1,026 results
Search Results
2. Organisational learning from the public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic: findings from a qualitative interview study.
- Author
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Southworth F, Chalmers D, Reedy G, Amlôt R, and Skryabina E
- Subjects
- Humans, United Kingdom, Interviews as Topic, SARS-CoV-2, Pandemics, Learning, Male, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Qualitative Research, Public Health
- Abstract
System learning from major incidents is essential for enhancing preparedness for responding to future adverse events. Sharing learning not only stimulates further improvements, preventing the repetition of mistakes, but may also promote collaboration and the adoption of evidenced-based best practises. As part of a qualitative interview study designed to explore lessons learned, this paper describes the experiences and perspectives of 30 staff from the public health agency responsible for the national COVID-19 response in the United Kingdom. The focus of the interviews was on enabling factors and practises that worked well, as well as those that were more challenging, and which, if addressed, could improve responses to future infectious disease incidents. The interviews elicited valuable insights across various thematic areas that could inform emergency preparedness activities for future infectious disease outbreaks. The outcomes of this study, while integral for the UK agency responsible for public health, extend beyond organisational boundaries and contribute to a broader spectrum of activities aimed at facilitating global learning from the COVID-19 response., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Southworth, Chalmers, Reedy, Amlôt and Skryabina.)
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- 2024
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3. What Does 'Preconception Health' Mean to People? A Public Consultation on Awareness and Use of Language.
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Schoenaker, Danielle, Gafari, Olatundun, Taylor, Elizabeth, Hall, Jennifer, Barker, Caroline, Jones, Barney, Alwan, Nisreen A., Watson, Daniella, Jacob, Chandni Maria, Barker, Mary, Godfrey, Keith M., Reason, Emily, Forder, Finlay, and Stephenson, Judith
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LANGUAGE & languages ,SUPPORT groups ,HEALTH literacy ,NATIONAL health services ,LIFESTYLES ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,RESEARCH funding ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH policy ,LGBTQ+ people ,FOLIC acid ,REGULATION of body weight ,SMOKING ,PUBLIC opinion ,PARENTHOOD ,AGE distribution ,ENDOMETRIOSIS ,PRECONCEPTION care ,HEALTH behavior ,WOMEN'S health ,HEALTH promotion ,PUBLIC health ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DIET ,DIABETES ,WELL-being - Abstract
Introduction: There is growing scientific and policy recognition that optimising health before a potential pregnancy (preconception health) improves reproductive outcomes and the lifelong health of future children. However, public awareness on this topic is low. We conducted a public consultation to develop language recommendations and identify and prioritise approaches to inform research and improve public awareness of preconception health. Methods: A public consultation was undertaken with people of any gender aged 18–50 years living in the United Kingdom who were not currently expecting a child. Public contributors were recruited through patient and public involvement, community and support groups, an existing cohort study, and an LGBTQ+ charity. An initial round of online group discussions (February/March 2021) explored public contributors' knowledge of preconception health, their recommendations for appropriate language, and ideas about public health approaches. In a subsequent discussion round (May 2021), language recommendations were refined and suggested approaches prioritised. Discussions were summarised based on notes taken by two researchers. Results: Fifty‐four people joined the initial discussion round (66% women, 21% men, 13% nonbinary or transgender; 55% aged 18–30 years, 30% 31–40 years, 15% 41–50 years). Of these, 36 people (67%) participated in the subsequent round. Very few had heard the term 'preconception health', understood what it means, or why and for whom it is important. They recommended avoiding unfamiliar terms without further explanation (e.g., preconception health, medical terms), using language that is positive, encouraging and gender‐sensitive where possible, and using messages that are specific, nonjudgmental and realistic. The phrases 'health and well‐being during the childbearing years', 'health and well‐being before pregnancy and parenthood' and 'planning for parenthood' resonated with most public contributors. School‐based education, social media campaigns and the National Health Service emerged as priority approaches/settings for raising awareness. Conclusion: This public consultation produced recommendations from a diverse group of people of reproductive age in the United Kingdom to improve language and prioritise approaches that increase public understanding of preconception health in ways that are relevant and appropriate to them. This should begin in schools and will require adaptation of curricula, alongside co‐development of public awareness campaigns and guidance for healthcare professionals. Patient or Public Contribution: This public consultation included a diverse group of members of the public. They were not involved in the original design of the project, but following the initial round of online group discussions, they contributed to the interpretation and refinement of the emerging concepts in a subsequent round of group meetings. After the consultation activity, public contributors formed a Public Advisory Group and have subsequently been involved in other studies on the same topic. Two public contributors (E.R. and F.F.) provided critical input in the preparation and revision of this manuscript and are co‐authors of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Delivery of public health interventions by the ambulance sector: a scoping review.
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Ablard, Suzanne, Miller, Elisha, Poulton, Steven, Cantrell, Anna, Booth, Andrew, Lee, Andrew, Mason, Suzanne, and Bell, Fiona
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AMBULANCES ,PUBLIC health education ,PUBLIC health ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,MEDICAL screening ,GREY literature - Abstract
Background: With millions of unscheduled patient contacts every year and increasing call outs clustered around the most deprived communities, it is clear the ambulance sector could have a role to play in improving population health. However, the application and value of a public health approach within the ambulance sector has not been comprehensively explored. A scoping review was undertaken to explore the role of the ambulance sector in the delivery of public health interventions and what impact this has on population health and ambulance sector outcomes. Methods: A search strategy was developed on MEDLINE and translated to other major medical and health related bibliographic databases (Embase; CINAHL; HMIC; Science and Social Sciences Citation Index; Cochrane Library) to identify literature published since 2000 in OECD countries. Targeted grey literature, reference list, and citation searching was also carried out. Search results were downloaded to Microsoft Excel and screened by three reviewers according to pre-determined inclusion / exclusion criteria. Data from included studies, such as the type of activity noted within the paper, the population involved and the public health approach that was utilised, was extracted from within the paper using a data extraction form and narratively synthesised. Results: Fifty-two references were included in the final review (37 database searching; 9 reference list searching; 6 grey literature). Included articles were categorised according to the relevant public health domains and subdomains as articulated by the UK Faculty of Public Health: Health improvement domain: Public health education and advice (Health promotion sub-domain) (n=13) Emergency Services personnel providing vaccines (Disease prevention sub-domain) (n=1) Health care public health domain Paramedicine (Service delivery sub-domain) (n=30) Screening tools and referral pathways used by the ambulance sector (Service delivery sub-domain) (n=28) Health intelligence using ambulance sector data (population health management sub-domain) (n=26) Of note, some domains (e.g. health protection) returned nil results. Discussion: The scoping review demonstrates the breadth of public health related activities in which the ambulance sector is involved. However, an overemphasis on demand management outcomes precludes definitive conclusions on the impact of ambulance sector-led public health initiatives on public health outcomes. Future evaluations of public health initiatives should incorporate wider health system perspectives beyond the immediately apparent remit of the ambulance sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF RESEARCH OF THE BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL DIMENSION OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM OF THE WORLD.
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Dotsenko, Tetiana and Kolomiiets, Svitlana
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SOCIOECONOMICS ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
The paper emphasizes the importance of human health as the most valuable, most important resource at the individual and national level, affecting the country's socio-economic development and competitiveness. It states that it is necessary for the actors ensuring the public health system to form a new concept for the functioning of the health system, taking into account the current state of public health, the functioning of medical institutions, and the resource support of the healthcare industry. The primary purpose is to conduct a bibliometric analysis of scientific publications dealing with the global behavioral and social dimension of the public health system. The systematization of literary achievements and approaches to solving this problem has been carried out, which indicates the need for proper attention and high-quality, conceptual, international research by world scientists on issues related to the state and level of public health, satisfaction with the healthcare system. The relevance of the analysis of research on the behavioral and social dimension of the public health system of the world implies that the further development of the healthcare industry necessitates research, intensive development, and dissemination of available scientific and methodological international experience in solving this issue of the public health system in different countries worldwide. The research consisted of four stages. A map of the interrelationships of key concepts with other scientific categories has been constructed; a content-contextual study of the constructed blocks of bibliometric analysis has been implemented; an inter-cluster analysis has been carried out. A map of the interrelationships of the key concepts under study with other scientific categories has been constructed, reflecting the dynamics in the form of a contextual-time block; the evolutionary-time prospects of the study have been determined. A geographically extensive map of the scientific bibliography of the categories under study has been constructed; the spatial component of the study has been analyzed. A territorially branched map of the spatio-temporal dimension of the category under the study in dynamics has been constructed. The methodological tools of the research are theoretical (grouping, abstraction, synthesis) and empirical methods (observation, description), research methods, services of the Scopus information platform, and VOSViewers tools.1.6.15. The study was conducted based on the publications indexed by the Scopus database for 2000-2020. The objects of research were the following scientific categories: "health care system, medical services, behavioral aspect, social aspect," the countries United States, Germany, Norway, Greece, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, India, Netherlands, China, Brazil, Switzerland, Denmark, Belgium, Iran, Japan, Italy, Spain, because these two groups of objects allowed to conduct two-directional analysis of the problem under study. The results of the bibliometric analysis presented in the paper showed that the aspect of the behavioral and social dimension of the public health system was relatively young and insufficiently developed; the attention of the scientific community for a long time on this issue was mainly concentrated in the United States and the United Kingdom. China, Iran, and Japan were less involved in this process at an earlier time interval, but this research became relevant for them in recent years. The study results can be used to identify the most potential priority areas for forming the policy and strategy of the state health system, based on determining the main significant, modern, relevant characteristics of the healthcare industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Building health research systems: WHO is generating global perspectives, and who's celebrating national successes?
