Justin Aunger

Justin Aunger
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Justin verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
Justin verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • Doctor of Philosophy; BA (Hons)
  • Research Fellow at University of Birmingham

Working on understanding how unprofessional behaviours in acute care arise, and strategies for mitigating them.

About

46
Publications
4,905
Reads
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472
Citations
Introduction
Dr. Justin Aunger is a research fellow in the NIHR Midlands Patient Safety Research Collaboration, focused on improving clinical decision-making across acute and maternal settings. He has a background in behavioural science and is interested in working on complex behavioural challenges in healthcare; he has recently worked on projects seeking to understand and improve inter-organisational collaborations in healthcare, and to reduce unprofessional behaviours between healthcare staff.
Current institution
University of Birmingham
Current position
  • Research Fellow
Additional affiliations
September 2016 - August 2019
University of Birmingham
Position
  • Fellow
October 2019 - March 2021
University of Birmingham
Position
  • Fellow
Education
September 2016 - August 2019
University of Birmingham
Field of study
  • PhD in Sport, Exercise, and Rehabilitation Sciences - Behavioural science applied to health
September 2013 - August 2016
Maastricht University
Field of study
  • Health sciences

Publications

Publications (46)
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Unprofessional behaviours (UB) between healthcare staff are rife in global healthcare systems, negatively impacting staff wellbeing, patient safety and care quality. Drivers of UBs include organisational, situational, team, and leadership issues which interact in complex ways. An improved understanding of these factors and their interact...
Article
Full-text available
Background In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, England’s Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) released a White Paper outlining proposed legislative reform of the National Health Service (NHS). Key to the proposals is the shift from relationships between providers based on competition, to cooperation, as the central driver of improved perf...
Article
Full-text available
Background Inter-organisational collaborations (IOCs) in healthcare have been viewed as an effective approach to performance improvement. However, there remain gaps in our understanding of what helps IOCs function, as well as how and why contextual elements affect their implementation. A realist review of evidence drawing on 86 sources has sought t...
Article
Full-text available
Background Osteoarthritis is a prevalent condition in older adults that causes many patients to require a hip or knee replacement. Reducing patients’ sedentariness prior to surgery may improve physical function and post-operative outcomes. Methods We conducted a pragmatic randomised-controlled feasibility study with 2:1 allocation into interventio...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: Unprofessional behaviors (UB) such as bullying and incivility among healthcare staff are a significant and pervasive issue, impacting staff wellbeing, and patient safety and experiences of care. Despite its prevalence, misconceptions persist regarding the impact of UB and the mechanisms through which it affects patients. Areas cover...
Conference Paper
Introduction Guidelines for the follow-up of pulmonary nodules, such as those from the British Thoracic Society, often see compliance rates below 50% in the UK and abroad. However, it is important to follow up on these patients to diagnose lung cancer earlier and improve patient safety. Interventions ranging from process improvement approaches to t...
Article
Full-text available
Background Inequalities in access to palliative and end of life care are longstanding. Integration of primary and palliative care has the potential to improve equity in the community. Evidence to inform integration is scarce as research that considers integration of primary care and palliative care services is rare. Aim To address the questions: ‘...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Communal Bowl-Hand Rinsing (CB-HR), refers to more than one person washing their hands in one shared container of water, without soap and without changing the water between individuals, before meals. CB-HR has persisted in Africa despite decades of handwashing education during communicable disease epidemics, including Covid-19. We system...
Article
Full-text available
Background Unprofessional behaviour in healthcare systems can negatively impact staff well-being, patient safety and organisational costs. Unprofessional behaviour encompasses a range of behaviours, including incivility, microaggressions, harassment and bullying. Despite efforts to combat unprofessional behaviour in healthcare settings, it remains...
Conference Paper
Objectives Vitamin D is an essential nutrient that plays a crucial role in overall health. Consequently, vitamin D insufficiency (VDI) or vitamin D deficiency (VDD) have been increasingly linked with a wide range of diseases such as rickets, osteomalacia, cardiovascular disease and cancer.¹ Although breastfeeding mothers and their infants in low an...
Article
Full-text available
Unprofessional behaviours (UBs) between healthcare staff are widespread and have negative impacts on patient safety, staff well-being and organisational efficiency. However, knowledge of how to address UBs is lacking. Our recent realist review analysed 148 sources including 42 reports of interventions drawing on different behaviour change strategie...
Article
Full-text available
Background Unprofessional behaviours (UB) between healthcare staff are rife in global healthcare systems, negatively impacting staff wellbeing, patient safety and care quality. Drivers of UBs include organisational, situational, team, and leadership issues which interact in complex ways. An improved understanding of these factors and their interact...
Poster
Full-text available
Outlining the drivers of unprofessional behaviour between healthcare staff and signposting to our guide for tackling these.
Article
Full-text available
Background Unprofessional behaviour (UB) between staff encompasses various behaviours, including incivility, microaggressions, harassment, and bullying. It is pervasive in acute health care settings and disproportionately impacts minoritised staff. UB has detrimental effects on staff wellbeing, patient safety, and organisational resources. While in...
Presentation
A guide for healthcare staff on addressing unprofessional behaviours between staff; including bullying, harassment, microaggressions, and more. It sets out how unprofessional behaviours arise, strategies for tackling these contributors, and key aspects to keep in mind when designing interventions. The full guide can be downloaded at https://workfor...
Article
Purpose: Inter-organisational collaboration (IOC) across healthcare settings has been put forward as a solution to mounting financial and sustainability challenges. Whilst ingredients for successful IOC have been explored, there remains limited understanding of the development of IOCs over time. Design/methodology/approach: The authors systemati...
