
Dr Cynthia Ochieng
PhD, MSc, BSc
Current positions
Research Fellow
School of Psychological ScienceResearch Fellow
Bristol Medical School (PHS)
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
Cynthia currently works in the School of Psychological Science, utilising the person-based approach for intervention development. She is involved in developing a PPI and stakeholder co-produced intervention for post-partum blood pressure self-management.
Cynthia previously worked at the NIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre and Bristol Centre for Surgical Research, which aimed to improve the surgical evidence base and patient care through high quality multidisciplinary research. Her work broadly looked at issues such as informed consent during innovative surgeries. She was involved in a study on risks and innovations for surgery during the Covid19 pandemic, information provision within surgical innovation and surgical prioritisation during the Covid19 pandemic.
She has post-doctoral experience in a number of domains of health research including:
- Palliative care- She conducted a bereavement care survey study for the Welsh government
- Advance Care Planning- She used qualitative methodology to evaluate the ReSPECT form developed by the Resuscitation Council
- Paediatric Neuro-disability nutrition support- She was invloved in assessing psychosocial support models for families having children with neuro-disability and requiring tube feeding
- Urology- She conducted qualitative research nested within a trial of men with bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms randomised for/against urodynamic testing and subsequently having/not having bladder outlet surgery
Her PhD study was at the University of Bristol and explored the experiences of participation and engagement in paediatric biobanks and particularly the ALSPAC cohort study.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Employing COnceptual schema for policy and Translation Engagement in Research
Role
Student
Description
Engagement is critical to contextualising and translating ideas and evidence within transdisciplinary teams. It also affords opportunities to link developments to wider communities of practice. The ÉCOUTER (Employing COnceptual schema…Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (PHS)Dates
01/01/2011 to 01/05/2017
Publications
Recent publications
10/07/2024105 Optimising shared decision making for surgical innovation
A tool for optimising shared decision making and informed consent for surgical innovation
BMJ Surgery, Interventions, & Health Technologies
Exploring the role of ChatGPT in rapid intervention text development
F1000Research
What are patients told about innovative surgical procedures?
Annals of Surgery
Managing surgical demand when needs outstrip resource
British Journal of Surgery