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Hanney, Stephen R. and González-Block, Miguel A.
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PUBLIC health research ,GOVERNMENT aid to research ,CAPACITY building ,PATIENTS ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL care ,NATIONAL health services ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH ,WORLD health ,GOVERNMENT programs ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
In 2016, England's National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) celebrated its tenth anniversary as an innovative national health research system with a focus on meeting patients' needs. This provides a good opportunity to reflect on how the creation of the NIHR has greatly enhanced important work, started in 1991, to develop a health research system in England that is embedded in the National Health Service.In 2004, WHO identified a range of functions that a national health research system should undertake to improve the health of populations. Health Research Policy and Systems (HRPS) has taken particular interest in the pioneering developments in the English health research system, where the comprehensive approach has covered most, if not all, of the functions identified by WHO. Furthermore, several significant recent developments in thinking about health research are relevant for the NIHR and have informed accounts of its achievements. These include recognition of the need to combat waste in health research, which had been identified as a global problem in successive papers in the Lancet, and an increasing emphasis on demonstrating impact. Here, pioneering evaluation of United Kingdom research, conducted through the impact case studies of the Research Excellence Framework, is particularly important. Analyses informed by these and other approaches identified many aspects of NIHR's progress in combating waste, building and sustaining research capacity, creating centres of research excellence linked to leading healthcare institutions, developing research networks, involving patients and others in identifying research needs, and producing and adopting research findings that are improving health outcomes.The NIHR's overall success, and an analysis of the remaining problems, might have lessons for other systems, notwithstanding important advances in many countries, as described in papers in HRPS and elsewhere. WHO's recently established Global Observatory for Health Research and Development provides an opportunity to promote some of these lessons. To inform its work, the Observatory is sponsoring a thematic series of papers in HRPS focusing on health research issues such as funding flows, priority setting, capacity building, utilisation and equity. While important papers on these have been published, this series is still open to new submissions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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7. Nothing about us without us: A co‐production strategy for communities, researchers and stakeholders to identify ways of improving health and reducing inequalities.
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Albert, Alexandra, Islam, Shahid, Haklay, Muki, and McEachan, Rosemary R. C.
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DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,STRATEGIC planning ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,PREVENTIVE health services ,HUMAN services programs ,EXPERIENCE ,CHILDREN'S health ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDICAL research ,HEALTH promotion ,ADULT education workshops - Abstract
Introduction: Co‐production with communities is increasingly seen as best practice that can improve the quality, relevance and effectiveness of research and service delivery. Despite this promising position, there remains uncertainty around definitions of co‐production and how to operationalize it. The current paper describes the development of a co‐production strategy to guide the work of the ActEarly multistakeholder preventative research programme to improve children's health in Bradford and Tower Hamlets, UK. Methods: The strategy used Appreciative Inquiry (AI), an approach following a five‐step iterative process: to define (Step 1) scope and guide progress; to discover (Step 2) key issues through seven focus groups (N = 36) and eight in‐depth interviews with key stakeholders representing community groups, and the voluntary and statutory sectors; to dream (Step 3) best practice through two workshops with AI participants to review findings; to design (Step 4) a co‐production strategy building on AI findings and to deliver (Step 5) the practical guidance in the strategy. Results: Nine principles for how to do co‐production well were identified: power should be shared; embrace a wide range of perspectives and skills; respect and value the lived experience; benefits should be for all involved parties; go to communities and do not expect them to come to you; work flexibly; avoid jargon and ensure availability of the right information; relationships should be built for the long‐term; co‐production activities should be adequately resourced. These principles were based on three underlying values of equality, reciprocity and agency. Conclusion: The empirical insights of the paper highlight the crucial importance of adequate resources and infrastructure to deliver effective co‐production. This documentation of one approach to operationalizing co‐production serves to avert any misappropriations of the term 'co‐production' by listening to service users, stakeholders and other relevant groups, to develop trust and long‐term relationships, and build on the learning that already exists amongst such groups. Patient or Public Contribution: The work was overseen by a steering group (N = 17) of individuals, both professional and members of the public with experience in undertaking co‐production, and/or with some knowledge of the context of the two ActEarly field sites, who provided regular oversight and feedback on the AI process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Lessons from evaluation of the NHS white paper Our Health, Our Care, Our Say.
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Salisbury, Chris, Stewart, Kate, Purdy, Sarah, Thorp, Helen, Cameron, Ailsa, Lart, Rachel, Peckham, Stephen, and Calnan, Michael
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NATIONAL health services ,PUBLIC health ,RHETORICAL analysis ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
The article discusses a review on the evaluations of ten initiatives specifically promoted in the National Health Service (NHS) white paper "Our Health, Our Care, Our Say," published in January 2006. An extensive mapping exercise was made to identify evaluations of the specified initiatives being conducted in England. It indicates that the rhetorical commitment to evaluation was compromised and the investment in evaluation at national and local levels was not as productive.
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- 2011
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9. Economic appraisal of in vitro fertilization: discussion paper.
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Page, H.
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FERTILIZATION in vitro ,REPRODUCTIVE technology ,GENETIC engineering ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The article discusses the cost and effectiveness of in vitro fertilization (IVF) technique in Great Britain. The development of IVF presents the providers of health care with several problems. Inequality of distribution will become a problem if the new technique would be taken up by the private sector. In the present financial climate of the country it appears that National Health Service funding will be available to meet the demand for IVF.
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- 1989
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10. Iron added to flour: is it nutritionally beneficial? Discussion paper.
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Hall, M. J.
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LEGISLATION ,NUTRITION policy ,IRON metabolism ,IRON in the body ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The article focuses on the iron restoration regulation that lead researchers to conduct a study regarding the impact of adding iron to white floor to the public health. Details related to the historical aspects of implementation of iron restoration regulation in Great Britain are included. Information on the study about the nutritional contribution of adding iron to flour are discussed. It concludes that additional iron to floor has no significant benefit to public health.
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- 1988
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11. Public awareness of the alcohol-cancer link in the EU and UK: a scoping review.
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Kokole, Daša, Ferreira-Borges, Carina, Galea, Gauden, Tran, Alexander, Rehm, Jürgen, and Neufeld, Maria
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TUMOR risk factors ,COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism ,BREAST tumor risk factors ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,CINAHL database ,LIVER tumors ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PUBLIC health ,HEAD & neck cancer ,HEALTH literacy ,COLORECTAL cancer ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,GREY literature ,ESOPHAGEAL tumors ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background Alcohol increases cancer risk, but less is known about public awareness of this link. This scoping review summarizes recent findings on the public awareness of alcohol as a cancer risk factor in European Union and UK. Methods Four databases (Web of Science, MEDLINE, PsycInfo, CINAHL) were searched for papers containing data on awareness of alcohol as cancer risk factor in EU or UK published between January 2017 and December 2022, and complemented with grey literature searches. Results In total, 45 studies were included covering 18 EU countries (Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden) and UK, presenting data collected between 2009 and 2022. Studies covered general population (17 studied a nationally representative sample), women, health professionals, patients and young people. Awareness of alcohol causing cancer in general was higher and studied more often than awareness of alcohol's impact on specific cancers. Among the EU general population, awareness of the link between alcohol and breast cancer ranged between 10% and 20%, head and neck cancer 15–25%, colorectal and oesophagus cancer 15–45% and liver cancer 40%. Awareness was higher among young people and specialized health professions and lower among women (the latter specifically for the breast cancer). Conclusions While awareness rates varied depending on the exact question wording, many studies showed low awareness of the alcohol-cancer link, especially for specific types such as breast and colon cancer. Public should be better informed about alcohol consumption-related cancer risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Tweeting about twenty: an analysis of interest, public sentiments and opinion about 20mph speed restrictions in two UK cities.
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Semwal, Tushar, Milton, Karen, Jepson, Ruth, and Kelly, Michael P.
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SPEED limits ,SENTIMENT analysis ,ROAD safety measures ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Twenty miles per hour (20mph) speed limits (equivalent to roughly 30kmh) have become part of public health policies to reduce urban road collisions and casualties, especially in Western countries. Public opinion plays a crucial role in opposition to and acceptance of policies that are advocated for improving public health. Twenty miles per hour speed limit policies were implemented in Edinburgh and Belfast from 2016 to 2018. In this paper, we extract public opinion and sentiments expressed about the new 20mph speed limits in those cities using publicly available Twitter data. Methods: We analysed public sentiments from Twitter data and classified the public comments in plain English into the categories 'positive', 'neutral', and 'negative'. We also explored the frequency and sources of the tweets. Results: The total volume of tweets was higher for Edinburgh than for Belfast, but the volume of tweets followed a similar pattern, peaking around 2016, which is when the schemes were implemented. Overall, the tone of the tweets was positive or neutral towards the implementation of the speed limit policies. This finding was surprising as there is a perception among policymakers that there would have been public backlash against these sorts of policy changes. The commonly used hashtags focused largely on road safety and other potential benefits, for example to air pollution. Conclusions: Overall, public attitudes towards the policies were positive, thus policymakers should be less anxious about potential public backlash when considering the scale-up of 20mph speed restrictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. The contribution of peer research in evaluating complex public health interventions: examples from two UK community empowerment projects.
- Author
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Southby, Kris, Coan, Susan, Rushworth, Sara, South, Jane, Bagnall, Anne-Marie, Lam, Tiffany, Woodward, Jenny, and Button, Danial
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COMMUNITIES ,THEORY of change ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH skills ,PEERS - Abstract
Background: Peer-research is steered and conducted by people with lived experience of the issues being researched. This paper explores the value of peer-research in two complex public health intervention evaluations in the UK.Methods: Reports from 18 peer research projects, completed by residents from 12 communities in the UK taking part in two community empowerment interventions, were analysed using cross-case analysis.Results: Undertaking peer research helped to build the evaluation and research skills within individual projects as well as providing data on other outcomes related to the programmes Theory of Change. Some peer researchers, however, felt unprepared for the activity despite support from the academic team and were unsatisfied with project outcomes. While peer research projects provided more opportunities for local residents to engage with the overall evaluations, there was an overreliance on people closely connected to the programmes to be peer researchers. The peer research projects explored topics that were broader than the aims and objectives of the overall programme evaluations. All provided insight into the context in which projects occurred, while some also informed understanding of programme change mechanisms.Conclusions: Including peer research as part of complex public health intervention evaluations can help uncover important contextual and ecological details beyond the reach of more traditional evaluation data collection. Peer research can also empower and build research/evaluation capacity within communities, which is particularly pertinent for community empowerment interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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14. Estimation and Implication of Time-Varying Reproduction Numbers during the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK †.
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Yan, Jiangjiang, Huang, Ruochen, and Yin, Wuliang
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BASIC reproduction number ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PREVENTION of communicable diseases ,PUBLIC health ,DISEASE incidence - Abstract
Infectious illness prevention and control is an important part of public health management. The early monitoring and numerical modelling of incidence data can help with the efficient prevention and control of infectious disease prevalence. The reproduction number R, as an essential index to understand the dynamics of COVID-19, can be predicted by using confirmed new incidence cases and serial interval data in the datasets provided by UK government. In this paper, an extended model is proposed to account for variable reporting rates instead of 1 for the estimation of the R number. The impact of using various modelling parameters is also evaluated, which provides insight into how to select a set of suitable parameters in modelling. The variation of the estimation of the R number by incorporating variable reporting rates can be observed and assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Implementation of the polluter pay's principle in tobacco control in the UK: a stakeholder analysis.
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Smith, Marissa J., Patterson, Chris, Buckton, Christina, and Hilton, Shona
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STAKEHOLDER analysis ,TOBACCO ,TOBACCO industry ,THEMATIC analysis ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Background: The polluter's pay principle (PPP) aims to internalise external costs and assign liability to the polluter for the harmful cost of their products to society. Tobacco companies continue to manufacture and sell harmful cigarettes, earning billions in profits each year from these products. Meanwhile, governments and their people are left to 'clean up' and deal with the detrimental health consequences. This paper explores with expert stakeholders how the PPP could be implemented within the context of tobacco control in the United Kingdom (UK). Methods: Twenty-four semi-structured interviews and two follow-up discussion groups were conducted with UK and international experts on tobacco control, public health, economics, or law from the academic, public, private and third sector. Participants considered the facilitators and barriers to implementing the PPP to tobacco control in the UK. Thematic analysis was employed, aided by NVivo 12, and data were compared to examine the views expressed by the different types of experts. Results: Stakeholders favoured the implementation of the PPP in the context of tobacco control and indicated that it could be acceptable and feasible to implement and that it would likely have support from policymakers and the public alike. Stakeholders unanimously agreed that any legislation and administration should be free from tobacco industry influence; however, differences arose concerning who should oversee the implementation. Conclusion: The PPP from environmental law was predominantly seen as an approach that could be usefully applied to the tobacco industry. However, there is no one size fits all template, therefore its implementation would need to be adapted to fit the UK context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Co-production in local government: process, codification and capacity building of new knowledge in collective reflection spaces. Workshops findings from a UK mixed methods study.
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van der Graaf, Peter, Cheetham, Mandy, Redgate, Sam, Humble, Clare, and Adamson, Ashley
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LOCAL government ,COGNITIVE structures ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LITERATURE reviews ,MUNICIPAL services - Abstract
Background: Co-production of research evidence is valued by local government to improve effective decision-making about public services in times of austerity. However, underlying structural issues of power (so-called 'dark shadows of co-production') challenge this ambition with limited evidence on how to embed research use sustainably. In this paper we reflect on mechanisms for increasing co-production in local government.Methods: This paper presents findings from a Health Foundation funded research project that explored how a culture of evidence use to improve population health could be embedded in UK local government. Five linked work packages were undertaken using mixed methods. In this paper, we report the views of UK local authority staff who participated in four workshops (n = 54), informed by a rapid literature review and an online scoping survey.Results: We identified five themes that facilitate public health evidence use in local government: (1) new governance arrangements to integrate national and local policies, (2) codifying research evidence through local system-wide approaches and (3) ongoing evaluation of programmes, and (4) overcoming political and cultural barriers by increasing absorptive capacity of Local Authorities to embed co-produced knowledge in their cognitive structures. This requires adaptive governance through relationship building between academic researchers and Local Authority staff and shared understanding of fragmented local policy making, which are supported by (5) collective spaces for reflection within local government.Conclusions: Creating collective spaces for reflection in between government departments allows for iterative, interactive processes of co-production with external partners that support emergence of new governance structures to socially action the co-produced knowledge in context and build capacity for sustained evidence use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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17. Frameworks and guidance to support ethical public health practice.
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Viens, A M and Vass, Caroline
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CLINICAL competence ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COUNSELING ,EMPLOYMENT ,MEDICAL protocols ,PROFESSIONS ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC health administration ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,PROFESSIONAL practice - Abstract
This article reports and reflects on an element of a recent survey of UK public health professionals, specifically in relation to the Public Health Knowledge and Skills Framework (PHSKF) and the ethical requirements that underpin public health practice. Only 38.4% of respondents reported accessing the PHKSF and a mere 13.7% reported accessing the accompanying background paper on ethical public health practice. Given that ethical practice underpins the PHSKF, it is concerning that so few respondents are familiar with the PHSKF and one of the source documents. While issuing frameworks and guidance is one way to support public health practice, there is a further need for greater integration of skills and knowledge around ethical public health practice within education and training initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. Leaked paper reveals lack of funds for NHS IT plan.
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Collins, Tony
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INFORMATION technology ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Great Britain Prime Minister Tony Blair's plans for an £1.1bn IT-led reform of London's health service must meet a series of "critical" challenges before contracts are awarded, although deals were due to be signed yesterday, according to a leaked NHS document. The paper, which set out a formal business case for an Integrated Care Records Service in London under the £2.3bn national programme for IT, revealed that uncertainties existed over the full cost of its implementation. INSET: Leaked problems.
- Published
- 2003
19. The impacts and implications of the community face mask use during the Covid‐19 pandemic: A qualitative narrative interview study.
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Hanna, Esmée, Martin, Graham, Campbell, Anne, Connolly, Paris, and Fearon, Kristine
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MEDICAL masks ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC health ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,PUBLIC opinion ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Introduction: A range of nonpharmaceutical public health interventions has been introduced in many countries following the rapid spread of Covid‐19 since 2020, including recommendations or mandates for the use of face masks or coverings in the community. While the effectiveness of face masks in reducing Covid‐19 transmission has been extensively discussed, scant attention has been paid to the lived experience of those wearing face masks. Method: Drawing on 40 narrative interviews with a purposive sample of people in the United Kingdom, with a particular focus on marginalised and minoritized groups, our paper explores experiences of face mask use during the pandemic. Results: We find that face masks have a range of societal, health and safety impacts, and prompted positive and negative emotional responses for users. We map our findings onto Lorenc and Oliver's framework for intervention risks. We suggest that qualitative data offer particular insights into the experiences of public health interventions, allowing the potential downsides and risks of interventions to be more fully considered and informing public health policies that might avoid inadvertent harm, particularly towards marginalised groups. Patient or Public Contribution: The study primarily involved members of the public in the conduct of the research, namely through participation in interviews (email and telephone). The conception for the study involved extensive discussions on social media with a range of people, and we received input and ideas from presentations we delivered on the preliminary analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. It was good while it lasted: politics is at the heart of public health but are we willing to engage?
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McKee M
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- Humans, Public Policy, United Kingdom, Government Regulation, Public Health, Politics
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This paper, written to mark the 50th anniversary of the Faculty of Public Health, reflects on the challenges to governance in a United Kingdom outside the European Union. Drawing on Virchow's call to address the political determinants of health, it describes a situation in which the current government consistently displays disregard for the institutions of state, and the principles on which they are based, such as honesty and the rule of law. It argues that this is a departure from the past and that it undermines the trust that is essential for effective public health policies that attract public support. It ends with a challenge to the public health establishment in the United Kingdom to decide whether they will challenge the decline in public standards, and thus promote structures that can consider and prioritize health or continue to pick up the pieces of political failings., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Faculty of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2022
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21. Online grocery shopping: promise and pitfalls for healthier food and beverage purchases.
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Jilcott Pitts, Stephanie B, Ng, Shu Wen, Blitstein, Jonathan L, Gustafson, Alison, and Niculescu, Mihai
- Subjects
GROCERY shopping ,ONLINE shopping ,IMPULSE buying ,JUNK food - Abstract
Objectives: (i) To determine the current state of online grocery shopping, including individuals' motivations for shopping for groceries online and types of foods purchased; and (ii) to identify the potential promise and pitfalls that online grocery shopping may offer in relation to food and beverage purchases. Design: PubMed, ABI/INFORM and Google Scholar were searched to identify published research. Setting: To be included, studies must have been published between 2007 and 2017 in English, based in the USA or Europe (including the UK), and focused on: (i) motivations for online grocery shopping; (ii) the cognitive/psychosocial domain; and (iii) the community or neighbourhood food environment domain. Subjects: Our search yielded twenty-four relevant papers. Results: Findings indicate that online grocery shopping can be a double-edged sword. While it has the potential to increase healthy choices via reduced unhealthy impulse purchases, nutrition labelling strategies, and as a method to overcome food access limitations among individuals with limited access to a brick-and-mortar store, it also has the potential to increase unhealthy choices due to reasons such as consumers' hesitance to purchase fresh produce online. Conclusions: Additional research is needed to determine the most effective ways to positively engage customers to use online grocery shopping to make healthier choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. White Paper could give OH bigger role in public health.
- Author
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Paton, Nic
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,EVALUATION of medical care ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,ACCREDITATION - Abstract
The article reports on The Healthy Lives, Healthy People White Paper published by the Department of Health in December 2010 which described a new vision that would require employers to play a central role in encouraging better public health.
- Published
- 2011
23. Health White Paper puts OH professionals centre stage.
- Author
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Paton, Nic
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,EMPLOYEE health promotion ,GOVERNMENT publications ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Details the plans laid out by the British government in its public health White Paper "Choosing Health," which focused on occupational health and published in November 2004. Goals prioritized by ministers in workplace health; Importance of the partnership between health professionals, individuals and employers towards the promotion of health in the workplace; Impact of work on health according to David Coats, associate director at the Work Foundation.
- Published
- 2004
24. The Conflict Between Public Health And Civil Liberties: The Initial UK Government Policy Response to the Covid-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Mujib, Minaa
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ethics ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIL rights ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This paper aims to illustrate the tension between public health and civil liberties through the case study of the UK government's emergency response to the Covid-19 pandemic. In the area of public health, this tension is predominantly approached by reference to two theories: liberalism and communitarianism. This paper studies these positions and how they are manifested in evidence-based policymaking by combining a study of public health policy with a study of public health ethics. The studies help demonstrate the UK government's framing of health policy relating to Covid-19 in terms of liberalism and communitarianism. The paper concludes that in the initial UK government response to Covid-19, the government discourse evoked communitarian values and framed its policies as being evidence-led and as prioritising public health. However, the policy measures themselves manifested liberal values: they had the underlying concern of not infringing excessively on civil liberties, and individuals were given autonomy of decision making within the measures that were taken. The article concluded that emergency times require a communitarian response based on preventative action. This article is the first to combine public health policy with public health ethics to demonstrate how values form a key part of decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
25. impact of lower strength alcohol products on alcohol purchases: ARIMA analyses based on 4 million purchases by 69 803 households, 2015–2019.
- Author
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Anderson, Peter, O'Donnell, Amy, Llopis, Eva Jané, and Kaner, Eileen
- Subjects
ALCOHOLIC beverages ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ACQUISITION of property ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALCOHOL drinking ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background Lowering the strength of alcohol products could lead to less alcohol being bought and drunk. In its prevention White Paper, the UK Government aims to promote a significant increase in the availability of alcohol-free and low-alcohol products by 2025. Methods Through descriptive analysis and ARIMA modelling of >4 million alcohol purchases from 69 803 British households, we study the potential impact of lower strength alcohol products in reducing household purchases of grams of alcohol over 2015–2019. Households are divided into predominantly beer, wine or spirits purchasers. Results Over 5 years, there were decreases in purchases of grams of alcohol within beer amongst beer-purchasing households and increases in purchases of grams of alcohol within wine and spirits amongst, respectively, wine- and spirits-purchasing households. Almost all the changes were due to beer-purchasing households buying less regular strength beer, and wine and spirits-purchasing households buying, respectively, more regular strength wine and spirits, rather than increases in purchases of no- and low-alcohol products. Conclusions In general, lower strength alcohol products have not contributed to British households buying fewer grams of alcohol over the 5-year follow-up period during 2015–2019. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Community hospitals -- the place of local service provision in a modernising NHS: an integrative thematic literature review.
- Author
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Heaney, David, Black, Corri, O'Donnell, Catherine A., Stark, Cameron, and van Teijlingen, Edwin
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,HOSPITALS ,PUBLIC health ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background: Recent developments within the United Kingdom's (UK) health care system have reawakened interest in community hospitals (CHs) and their role in the provision of health care. This integrative literature review sought to identify and assess the current evidence base for CHs. Methods: A range of electronic reference databases were searched from January 1984 to either December 2004 or February 2005: Medline, Embase, Web of Knowledge, BNI, CINAHL, HMIC, ASSIA, PsychInfo, SIGLE, Dissertation Abstracts, Cochrane Library, Kings Fund website, using both keywords and text words. Thematic analysis identified recurrent themes across the literature; narrative analyses were written for each theme, identifying unifying concepts and discrepant issues. Results: The search strategy identified over 16,000 international references. We included papers of any study design focussing on hospitals in which care was led principally by general practitioners or nurses. Papers from developing countries were excluded. A review of titles revealed 641 potentially relevant references; abstract appraisal identified 161 references for review. During data extraction, a further 48 papers were excluded, leaving 113 papers in the final review. The most common methodological approaches were cross-sectional/descriptive studies, commentaries and expert opinion. There were few experimental studies, systematic reviews, economic studies or studies that reported on longer-term outcomes. The key themes identified were origin and location of CHs; their place in the continuum of care; services provided; effectiveness, efficiency and equity of CHs; and views of patients and staff. In general, there was a lack of robust evidence for the role of CHs, which is partly due to the ad hoc nature of their development and lack of clear strategic vision for their future. Evidence for the effectiveness and efficiency of the services provided was limited. Most people admitted to CHs appeared to be older, suggesting that admittance to CHs was age-related rather than condition-related. Conclusion: Overall the literature surveyed was long on opinion and short of robust studies on CHs. While lack of evidence on CHs does not imply lack of effect, there is an urgent need to develop a research agenda that addresses the key issues of health care delivery in the CH setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Development and evaluation of a hand held computer based on-call pack for health protection out of hours duty: A pilot study.