Technical Report
Full-text available
Background: Interorganisational collaboration is currently being promoted to improve the performance of NHS providers. However, up to now, there has, to the best of our knowledge, been no systematic attempt to assess the effect of different approaches to collaboration or to understand the mechanisms through which interorganisational collaborations...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Unprofessional behaviours encompass many behaviours including bullying, harassment and microaggressions. These behaviours between healthcare staff are problematic; they affect people’s ability to work, to feel psychologically safe at work and speak up and to deliver safe care to patients. Almost a fifth of UK National Health Service st...
Article
Full-text available
Background Frailty is a common and clinically significant condition among geriatric populations. Although well-evidenced pooled estimates of the prevalence of frailty exist within various settings and populations, presently there are none assessing the overall prevalence of frailty among geriatric hospital inpatients. The purpose of this review was...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose Evidence-based guidelines on nutrition and physical activity are used to increase knowledge in order to promote a healthy lifestyle. However, actual knowledge of guidelines is limited and whether it is associated with health outcomes is unclear. Participants and Methods This inception cohort study aimed to investigate the association of kn...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Background Frailty is a common and clinically significant condition among geriatric populations. Although well-evidenced pooled estimates of the prevalence of frailty exist within various settings and populations, presently there are none assessing the overall prevalence of frailty among geriatric hospital inpatients. The purpose of this review was...
Article
Full-text available
Background Health systems are facing unprecedented socioeconomic pressures as well as the need to cope with the ongoing strain brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. In response, the reconfiguration of health systems to encourage greater collaboration and integration has been promoted with a variety of collaborative shapes and forms being encourag...
Article
Full-text available
Background Inter-organisational collaboration is increasingly prominent within contemporary healthcare systems. A range of collaboration types such as alliances, networks, and mergers have been proposed as a means to turnaround organisations, by reducing duplication of effort, enabling resource sharing, and promoting innovations. However, in practi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Health systems are facing unprecedented socioeconomic pressures as well as responding to the ongoing strains and surges brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic. In response, the reconfiguration of health systems to encourage greater collaboration and integration has been promoted with a variety of collaborative shapes and forms being enco...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives Objectives: Human biologists are increasingly interested in measuring and comparing physical activities in different societies. Sedentary behavior, which refers to time spent sitting or lying down while awake, is a large component of daily 24 hours movement patterns in humans and has been linked to poor health outcomes such as risk of al...
Article
Purpose The NHS is facing unprecedented financial strain. These significant economic pressures have coincided with concerns regarding the quality and safety of the NHS provider sector. To make the necessary improvements to performance, policy interest has turned to encouraging greater collaboration and partnership working across providers. Methods...
Article
Full-text available
Background Inter-organisational collaboration is increasingly prominent within contemporary healthcare systems. A range of collaboration types such as alliances, networks, and mergers have been proposed as a means to turnaround organisations, by reducing duplication of effort, and enabling resource sharing, greater influence, and novel innovations...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Inter-organisational collaboration is increasingly prominent within contemporary healthcare systems. A range of collaboration types such as alliances, networks, and mergers have been proposed as a means to turnaround organisations, by reducing duplication of effort, enabling resource sharing, and promoting innovations. However, in practi...
Article
Full-text available
Osteoarthritis is a prevalent condition in older adults that causes many patients to require a hip or knee replacement in order to improve quality of life and reduce pain. Reducing sedentariness prior to surgery may aid in improving physical function and post-operative outcomes. Thus, we performed a pragmatic randomised controlled feasibility study...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Frailty is a common and clinically significant condition in geriatric populations, associated with adverse health outcomes such as hospitalisation, disability and mortality. Although there are systematic reviews/meta-analyses assessing the prevalence of frailty in community-dwelling older adults, nursing home residents, and cancer and...
Thesis
Full-text available
Older adults are a growing portion of the population and are most at-risk of the negative health effects of sedentary behaviour. In this PhD, a systematic review was presented which assessed existing interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in older adults and found that to date, none have recruited older adults with co-morbidities or mobility l...
Article
Full-text available
Background: The ageing of the population is a global challenge and the period of life spent in good health, although increasing, is not keeping pace with lifespan. Consequently, understanding the important factors that contribute to healthy ageing and validating interventions and influencing policy to promote healthy ageing are vital research prior...
Article
Full-text available
Ethnic minorities have a high prevalence of non-communicable diseases relating to unhealthy lifestyle practices. Several factors have been identified as influencing unhealthy lifestyle practices among this population; however, there is little evidence about how these factors differ among a heterogeneous sample living in a super-diverse city. This s...
Article
Full-text available
Background Osteoarthritis is a highly prevalent condition in older adults, that causes many sufferers to require a hip or knee replacement in order to improve their quality of life and reduce pain. Individuals waiting for hip or knee replacements are often highly sedentary; thus, it is pertinent to assess whether reducing their sedentariness prior...
Article
Full-text available
Sedentary behavior has been found to be associated with negative health outcomes independently of physical activity in older adults. This systematic review collates interventions to reduce sedentary behavior in non-working older adults, assessing whether they are effective, feasible, and safe. A systematic search identified 2560 studies across five...

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