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D-Index
34
Citations
5658
World Ranking
10148
National Ranking
996

Overview

Katerina Hilari is affiliated with City, University of London in the United Kingdom. Their research focuses primarily on Medicine, with significant contributions in Rehabilitation, Cognitive Neuroscience, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Epidemiology, and General Health Professions.

Hilari's work covers main topics including Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery, Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism, Acute Ischemic Stroke Management, Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research, Dysphagia Assessment and Management, Voice and Speech Disorders, and Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders.

Frequent publication venues for Hilari include the International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, Disability and Rehabilitation, Aphasiology, Clinical Rehabilitation, and Stroke.

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Hilari include:

  • Supporting wellbeing through peer-befriending (SUPERB) for people with aphasia: A feasibility randomised controlled trial, 2021, Clinical Rehabilitation
  • Predictors of Poststroke Aphasia Recovery, 2021, Stroke
  • A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality, 2020, PLoS ONE
  • Precision rehabilitation for aphasia by patient age, sex, aphasia severity, and time since stroke? A prespecified, systematic review-based, individual participant data, network, subgroup meta-analysis, 2022, International Journal of Stroke
  • 'Emotion is of the essence.... Number one priority': A nested qualitative study exploring psychosocial adjustment to stroke and aphasia, 2021, International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders

Hilari has collaborated frequently with several co-authors, including Nicholas Behn, Shirley Thomas, Jane Marshall, Sarah Northcott, and Caterina Breitenstein.

Best Publications

  • Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale-39 (SAQOL-39): evaluation of acceptability, reliability, and validity.

    Katerina Hilari;Sally Byng;Donna L. Lamping;Sarah C. Smith

  • What are the important factors in health-related quality of life for people with aphasia? A systematic review.

    Katerina Hilari;Justin J. Needle;Kirsty L. Harrison

  • The impact of stroke: are people with aphasia different to those without?

    Katerina Hilari

  • A systematic review of the impact of stroke on social support and social networks: Associated factors and patterns of change

    Sarah Northcott;Becky Moss;Kirsty Harrison;Katerina Hilari

  • Psychological distress after stroke and aphasia: the first six months

    Katerina Hilari;Sarah Northcott;Penny Roy;Jenny Marshall

  • Social support in people with chronic aphasia

    Katerina Hilari;Sarah Northcott

  • A core outcome set for aphasia treatment research: The ROMA consensus statement:

    Sarah J. Wallace;Linda Worrall;Tanya Rose;Guylaine Le Dorze

  • Predictors of health-related quality of life (HRQL) in people with chronic aphasia

    Katerina Hilari;Richard Wiggins;Penny Roy;Sally Byng

  • Why do people lose their friends after a stroke

    Sarah Northcott;Katerina Hilari

  • Proxy and self‐report agreement on the Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale‐39

    Katerina Hilari;Sophie Owen;Sharon Jane Farrelly

  • Health-related quality of life in people with severe aphasia.

    Katerina Hilari;Sally Byng

  • Psychometric properties of the Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale (SAQOL-39) in a generic stroke population

    Katerina Hilari;Donna L Lamping;Sarah C Smith;Sarah Northcott

  • Measuring quality of life in people with aphasia: the Stroke Specific Quality of Life Scale.

    Katerina Hilari;Sally Byng

  • Aphasia blog talk: How does stroke and aphasia affect a person’s social relationships?

    Dimitra Fotiadou;Sarah Northcott;Ariadni Chatzidaki;Katerina Hilari

  • Evaluating the Benefits of Aphasia Intervention Delivered in Virtual Reality: Results of a Quasi-Randomised Study

    Jane Marshall;Tracey Booth;Niamh Devane;Julia Galliers

  • Reviewing the quality of discourse information measures in aphasia

    Madeleine Pritchard;Katerina Hilari;Naomi Cocks;Lucy Dipper

  • A Systematic Review of Semantic Feature Analysis Therapy Studies for Aphasia

    Evangelia Antonia Efstratiadou;Evangelia Antonia Efstratiadou;Ilias Papathanasiou;Rachel Holland;Anastasia Archonti

  • Dosage, Intensity, and Frequency of Language Therapy for Aphasia: A Systematic Review–Based, Individual Participant Data Network Meta-Analysis

    Marian C. Brady;Myzoon Ali;Kathryn VandenBerg;Linda J. Williams

  • Predictors of poststroke aphasia recovery: a systematic review-informed individual participant data meta-analysis

    Myzoon Ali;Kathryn VandenBerg

  • “Struggling to stay connected”: comparing the social relationships of healthy older people and people with stroke and aphasia

    Katerina Hilari;Sarah Northcott

  • What Factors Predict Who Will Have a Strong Social Network Following a Stroke

    Sarah Northcott;Jane Marshall;Katerina Hilari

Frequent Co-Authors

Jane Marshall
Jane Marshall City, University of London
Linda Worrall
Linda Worrall University of Queensland
Pam Enderby
Pam Enderby University of Sheffield
Brian MacWhinney
Brian MacWhinney Carnegie Mellon University
Elizabeth Rochon
Elizabeth Rochon University of Toronto
David Howard
David Howard Newcastle University
Miranda Rose
Miranda Rose La Trobe University
Matthew A. Lambon Ralph
Matthew A. Lambon Ralph University of Cambridge
Cathy J. Price
Cathy J. Price University College London
Nicola Botting
Nicola Botting City, University of London

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