- Author
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Abubakar, Ibrahim, Williams, Christopher J., and McEvoy, Marian
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC systems ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MEDICAL equipment - Abstract
Background: The on call service for health protection in most parts of the UK is provided by general public health consultants, registrars and nurses as the first tier of response backed up by medical consultants in health protection. The first tier responder usually carries a large bag of papers containing both local and national guidance on the management of common cases/incidents. An electronic on call pack may provide a suitable practical alternative to large paper based systems and help professionals deliver out of hours health protection advice and response to incidents. Methods: We developed and piloted an electronic on call pack in Hertfordshire for use at the health protection unit level containing key local and national guidelines, contact information and useful references. The on-call pack was initially piloted using a laptop and more recently using a personal digital assistant (PDA). The use of the on-call pack was evaluated. Results: Key advantages of the electronic system include reduced size, faster access to information that is clearly indexed and the relative ease of updating information. As part of the pilot, the electronic on call pack was presented to a local and regional training meeting with good response from participants using qualitative and quantitative methods. Conclusion: It is anticipated that with suitable evaluation this system can be adapted and utilised by other health protection practitioners. This system provides a fast, reliable and easily maintained source of information for the public health on-call team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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- View/download PDF
28. Indicators of recent COVID-19 infection status: findings from a large occupational cohort of staff and postgraduate research students from a UK university.
- Author
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Davis, Katrina A. S., Carr, Ewan, Leightley, Daniel, Vitiello, Valentina, Bergin-Cartwright, Gabriella, Lavelle, Grace, Wickersham, Alice, Malim, Michael H., Oetzmann, Carolin, Polling, Catherine, Stevelink, Sharon A. M., Razavi, Reza, and Hotopf, Matthew
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,GRADUATE students ,ANTIBODY titer ,COVID-19 pandemic ,STUDENT research - Abstract
Background: Researchers conducting cohort studies may wish to investigate the effect of episodes of COVID-19 illness on participants. A definitive diagnosis of COVID-19 is not always available, so studies have to rely on proxy indicators. This paper seeks to contribute evidence that may assist the use and interpretation of these COVID-indicators.Methods: We described five potential COVID-indicators: self-reported core symptoms, a symptom algorithm; self-reported suspicion of COVID-19; self-reported external results; and home antibody testing based on a 'lateral flow' antibody (IgG/IgM) test cassette. Included were staff and postgraduate research students at a large London university who volunteered for the study and were living in the UK in June 2020. Excluded were those who did not return a valid antibody test result. We provide descriptive statistics of prevalence and overlap of the five indicators.Results: Core symptoms were the most common COVID-indicator (770/1882 participants positive, 41%), followed by suspicion of COVID-19 (n = 509/1882, 27%), a positive symptom algorithm (n = 298/1882, 16%), study antibody lateral flow positive (n = 124/1882, 7%) and a positive external test result (n = 39/1882, 2%), thus a 20-fold difference between least and most common. Meeting any one indicator increased the likelihood of all others, with concordance between 65 and 94%. Report of a low suspicion of having had COVID-19 predicted a negative antibody test in 98%, but positive suspicion predicted a positive antibody test in only 20%. Those who reported previous external antibody tests were more likely to have received a positive result from the external test (24%) than the study test (15%).Conclusions: Our results support the use of proxy indicators of past COVID-19, with the caveat that none is perfect. Differences from previous antibody studies, most significantly in lower proportions of participants positive for antibodies, may be partly due to a decline in antibody detection over time. Subsequent to our study, vaccination may have further complicated the interpretation of COVID-indicators, only strengthening the need to critically evaluate what criteria should be used to define COVID-19 cases when designing studies and interpreting study results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
29. Systematic review of the characteristics of school-based feasibility cluster randomised trials of interventions for improving the health of pupils in the UK.
- Author
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Parker, Kitty, Eddy, Saskia, Nunns, Michael, Xiao, ZhiMin, Ford, Tamsin, Eldridge, Sandra, and Ukoumunne, Obioha C.
- Subjects
INTRACLASS correlation ,PERCENTILES ,FEASIBILITY studies ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) - Abstract
Background: The last 20 years have seen a marked increase in the use of cluster randomised trials (CRTs) in schools to evaluate interventions for improving pupil health outcomes. Schools have limited resources and participating in full-scale trials can be challenging and costly, given their main purpose is education. Feasibility studies can be used to identify challenges with implementing interventions and delivering trials. This systematic review summarises methodological characteristics and objectives of school-based cluster randomised feasibility studies in the United Kingdom (UK). Methods: We systematically searched MEDLINE from inception to 31 December 2020. Eligible papers were school-based feasibility CRTs that included health outcomes measured on pupils. Results: Of 3285 articles identified, 24 were included. School-based feasibility CRTs have been increasingly used in the UK since the first publication in 2008. Five (21%) studies provided justification for the use of the CRT design. Three (13%) studies provided details of a formal sample size calculation, with only one of these allowing for clustering. The median (IQR; range) recruited sample size was 7.5 (4.5 to 9; 2 to 37) schools and 274 (179 to 557; 29 to 1567) pupils. The most common feasibility objectives were to estimate the potential effectiveness of the intervention (n = 17; 71%), assess acceptability of the intervention (n = 16; 67%), and estimate the recruitment/retention rates (n = 15; 63%). Only one study was used to assess whether cluster randomisation was appropriate, and none of the studies that randomised clusters before recruiting pupils assessed the possibility of recruitment bias. Besides potential effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and the intra-cluster correlation coefficient, no studies quantified the precision of the feasibility parameter estimates. Conclusions: Feasibility CRTs are increasingly used in schools prior to definitive trials of interventions for improving health in pupils. The average sample size of studies included in this review would be large enough to estimate pupil-level feasibility parameters (e.g., percentage followed up) with reasonable precision. The review highlights the need for clearer sample size justification and better reporting of the precision with which feasibility parameters are estimated. Better use could be made of feasibility CRTs to assess challenges that are specific to the cluster design. Trial registration: PROSPERO: CRD42020218993. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
30. Healthy Animals, Healthy People: Zoonosis Risk from Animal Contact in Pet Shops, a Systematic Review of the Literature.
- Author
-
Halsby, Kate D., Walsh, Amanda L., Campbell, Colin, Hewitt, Kirsty, and Morgan, Dilys
- Subjects
ANIMAL health ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ANIMAL models in research ,APPROXIMATION theory ,SALMONELLA infections in animals - Abstract
Background: Around 67 million pets are owned by households in the United Kingdom, and an increasing number of these are exotic animals. Approximately a third of pets are purchased through retail outlets or direct from breeders. A wide range of infections can be associated with companion animals. Objectives: This study uses a systematic literature review to describe the transmission of zoonotic disease in humans associated with a pet shop or other location selling pets (incidents of rabies tracebacks and zoonoses from pet food were excluded). Data sources: PubMed and EMBASE. Results: Fifty seven separate case reports or incidents were described in the 82 papers that were identified by the systematic review. Summary information on each incident is included in this manuscript. The infections include bacterial, viral and fungal diseases and range in severity from mild to life threatening. Infections associated with birds and rodents were the most commonly reported. Over half of the reports describe incidents in the Americas, and three of these were outbreaks involving more than 50 cases. Many of the incidents identified relate to infections in pet shop employees. Limitations: This review may have been subject to publication bias, where unusual and unexpected zoonotic infections may be over-represented in peer-reviewed publications. It was also restricted to English-language articles so that pathogens that are more common in non-Western countries, or in more exotic animals not common in Europe and the Americas, may have been under-represented. Conclusions/implications: A wide spectrum of zoonotic infections are acquired from pet shops. Salmonellosis and psittacosis were the most commonly documented diseases, however more unusual infections such as tularemia also appeared in the review. Given their potential to spread zoonotic infection, it is important that pet shops act to minimise the risk as far as possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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31. Adopting a Whole Systems Approach to Transport Decarbonisation, Air Quality and Health: An Online Participatory Systems Mapping Case Study in the UK.
