Difference between revisions of "UCL PhD studentship April 2017: Conversation analysis of communication with the relatives of hospice patients"

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|Short title=UCLPhd2017
 
|Short title=UCLPhd2017
 
|Short summary=3y CA Phd studentship at UCL, starts April 2017 on comms with relatives of hospice patients DL: 26th Oct. 2016
 
|Short summary=3y CA Phd studentship at UCL, starts April 2017 on comms with relatives of hospice patients DL: 26th Oct. 2016
|Announcement text=**DL: 26th Oct. 2016**
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|Announcement text=DL: 26th Oct. 2016
  
 
As part of a wider Marie Curie Programme Grant we have secured funding for a 3-year PhD studentship at University College London. Funding begins April 2017. The project will focus on conversations between medics and family members (typically in the 48-24hr period before end of life) - examining the communication of uncertainly in prognostication as well as other sequential features arising in end of life conversations with family members. The work will take place in one London hospice with opportunities for additional ethnographic work. A longer term aim will be to develop learning tools for medics in this field. The student will be supervised by Steven Bloch (Senior Lecturer in Language and Cognition, UCL) and Paddy Stone (Marie Curie Chair in palliative and end of life care, UCL). Ruth Parry is a co-researcher and a member of the steering committee, providing strong links with the VERDIS project.  Closing date: 26th October 2016.  
 
As part of a wider Marie Curie Programme Grant we have secured funding for a 3-year PhD studentship at University College London. Funding begins April 2017. The project will focus on conversations between medics and family members (typically in the 48-24hr period before end of life) - examining the communication of uncertainly in prognostication as well as other sequential features arising in end of life conversations with family members. The work will take place in one London hospice with opportunities for additional ethnographic work. A longer term aim will be to develop learning tools for medics in this field. The student will be supervised by Steven Bloch (Senior Lecturer in Language and Cognition, UCL) and Paddy Stone (Marie Curie Chair in palliative and end of life care, UCL). Ruth Parry is a co-researcher and a member of the steering committee, providing strong links with the VERDIS project.  Closing date: 26th October 2016.  

Revision as of 04:02, 5 October 2016

UCLPhd2017
Type Job
Categories (tags) Hospice, EMCA, medical
Dates - 2016/10/26
Link https://www.ucl.ac.uk/pals/people/profiles/academic-staff/steven-bloch
Address University College London
Geolocation 51° 32' 41", -0° 8' 7"
Abstract due 2016/10/26
Submission deadline 2016/10/26
Final version due
Notification date
Tweet 3y CA Phd studentship at UCL, starts April 2017 on comms with relatives of hospice patients DL: 26th Oct. 2016
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UCL PhD studentship April 2017: Conversation analysis of communication with the relatives of hospice patients:


Details:

DL: 26th Oct. 2016

As part of a wider Marie Curie Programme Grant we have secured funding for a 3-year PhD studentship at University College London. Funding begins April 2017. The project will focus on conversations between medics and family members (typically in the 48-24hr period before end of life) - examining the communication of uncertainly in prognostication as well as other sequential features arising in end of life conversations with family members. The work will take place in one London hospice with opportunities for additional ethnographic work. A longer term aim will be to develop learning tools for medics in this field. The student will be supervised by Steven Bloch (Senior Lecturer in Language and Cognition, UCL) and Paddy Stone (Marie Curie Chair in palliative and end of life care, UCL). Ruth Parry is a co-researcher and a member of the steering committee, providing strong links with the VERDIS project. Closing date: 26th October 2016.

For informal enquiries specifically about this post, please contact Dr Joe Low at joseph.low@ucl.ac.uk.