Teresa Jones
Teresa graduated from City University in 2000 with a MSc in Information Science. She has developed a particular interest in bibliometric techniques and took up a NHS Research Fellowship at HERG to examine the outputs from research with some element of NHS funding.
Teresa was part of the team that conducted a systematic review, funded by the HTA, examining the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of drug treatments for neuropathic pain associated with post-herpetic neuralgia and diabetic neuropathy.
More recently she has spent much of her time working on a project funded by the MRC Methodology Programme investigating the categorisation of citations across many generations of citing papers to trace the wider impacts of research. This has involved the development of a new methodology which has been applied to research in the area of psychiatry and neuroscience.
In addition she is part of the team examining the available evidence on engagement of research and improved performance in healthcare organisations.
Her work forms part of the methodological development theme within the “Analysis of ‘Payback’ from Research” project.
Research interests: the evaluation of research and the use of bibliometric techniques. The translation of research findings into clinical practice.
Recent publications (selected)
Fox-Rushby JA, Griffith GL, Ross JR, Peacock JL, Farquhar-Smith P, Jones T, Phillips TJC, Branford RA, Bruni C, Coyle D, Williams JE. (Pending) The efficacy and cost-effectiveness of different treatment pathways for neuropathic pain: systematic review and economic modelling of post-herpetic neuralgia and painful diabetic neuropathy. Health Technology Assessment. Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M (2007) The information sources and journals consulted or read by UK paediatricians to inform their clinical practice and those which they consider important: a questionnaire survey, BMC Pediatrics,7, 1, doi:10.1186/1471-2431-7-1 http://hdl.handle.net/2438/670 Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M (2006) The journals of importance to UK clinicians: a questionnaire survey of surgeons. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 6, 24, doi:1186/1472-6947-6-24 http://hdl.handle.net/2438/674 Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M, Rippon I (2005) Journals used for the publication of English psychiatry, surgery and paediatrics research. Aslib Proceedings, 57 (3): 278-290. Buxton M, Hanney S, Jones T (2004) Estimating the economic value to societies of the impact of health research: a critical review, Bulletin of World Health Organisation, vol 82:733-739 pdf copy Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M, Burns T (2004) What British psychiatrists read: Questionnaire survey of journal usage among clinicians. British Journal of Psychiatry, vol 185 , pp 251-7.
Conference presentations
Jones, TH Hanney, S Donovan, C Tracing the wider impacts of biomedical research: A literature search to develop a novel citation categorisation technique 7th International conference on webometrics, informetrics and scientometrics, 12th COLLNET meeting September 20-23, 2011, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.
Jones, T Hanney, S Do the journals that UK clinical practitioners consider important for clinical practice have high impact factors? A cross specialty comparison. Measuring Scientific and Technological Progress: S&T Indicators Conference 2004, Leiden, The Netherlands
Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M (2006) The journals of importance to UK clinicians: a questionnaire survey of surgeons. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 6, 24, doi:1186/1472-6947-6-24 http://hdl.handle.net/2438/674 Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M, Rippon I (2005) Journals used for the publication of English psychiatry, surgery and paediatrics research. Aslib Proceedings, 57 (3): 278-290. Buxton M, Hanney S, Jones T (2004) Estimating the economic value to societies of the impact of health research: a critical review, Bulletin of World Health Organisation, vol 82:733-739 pdf copy Jones T, Hanney S, Buxton M, Burns T (2004) What British psychiatrists read: Questionnaire survey of journal usage among clinicians. British Journal of Psychiatry, vol 185 , pp 251-7.
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