- Author
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Penn, Alexandra S., Bartington, Suzanne E., Moller, Sarah J., Hamilton, Ian, Levine, James G., Hatcher, Kirstie, and Gilbert, Nigel
- Subjects
AIR quality ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,CAUSAL models ,HUMAN ecology ,TRANSPORTATION industry - Abstract
In a drive to achieve net zero emissions, U.K. transport decarbonisation policies are predominantly focussed on measures to promote the uptake and use of electric vehicles (EVs). This is reflected in the COP26 Transport Declaration signed by 38 national governments, alongside city region governments, vehicle manufacturers and investors. However, emerging evidence suggests that EVs present multiple challenges for air quality, mobility and health, including risks from non-exhaust emissions (NEEs) and increasing reliance on vehicles for short trips. Understanding the interconnected links between electric mobility, human health and the environment, including synergies and trade-offs, requires a whole systems approach to transport policymaking. In the present paper, we describe the use of Participatory Systems Mapping (PSM) in which a diverse group of stakeholders collaboratively constructed a causal model of the U.K. surface transport system through a series of interactive online workshops. We present the map and its analysis, with our findings illustrating how unintended consequences of EV-focussed transport policies may have an impact on air quality, human health and important social functions of the transport system. We conclude by considering how online participatory causal modelling techniques could be effectively integrated with empirical metrics to facilitate effective policy design and appraisal in the transport sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Melancholy Consequences: Britain's Long Relationship with Agricultural Chemicals Since the Mid-Eighteenth Century.
- Author
-
HOLMES, MATTHEW
- Subjects
CONTROL of phytopathogenic microorganisms ,PUBLIC health ,PESTICIDES - Abstract
Chemicals used to control agricultural diseases and pests have formed a significant aspect of rural life in Britain since at least the mid-eighteenth century. This paper argues that agricultural chemicals have long been subject to public health and environmental concern. Harnessing agricultural textbooks, periodicals and newspaper reports, this paper charts the use of arsenic and copper sulphate as means of preventing fungal disease in wheat over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. During this time the dangers and benefits associated with chemical seed steeps - a mixture of water with arsenic or copper sulphate in which seeds were immersed - were thoroughly explored: landowners and agricultural improvers released their own recipes, suggested alternative remedies for fungal disease and even carried out crop trials to test the efficiency of chemical preventatives. Yet, by the mid-nineteenth century, seed steeps had become an issue of public health and government concern, as noxious substances poisoned game birds intended for human consumption. Embracing a 'long-run' history of agricultural chemicals enriches current debates on the use, regulation and impact of these products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
33. The White Paper: a framework for survival?
- Author
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Jones, Roger
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The author weighs the possible impact of the proposal by the new British coalition government to restructure the National Health Service (NHS) in 2010. Particular focus was given by the author on the new NHS Outcomes Framework. He notes that such framework will center on three themes of quality, namely, the effectiveness of treatment and its effect on both clinical and patient-reported outcomes, the safety of the provided treatment and patients' broader experience of health care. He points out some loopholes in the proposals.
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
34. Reflections on physical activity intervention research in young people - dos, don'ts, and critical thoughts.
- Author
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van Sluijs, Esther M. F. and Kriemler, Susi
- Subjects
PHYSICAL activity ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH care rationing ,INTENTION ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PRIORITY (Philosophy) ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN services programs ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Physical activity has been associated with many benefits throughout the life course. As levels of physical activity appear to be insufficient in large populations, the development of effective interventions to promote or maintain activity levels in young people are therefore of key public health concern. Physical activity intervention research in young people is challenging, but this should not be a reason to continue conducting inferior quality evaluations. This paper highlights some of the key issues that require more careful and consistent consideration to enable future research to achieve meaningful impact. Discussion: This paper critically evaluates, amongst others, current research practice regarding intervention development, targeting, active involvement of the target population, challenge of recruitment and retention, measurement and evaluation protocols, long-term follow-up, economic evaluation, process evaluation, and publication. It argues that funders and researchers should collaborate to ensure high quality long-term evaluations are prioritised and that a trial's success should be defined by its quality, not its achieved effect. Summary: The conduct and publication of well-designed evaluations of well-defined interventions is crucial to advance the field of youth physical activity promotion and make us better understand which intervention strategies may or may not work, why, and for whom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
35. The Right to Health in Times of Pandemic: What Can We Learn from the UK's Response to the COVID-19 Outbreak?
- Author
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Montel L, Kapilashrami A, Coleman MP, and Allemani C
- Subjects
- Europe, Health Personnel, Humans, Organizational Case Studies, SARS-CoV-2, United Kingdom, Vulnerable Populations, COVID-19 mortality, Disease Outbreaks, Human Rights legislation & jurisprudence, Public Health, Right to Health
- Abstract
The UK's response to COVID-19 has been widely criticized by scientists and the public. According to EuroMOMO, a European mortality monitoring initiative, the excess mortality that may be attributable to COVID-19 in England is one of the highest in Europe, second only to Spain. While critiqued from a public health perspective, much less attention is given to the implications of the pandemic outbreak for the right to health as defined under international human rights law and ratified by member states. Using the UK as a case study, we examine critically the extent to which the government's response to COVID-19 complied with the legal framework of the right to health. We review further key states' obligations on the right to health and assess its suitability in times of pandemic. Finally, we offer some recommendations for an update of the right to health. This paper adds to the body of literature on the right to health and human rights based-approaches to health., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (Copyright © 2020 Montel, Kapilashrami, Coleman, and Allemani.)
- Published
- 2020
36. Indoor Tracking to Understand Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour: Exploratory Study in UK Office Buildings.
- Author
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Spinney, Richard, Smith, Lee, Ucci, Marcella, Fisher, Abigail, Konstantatou, Marina, Sawyer, Alexia, Wardle, Jane, and Marmot, Alexi
- Subjects
PHYSICAL activity ,SEDENTARY behavior ,OFFICE buildings ,PUBLIC health ,NON-communicable diseases ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Little is known of the patterns of physical activity, standing and sitting by office workers. However, insight into these behaviours is of growing interest, notably in regard to public health priorities to reduce non-communicable disease risk factors associated with high levels of sitting time and low levels of physical activity. With the advent and increasing availability of indoor tracking systems it is now becoming possible to build detailed pictures of the usage of indoor spaces. This paper reports initial results of indoor tracking used in conjunction with the ActivPAL activity monitoring device. In this paper we give an overview of the usage of the tracking system and its installation and illustrate some of the resultant data. We also provide preliminary results that investigate the relationship between location, light physical activity and sitting in a small sample of office workers (n=33) from two separate office environments in order to demonstrate the relevance and explanatory power of the technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The changing landscape of care: does ethics education have a new role to play in health practice?
- Author
-
Wintrup, Julie
- Subjects
MEDICAL ethics ,MEDICAL care ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATORS ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: In the UK, higher education and health care providers share responsibility for educating the workforce. The challenges facing health practice also face health education and as educators we are implicated, by the way we design curricula and through students' experiences and their stories. This paper asks whether ethics education has a new role to play, in a context of major organisational change, a global and national austerity agenda and the ramifications of disturbing reports of failures in care. It asks: how would it be different if equal amounts of attention were given to the conditions in which health decisions are made, if the ethics of organisational and policy decisions were examined, and if guiding collaborations with patients and others who use services informed ethics education and its processes? Discussion: This is in three parts. In part one an example from an inspection report is used to question the ways in which clinical events are decontextualised and constructed for different purposes. Ramifications of a decision are reflected upon and a case made for different kinds of allegiances to be developed. In part two I go on to broaden the scope of ethics education and make a case for beginning with the messy realities of practice rather than with overarching moral theories. The importance of power in ethical practice is introduced, and in part three the need for greater political and personal awareness is proposed as a condition of moral agency. Summary: This paper proposes that ethics education has a new contribution to make, in supporting and promoting ethical practice -as it is defined in and by the everyday actions and decisions of practitioners and people who need health services. Ethics education that promotes moral agency, rather than problem solving approaches, would explore not only clinical problems, but also the difficult and contested arenas in which they occur. It would seek multiple perspectives and would begin with places and people, and their priorities. It would support students to locate their practice in imperfect global contexts, and to understand how individual and collective forms of power can influence healthcare quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. "A Mistaken Policy of Secretiveness": Venereal Disease and Changing Heterosexual Morality in Lancashire, UK, 1920-1935.
