
Emily Spencer
Articles
-
Oct 4, 2024 |
pod.fo | Emily Spencer
This is now the tenth blog post in my series on academia and parenthood, and finally, the inevitable has happened: I have returned to work. My son turned 9 months old yesterday, and I’ve been back at work for almost two weeks. This was always the plan: nine months seemed like a good balance in terms of minimising months without my income, but also meaning that the transition to childcare wouldn’t be so abrupt.
-
Aug 28, 2024 |
pod.fo | Emily Spencer
Over the last few months, I have often received the feedback that my blogs on maternity leave and parenthood are ‘open’ or ‘honest’. When invited to write these posts, my aim was to speak about anything that seemed important – no holds barred. For a few months there has been a topic I’ve been threatening to write on but avoided. However, it would be remiss of me to talk about becoming a parent without even vaguely alluding to birth.
-
Jul 1, 2024 |
bmjopen.bmj.com | Emily Spencer |Sarah Griffiths |Katie Flanagan |Aidan O'Keeffe
Innovative approachesThroughout the course of the intervention, practices worked to develop their own processes around care planning. The flexible nature of the intervention meant that practices could innovate solutions to fit their context, best using available staff to improve care provision. In two practices, an MDT approach was adopted, through the running of dementia review ‘one-stop-shops’.
-
Jun 29, 2024 |
themobiworld.com | Emily Spencer
Imagine a future where the smell of menthol could alleviate some of the worst symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. This might sound like science fiction, but innovative new research is making it a potential reality. Scientists have discovered that when mice with Alzheimer’s inhaled menthol, their cognitive abilities improved. This unexpected finding highlights a potential new avenue for treating this debilitating condition.
-
Jun 18, 2024 |
psypost.org | Emily Spencer
Imagine a future where the smell of menthol could alleviate some of the worst symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. This might sound like science fiction, but innovative new research is making it a potential reality. Scientists have discovered that when mice with Alzheimer’s inhaled menthol, their cognitive abilities improved. This unexpected finding highlights a potential new avenue for treating this debilitating condition.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →