Metadata
Title
Supportive Cancer Care
Category
graduate
UUID
2ad558e500e740a5b3665301db52de64
Source URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hls/groups/supportive-cancer-care-and-l...
Parent URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T05:14:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Supportive Cancer Care

Source: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hls/groups/supportive-cancer-care-and-long-term-conditions Parent: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy

Group Leader(s): Professor Eila Watson

Contact:

ewatson@brookes.ac.uk

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About us

Research impact

Leadership

Membership

Projects

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About us Research impact Leadership Membership Projects

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About us

The Supportive Cancer Care Research Group conducts research to inform how services and support delivered to patients and their families/ carers can be improved.

The group is interdisciplinary and has strong links with clinical partners and other academic institutions.

Supportive care includes addressing the psychosocial, physical, information, and practical needs of patients (and family members/ carers) throughout their journey. Using both quantitative and qualitative research, we aim to describe the experiences and needs of patients, and to develop and test interventions to meet those needs.

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Research impact

As more people are diagnosed and live longer with cancer, the prevalence of cancer survivors is growing rapidly, and, in the UK, will reach 4 million by 2030. People living with and beyond a cancer diagnosis can experience wide-ranging impacts following diagnosis and treatment, and understanding how to maximise quality of life is increasingly important.

Our research has had a significant impact on improving the experiences, quality of life and health outcomes of cancer survivors. Through projects commissioned by cancer charities, we have provided robust and novel evidence of the physical, psychological and social consequences of diagnosis and treatment on patients and their families, highlighting important gaps in care and support. We have provided key evidence to guide cancer charities in developing strategy, and informed the development and delivery of supportive care services at both the local and national level.

Leadership

Professor Eila Watson

Professor in Supportive Cancer Care, and Deputy Director (interim) of OxInAHR

View profile for Eila Watson

Membership

Staff members Research students

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Staff

Name Role Email
Dr Obrey Alexis Reader in Adult Nursing oalexis@brookes.ac.uk
Professor Mary Boulton Professor Emerita of Health Sociology mgboulton@brookes.ac.uk
Professor Jo Brett Professor jbrett@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Dan Butcher Senior Lecturer - Course Lead Professional Doctorate in Nursing dbutcher@brookes.ac.uk
Professor Paul Carding Director of OxInAHR (Oxford Institute of Allied Health Research) pcarding@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Zoe Davey Research Fellow zdavey@brookes.ac.uk
Mr Paul Dawson Research Fellow pdawson@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Kathleen Greenway Associate Professor of Adult Nursing kgreenway@brookes.ac.uk
Professor Catherine Henshall Professor of Nursing chenshall@brookes.ac.uk
Katie Hodson Research Trial Administrator khodson@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Elizabeth Jestico Senior Lecturer in Children's Nursing ejestico@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Olga Kozlowska Senior Lecturer in Research and Knowledge Exchange okozlowska@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Lauren Matheson Research Fellow l.matheson@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Lucy McGeagh Senior Research Fellow lmcgeagh@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Clair Merriman Divisional Lead for NMAHP Research and Innovation Oxford University Hospital Foundation Trust and Oxford Brookes University cmerriman@brookes.ac.uk
Mr Prasundcoomar Ramluggun Senior Lecturer in Nursing pramluggun@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Sue Schutz Senior Lecturer seschutz@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Louise Stayt Associate Professor lstayt@brookes.ac.uk
Dr Marion Waite Associate Professor of Nursing Academic Development mwaite@brookes.ac.uk

Projects

Active projects Completed projects

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Active projects

Project title and description Investigator(s) Funder(s) Dates
Supporting Women with Breast Cancer with AdhErence to Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy (SWEET) This research programme is developing and trialling a patient-centred, tailored intervention to reduce poor adherence to AET and improve quality of life and, in the longer-term, reduce recurrence, in women with hormone-receptor positive breast cancer. Professor Eila Watson NIHR From: May 2020 Until: May 2026
PETNECK2 PET-CT guided, symptom-based, patient-driven surveillance versus clinical follow-up in head neck cancer (PET NECK 2). People with head and neck cancer who are low risk of recurrence following a PET CT scan at one year post treatment will be randomised into patient initiated follow-up with an urgent two week referral into the clinic if they identify worrying symptoms or usual clinical follow-up with appointments every 3-6 months for five years. Professor Jo Brett, Professor Hisham Mehanna, Dr Paul Nankivell NIHR From: December 2020 Until: December 2026
Diabetes mellitus and mental health conditions in secondary mental health services Integrated approach to diagnosis and management of diabetes mellitus and mental health conditions in secondary mental health services - a feasibility study using the Clinical Records Interactive Search system. Dr Olga Kozlowska From: January 2021
FORTEe: Get strong to fight childhood cancer This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 945153 Hayley Marriott, Mr Stan Windsor, Dr Peter Wright Horizon 2020 From: May 2021 Until: July 2026

Image credit:

Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

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