- Author
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Moore, Francesca Patricia
- Subjects
HETEROSEXUALITY ,HETEROSEXUALS ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,SEX education ,SEXUAL ethics ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
In the interwar years in the mill town of Rochdale, in Lancashire, UK, the percentage of the population accessing treatment for venereal disease more than tripled, rising from 0.08% in 1920 to 0.29% in 1932. Concern began to grow during this period, and public health campaigns about sex education were deployed in an effort to tackle the problem. Archival research indicates that these events were intended to instill a new "modern" approach to sex in the town and to inculcate a "new sex morality" of frankness and responsible behavior. This paper uses the problem of venereal disease as a lens to examine the shifting historical geographies of heterosexuality. The changing sexual culture in the town is the focus of the paper, with an analytical spotlight directed at the discursive production of venereal disease as a new bio-political, public, and inter-generational concern. The paper also examines the way in which, as part of the "new sex morality," the family functioned as an important channel of sexual and social discipline. The advent of a belief in parental responsibility for accurate and adequate sex education led to changing parenting philosophies. The paper finds that bio-political concerns about the health of the town, and by extension the nation, were a significant impetus for making sexuality and sexual health a public matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
39. Ramadan and public health: A bibliometric analysis of top cited articles from 2004 to 2019.
- Author
-
Husain S, Zafar M, and Ullah R
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, Female, Holidays, Humans, Male, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Turkey, United Kingdom, Bibliometrics, Fasting, Islam, Periodicals as Topic, Public Health
- Abstract
Objective: The present bibliometric study aimed to identify and perform the analysis of top one hundred cited publications on Ramadan fasting and health., Methods: The Web of Science database was searched for publication analyses of the papers published from January 2004 till June 2019. The search was performed using keywords "Ramadan" AND "Health" OR "Fast*". The descriptive analysis was performed using SPSS (version 20) software. The coauthor collaborations and keywords were analyzed using VOS viewer software (version 1.6.11)., Results: The present study found that the United Kingdom was the most productive country (n=15) followed by Turkey (n=13), Tunisia (n=12) and Saudi Arabia (n=11). The most prominent institution was National Center of Medicine and Science in Sports, Tunisia (n=7) followed by King Saud University, Saudi Arabia (n=6) and Loughborough University, United Kingdom (n=5)., Conclusion: The most frequently occurring keywords in this analysis were Ramadan, fasting, exercise, Ramadan fasting and physical performance. The present study provides insight into the impactful papers pertaining to Ramadan fasting and associated health benefits., (Copyright © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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40. Sleep and dietary habits in the urban environment: the role of chrono-nutrition.
- Author
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Pot, Gerda K.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,FOOD habits ,METROPOLITAN areas ,NUTRITION ,SLEEP - Abstract
The urban environment has changed vastly over past decades, which also has had an impact on our sleep and dietary patterns and possibly health outcomes. Some studies have shown that sleep duration and sleep quality has declined over past decades, especially in children. In parallel, our lifestyle and dietary patterns have also changed including more shift work, more meals outside the home or family setting and more irregular eating patterns, including breakfast skipping and late-night eating. This new area of research in nutritional sciences studying the impact of the timing of eating on health outcomes is called chrono-nutrition, and combines elements from nutritional research with chrono-biology. The objectives of this paper were to discuss secular trends in sleep patterns and related dietary patterns, introduce basic concepts and mechanisms of chrono-nutrition and discuss the evidence for the importance of sleep and chrono-nutrition in relation to health outcomes. Overall, chrono-nutrition could mediate the effects between sleep, diet and urbanisation, and more research is needed to elucidate the importance of chrono-nutrition for metabolic health and its impact on public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A clinical audit of the electronic data capture of dementia in ambulance service patient records.
- Author
-
Pocock, Helen, Jadzinski, Patryk, Taylor-Jones, Chloe, King, Phil, England, Ed, and Fogg, Carole
- Subjects
DEMENTIA patients ,DEMENTIA ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,COGNITION disorders - Abstract
Background: Dementia is a common diagnosis in older people. It is important to identify and record dementia on emergency call-outs, as it impacts on subsequent care decisions. Ambulance services are changing from paper to electronic patient records, but there are limited data on how frequently and in which sections of the electronic patient record dementia is being recorded. Aims: To audit the proportion of ambulance electronic patient records where dementia is recorded for patients aged (i) 65 and above and (ii) 75 and above, and to describe the sections in the electronic patient record in which dementia is recorded, as there is currently no standardised button or field available. Results: A total of 314,786 electronic patient records were included in the audit, over a one-year period. The proportion of attended calls with 'dementia' recorded in the electronic patient record in patients aged 65+ was 13.5%, increasing to 16.5% in patients aged 75+, which is similar to that recorded in previous literature. For patients aged 75+ conveyed to hospital, 15.2% had 'dementia' recorded in the electronic patient record, which may indicate under-recording. Recording of dementia between Clinical Commissioning Groups varied between 11.0% and 15.3%. Dementia was recorded in 16 different free-text fields, and 38.4% of records had dementia recorded in more than one field. Conclusion: This audit demonstrates high variability in both the frequency of recording dementia and also the location in the electronic patient record. To ensure consistent recording and ease of retrieval to inform patient care and handover, we propose that the electronic patient record should be modified to reflect paramedics' needs, and those of the healthcare staff who receive and act on the report. Enhanced training for paramedics in the importance and method of recording dementia is required. Future data will enable accurate monitoring of trends in conveyance, and inform justifications for alternative services and novel referral pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Characteristics and practices of school-based cluster randomised controlled trials for improving health outcomes in pupils in the United Kingdom: a methodological systematic review.
- Author
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Parker, Kitty, Nunns, Michael, Xiao, ZhiMin, Ford, Tamsin, and Ukoumunne, Obioha C.
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SCHOOL nursing ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PRIMARY schools ,SECONDARY schools ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CHILDREN'S health - Abstract
Background: Cluster randomised trials (CRTs) are increasingly used to evaluate non-pharmacological interventions for improving child health. Although methodological challenges of CRTs are well documented, the characteristics of school-based CRTs with pupil health outcomes have not been systematically described. Our objective was to describe methodological characteristics of these studies in the United Kingdom (UK).Methods: MEDLINE was systematically searched from inception to 30th June 2020. Included studies used the CRT design in schools and measured primary outcomes on pupils. Study characteristics were described using descriptive statistics.Results: Of 3138 articles identified, 64 were included. CRTs with pupil health outcomes have been increasingly used in the UK school setting since the earliest included paper was published in 1993; 37 (58%) studies were published after 2010. Of the 44 studies that reported information, 93% included state-funded schools. Thirty six (56%) were exclusively in primary schools and 24 (38%) exclusively in secondary schools. Schools were randomised in 56 studies, classrooms in 6 studies, and year groups in 2 studies. Eighty percent of studies used restricted randomisation to balance cluster-level characteristics between trial arms, but few provided justification for their choice of balancing factors. Interventions covered 11 different health areas; 53 (83%) included components that were necessarily administered to entire clusters. The median (interquartile range) number of clusters and pupils recruited was 31.5 (21 to 50) and 1308 (604 to 3201), respectively. In half the studies, at least one cluster dropped out. Only 26 (41%) studies reported the intra-cluster correlation coefficient (ICC) of the primary outcome from the analysis; this was often markedly different to the assumed ICC in the sample size calculation. The median (range) ICC for school clusters was 0.028 (0.0005 to 0.21).Conclusions: The increasing pool of school-based CRTs examining pupil health outcomes provides methodological knowledge and highlights design challenges. Data from these studies should be used to identify the best school-level characteristics for balancing the randomisation. Better information on the ICC of pupil health outcomes is required to aid the planning of future CRTs. Improved reporting of the recruitment process will help to identify barriers to obtaining representative samples of schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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43. COVID-19: decision-making in public health.
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de Caestecker, Linda and von Wissmann, Beatrix
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COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ,DECISION making ,LIFE expectancy - Abstract
Against a background of stalling UK life expectancy, the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a different way of working for public health to respond quickly to new and many demands. At the same time, public health teams had to ensure they did not concentrate on the immediate crisis at the expense of mitigating longer-term impacts of the pandemic. This was, and is, a major challenge with additional demands on an already hard-pressed workforce. This paper discusses the experience of a local public health department in responding to the pandemic and raises four key areas that influenced decisions and need to be considered in future. These are care homes issues, addressing all four harms of the pandemic, lessons for behaviour change and the need to strengthen Scotland's public health workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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44. The researchers' role in knowledge translation: a realist evaluation of the development and implementation of diagnostic pathways for cancer in two United Kingdom localities.
