Dr Sally Hull, FRCGP MRCP MSc
Senior Clinical Lecturer
email: s.a.hull@qmul.ac.uk
Phone: +44 20 7882 2536
Fax: +44 20 7882 2552
Centre for Primary Care and Public Health
Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry
Postal address:
2 Newark Street
Whitechapel
London
E1 2AT
Sally Hull has been a GP in Tower Hamlets for more than twenty years. She is currently a clinical lead in the Clinical Effectiveness Group. This team promotes primary care development, through the use of locally tailored guidelines, audit and practice based education. The group is also involved in postgraduate education and research related to the delivery of high quality care for chronic disease.
Research interests:
Recent research interests include the use of the east London wide CEG data base to explore the delivery of primary care.
Examples include aspects of prescribing for depression, and the delivery of COPD services.
Currently the CEG is involved with the Health Foundation on a developmental project to improve health equity in east London through the use of practice health equity audits and linkages to self management programmes.
Publications:
Journal Articles
Hull SA, Dreyer G, Aitken Z, Chessor A, Yaqoob M
How does ethnicity affect the prevalence and management of CKD among diabetics in east London? Quarterly Journal of Medicine, 2009; 102(4):261-9
Hull SA, Rivas C, Bobby J, Boomla K, Robson J
Hospital data may be more accurate than census data in estimating the ethnic composition of general practice populations.Primary Care Informatics, 2009, Vol 17(2) 67-78
Robson J, Hull S.A, Boomla K, Hunter S, Cotton L, et al.
No ivory towers. Public Service Review: Health, 2007;10:123-4
Hull SA, Boomla K.
Primary care for refugees and asylum seekers. British Medical Journal, 2006;332: 62-3. (14 January.)
Hugh Middleton, Ian Shaw, Sally Hull, and Gene Feder
NICE guidelines for the management of depression (Editorial)
British Medical Journal, 2005; 330: 267 - 268.Hull SA, Aquino P, Cotter S. Explaining variation in antidepressant prescribing rates in east London: a cross sectional study. Family Practice, 2005; 22: 37-42
Parvin A, Jones CE, Hull SA. Experiences and understandings of social and emotional distress in the postnatal period among Bangladeshi women living in Tower Hamlets. Family Practice, 2004, 21: 254-60
Kamaldeep Bhui, Stephen Stansfeld, Sally Hull, Stefan Priebe, Funke Mole, Gene Feder Ethnic variations in pathways to and use of specialist mental health services in the United Kingdom: a systematic review. British Journal of Psychiatry 2003, 182; 105-116
Hull SA, Hagdrup N, Griffiths C, Tudor-Hart B, Hennessey E. Boosting Flu Immunisation: A randomised controlled trial of telephone appointing in general practice. British Journal of General Practice, 2002, 52, 712-6
Other publications
CEG Occasional Paper: Good practice guidelines for working with refugees and asylum seekers in primary care (2008) F. Franca, S.A.Hull ISBN 0 902238 58 2
Hull SA Lessons from the intravenous room in Hangzhou. British Journal of General Practice, 2007; 542: 754-5
CEG Guidelines for Chronic Kidney Disease (2006) S. A, Hull, A Sohal ISBN 0 902 238 40x
Hull SA (2003) The doctor Patient Relationship. In A Celebration of General Practice. Eds. Lakhani M. Radcliffe medical Press 2003 ISBN 1 85775 9230
Hull SA (2004) Academic General Practice. In Career options in General Practice. Eds. Aquino P. Jones P. Radcliffe Medical Press 2004 ISBN 1 85775 601 0
Balint E, Courtenay M, Elder A, Hull S, Julian P. (1993) The Doctor the Patient and the Group. Routledge, London.

