Image of Abbi Newlands, woman with brown wavy hair

Abbi Newlands

Pronouns: She/her


Research Fellow in Teenage and Young Adult Cancer
PhD
Wednesday, Thursday

About

My qualifications

2026
PhD in Psychology
University of Reading
2021
MSc in Research Methods in Psychology - Distinction
University of Reading
2019
BSc in Language Sciences and Psychology - 1st class with honours
University of Reading

Publications

Abigail F Newlands, Melissa L Kramer, Sarah Snuggs, Katherine A Finlay (2026)From Dismissal to Partnership: Patient Experiences of Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection Healthcare Informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework and Behaviour Change Theory, In: Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy29(2)e70629pp. e70629-n/a

Recurrent urinary tract infection (rUTI) is common, debilitating, and associated with substantial negative impact on quality of life. Despite this, rUTI healthcare is often experienced as fragmented, dismissive, and poorly aligned with patient needs. Applying behavioural science theory to systematically identify modifiable intervention targets offers a promising but unexplored approach to improving rUTI care. To explore patient experiences of rUTI healthcare in the United Kingdom, identify barriers to and facilitators of quality care, and generate theory-informed targets for behaviour-change intervention and service improvement. Qualitative interview study using reflexive thematic analysis, followed by deductive mapping of themes to the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF), Behaviour Change Technique Taxonomy (BCTT), and Behaviour Change Intervention Ontology (BCIO). Semi-structured one-to-one interviews with 26 adults living with rUTI in the United Kingdom, with the interview schedule informed by the TDF. Four barrier themes revealed systematic challenges: 'Struggling with the System,' 'Unheard Voices,' 'Shouldering Blame' and 'Forced to Become an Expert.' Together, these captured how diagnostic limitations, fragmented services, clinical dismissal, and individualised blame compel people living with rUTI into self-advocacy experienced as exhausting. Four facilitator themes demonstrated that quality care is achievable: 'Feeling Validated,' 'Partners in the Puzzle,' 'Continuity and Connection' and 'Expanding the Toolkit.' All 14 TDF domains were implicated, most frequently 'social influences,' 'beliefs about consequences,' 'environmental context and resources' and 'knowledge,' indicating improvement requires both system restructuring and interpersonal skill development. Mapping to the BCTT and BCIO identified specific intervention techniques targeting these domains. People living with rUTI face structural and relational challenges in healthcare that compound illness burden. When individuals feel believed, involved, and supported, rUTI healthcare experiences are transformed. By integrating reflexive thematic analysis with behavioural theory, this study demonstrates that improving rUTI care requires attention to both system-level factors such as diagnostic flexibility, service continuity, and treatment options, alongside relational factors, particularly validation and shared decision-making. These findings provide a theoretically grounded foundation for intervention development, with broader relevance for chronic conditions characterised by diagnostic uncertainty.

Sapna Thaker, Justin Y. H. Chan, Karan N. Thaker, Rebecca A. Takele, Abigail F. Newlands, Kayleigh Maxwell, Yasin Bhanji, Melissa Kramer, Kymora B. Scotland (2024)Public Interest in Online Information on Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections Is Greatest for Information with the Poorest Publication Quality, In: Pathogens (Basel)13(12)1125 Mdpi

Background: Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are among the most prevalent bacterial infections. With many patients turning to the Internet as a health resource, this study seeks to understand public engagement with online resources concerning recurrent UTIs (rUTIs), assess their reliability, and identify common questions/concerns about rUTIs. Methods: Social media analysis tool BuzzSumo was used to calculate online engagement (likes, shares, comments, views) with information on rUTIs. The reliability of highly engaged articles was evaluated using the DISCERN questionnaire. Highly engaged categories were entered as keywords in Google Trends to quantify search interest. To categorize patient-specific concerns, a database containing anonymously collected patient questions about rUTIs was created. Results: BuzzSumo revealed four search categories: general information, treatment, causes, and herbal remedies. DISCERN scores indicated moderate reliability overall; however, the "herbal remedies" category demonstrated poor reliability despite high engagement. Google Trends analysis highlighted "causes" and "treatment" searches as highest in relative interest. The 10 most popular categories of concern were antibiotics, microbiome, vaccines, prevention, pelvic pain, sex, testing, symptoms, diet/lifestyle, and hormones. Conclusions: People living with rUTIs demonstrate key concerns and often seek information online, yet articles with high engagement often contain unreliable information. Healthcare professionals may consider counteracting misinformation by providing evidence-based information online about rUTIs.