Hunter's research specialises in the areas of psychological approaches in women's health, cardiology and oncology. She has developed and evaluated cognitive behavioral interventions for women with cardiac chest pain, premenstrual and more recently menopausal problems (including well women and women who have had breast cancer).
She is currently applying the interventions to men who have hot flushes following prostate cancer treatment and is evaluating a brief cognitive behavioral intervention for women who are depressed during pregnancy.
Positions held
She is a member of the UK National Cancer Research Institute Breast Clinical Studies Group (NCRI Breast CSG) that has established a multi-disciplinary working party to evaluate & improve vasomotor symptom management (2013-2015) and Expert Psychology Advisor to the Core DevelopmentGroup for NICE Guidance on Menopause 2013–2015.
Ayers, B; Smith, M; Hellier, J; Mann, E; Hunter, M. S. (2012). "Effectiveness of group and self-help cognitive behavior therapy in reducing problematic menopausal hot flushes and night sweats (MENOS 2): A randomized controlled trial". Menopause. 19 (7): 749–759. doi:10.1097/gme.0b013e31823fe835. PMID22336748. S2CID40030145.
Hunter, MS; Smith, M (October 2013). Managing hot flushes and night sweats: a cognitive behavioural approach to menopause. Routledge. ISBN978-0-415-62515-9.
Grunfeld, Elizabeth A.; Hunter, Myra S.; Sikka, Pooja; Mittal, Sangeeta (2005). "Adherence beliefs among breast cancer patients taking tamoxifen". Patient Education and Counseling. 59 (1): 97–102. doi:10.1016/j.pec.2004.10.005. PMID16198223.