: a review of the evidence base.
TL;DR: The nursing care for patients in emergency and acute health care settings who have experienced domestic violence should focus on three domains of: Providing physical, psychological and emotional support; Enhancing safety of the patient and their family; and Promoting self-efficacy.
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Estimating the costs of gender-based violence in the European Union
Sylvia Walby,Philippa Olive +1 more
- 10 Dec 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify and recommend appropriate methodologies to measure the cost of gender-based and intimate partner violence in EU-28 Member States by drawing on the definitions advanced by the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (UN 1993) and Council of Europe (2011) respectively.
57
The holistic nursing care of patients with minor injuries attending the A&E department.
TL;DR: The study identifies issues that adversely affect the provision of holistic nursing care, notably fragmentation of care, dissemination of nursing information, and privacy.
32
Clinical academic research internships: What works for nurses and the wider nursing, midwifery and allied health professional workforce.
Philippa Olive,Fiona Maxton,Cate Ann Bell,Suzanne Bench,Suzanne Bench,Linda Tinkler,Linda Tinkler,Stephanie P Jones,Joyce Kenkre +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe and report on clinical academic internship opportunities available to nurses to share internationally, a range of innovative programmes currently in operation across the UK, and illustrate some of the tangible benefits for patients, professional development, clinical teams and NHS organisations resulting from these clinical academic internships.
25
Violence exposure and young people’s vulnerability, mental and physical health
TL;DR: Health risks and inequalities reported by CYP in this study provide compelling intelligence for renewed strategic policy-level consideration in the design and delivery of young peoples’ health services.