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Banks, Jon, Wye, Lesley, Hall, Nicola, Rooney, James, Walter, Fiona M., Hamilton, Willie, Gjini, Ardiana, and Rubin, Greg
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CANCER diagnosis ,CANCER research ,MIXED methods research ,CASE studies ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: In examining an initiative to develop and implement new cancer diagnostic pathways in two English localities, this paper evaluates 'what works' and examines the role of researchers in facilitating knowledge translation amongst teams of local clinicians and policy-makers.Methods: Using realist evaluation with a mixed methods case study approach, we conducted documentary analysis of meeting minutes and pathway iterations to map pathway development. We interviewed 14 participants to identify the contexts, mechanisms and outcomes (CMOs) that led to successful pathway development and implementation. Interviews were analysed thematically and four CMO configurations were developed.Results: One site produced three fully implemented pathways, while the other produced two that were partly implemented. In explaining the differences, we found that a respected, independent, well-connected leader modelling partnership working and who facilitates a local, stable group that agree about the legitimacy of the data and project (context) can empower local teams to become sufficiently autonomous (mechanism) to develop and implement research-based pathways (outcome). Although both teams designed relevant, research-based cancer pathways, in the site where the pathways were successfully implemented the research team merely assisted, while, in the other, the research team drove the initiative.Conclusion: Based on our study findings, local stakeholders can apply local and research knowledge to develop and implement research-based pathways. However, success will depend on how academics empower local teams to create autonomy. Crucially, after re-packaging and translating research for local circumstances, identifying fertile environments with the right elements for implementation and developing collaborative relationships with local leaders, academics must step back. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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45. Public attitudes towards COVID‐19 contact tracing apps: A UK‐based focus group study.
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Williams, Simon N., Armitage, Christopher J., Tampe, Tova, and Dienes, Kimberly
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PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,PRIVACY ,FOCUS groups ,MOBILE apps ,DIGITAL technology ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,MEDICAL ethics ,CONTACT tracing ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PUBLIC opinion ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: During the 2020 COVID‐19 pandemic, one of the key components of many countries' strategies to reduce the spread of the virus is contact tracing. Objective: To explore public attitudes to a COVID‐19 contact tracing app in the United Kingdom. Setting: Online video‐conferencing. Participants: 27 participants, UK residents aged 18 years and older. Methods: Qualitative study consisting of six focus groups carried out between 1st‐12th May, 2020 (39‐50 days into the UK 'lockdown'). Results: Participants were divided as to whether or not they felt they would use the app. Analysis revealed five themes: (1) lack of information and misconceptions surrounding COVID‐19 contact tracing apps; (2) concerns over privacy; (3) concerns over stigma; (4)concerns over uptake; and (5) contact tracing as the 'greater good'. Concerns over privacy, uptake and stigma were particularly significant amongst those stated they will not be using the app, and the view that the app is for the 'greater good' was particularly significant amongst those who stated they will be using the app. One of the most common misconceptions about the app was that it could allow users to specifically identify and map COVID‐19 cases amongst their contacts and in their vicinity. Conclusions: Our participants were torn over whether digital contact tracing is a good idea or not, and views were heavily influenced by moral reasoning. Patient or Public Contribution: No patients were involved in this study. The public were not involved in the development of the research questions, research design or outcome measures. A pilot focus group with participants not included in the present paper was used to help test and refine the focus group questions. Summary results were disseminated via email to participants prior to publication for feedback and comment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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46. How did the UK government face the global COVID-19 pandemic?
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Resende, Tamiris Cristhina, Catussi Paschoalotto, Marco Antonio, Peckham, Stephen, Souza Passador, Claudia, and Passador, João Luiz
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COVID-19 pandemic ,PRIMARY health care ,POPULATION health management ,ECONOMIC systems ,SOCIAL systems ,GOVERNMENT agencies - Abstract
Copyright of RAP: Revista Brasileira de Administração Pública is the property of RAP: Revista Brasileira de Administracao Publica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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47. Summertime overheating in UK homes: is there a safe haven?
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DRURY, PAUL, WATSON, STEPHEN, and LOMAS, KEVIN J.
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TEMPERATE climate ,AIR conditioning ,DWELLINGS ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Summertime overheating in dwellings in temperate climates is widespread. Overheating in bedrooms disrupts sleep, degrading health and wellbeing, and can be life-threatening. Air-conditioning homes is a solution, but is expensive and adds load onto electricity networks. An alternative is to provide safe havens, a cool retreat for sleeping when the main bedroom overheats. This paper estimates the number of English dwellings that might already have such spaces. The 2017 Energy Follow Up Survey (EFUS) to the English Housing Survey (EHS) provides temperatures measured in the main bedroom, up to two other bedrooms and the living room of 750 homes. These data were collected in 2018, a summer typical of those expected in the 2050s. The main bedroom overheated in 19% of the housing stock as judged by an adaptive comfort criterion. Up to 76% of these homes had living rooms that could provide a safe haven, and in up to 46% an alternative bedroom might provide a safe haven. Very few, if any, flats and small-area dwellings had a safe haven. These figures provide an upper-bound estimate; in practice the useable number of safe havens is likely to be less. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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48. New Kinds of (Ab)normal?: Public Pedagogies, Affect, and Youth Mental Health in the Digital Age.
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Fullagar, Simone, Rich, Emma, and Francombe-Webb, Jessica
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PUBLIC health ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL technology - Abstract
Academic, policy, and public concerns are intensifying around how to respond to increasing mental health problems amongst young people in OECD countries such as the UK and Australia. In this paper we make the case that public knowledge about mental health promotion, help-seeking, support and recovery can be understood as an enactment of public pedagogy--as knowledge practices and processes that are produced within and beyond formal spaces of learning. We explore the question of how new pedagogic modes of address are produced through digital technologies--social media, gamified therapies, e-mental health literacy, wearable technology--as they invite particular ways of knowing embodied distress as "mental illness or ill health." The rapid growth of formal and informal pedagogical sites for learning about youth mental health raises questions about the affective arrangements that produce new kinds of (ab)normal in the digital era. Through a posthumanist perspective that connects critical mental health studies and public pedagogy, this paper offers an original contribution that theorises pedagogic sites within the cultural formation of public-personal knowledge about mental (ill) health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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49. Developing virtual public health networks: aspiration and reality.
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Lake, Amelia A., Warren, Jon, Copeland, Alison, Rushmer, Rosemary, and Bambra, Clare
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BUSINESS networks ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,EXECUTIVES ,HEALTH ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL personnel ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PUBLIC health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SUCCESS ,WORK ,WORLD Wide Web ,MEMBERSHIP ,WELL-being ,RESEARCH personnel ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background This paper presents the results of an exercise to scope the potential of a virtual network to support dissemination, collaboration and innovation among the UK research community on the topic of 'work and health and well-being'. Methods Through a search of the literature and internet searches, a database of 333 individuals and 10 organizations (stakeholders) was developed to whom an online questionnaire was sent. The questionnaire scoped the potential of a virtual network on work and health and well- being. We compared respondents' aspirations for a network with the critical management literature examining the core conditions under which networks work best. Results We identified 1435 papers, published since 2008. In the UK, 333 individuals and 10 organizations were identified as working within the broad topic of Work and Health and Well-being. Of the 110 (a 34% response) responses to our online questionnaire, the majority (80%, n = 88) stated they would be interested in joining a virtual network. Conclusions Respondents indicated a willingness to engage with the network. They had a range of ideas regarding how a network could operate, which broadly match the conditions that support network effectiveness. A virtual-enabled network would be best supplemented by opportunities for face-to-face interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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50. Making the economic case for prevention - a view from Wales.
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Hale, Janine, Phillips, Ceri J., and Jewell, Tony
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LIFESTYLES ,HEALTH behavior ,PUBLIC health ,OVERWEIGHT persons ,OBESITY ,HEALTH & welfare funds - Abstract
Background: It is widely acknowledged that adverse lifestyle behaviours in the population now will place an unsustainable burden on health service resources in the future. It has been estimated that the combined cost to the NHS in Wales of overweight and obesity, alcohol and tobacco is in excess of £540 million. In the current climate of financial austerity, there can be a tendency for the case for prevention efforts to be judged on the basis of their scope for cost savings. This paper was prompted by discussion in Wales about the evidence for the cost savings from prevention and early intervention and a resulting concern that these programmes were thus being evaluated in policy terms using an incorrect metric. Following a review of the literature, this paper contributes to the discussion of the potential role that economics can play in informing decisions in this area. Discussion: This paper argues that whilst studies of the economic burden of diseases provide information about the magnitude of the problem faced, they should not be used as a means of priority setting. Similarly, studies discussing the likelihood of savings as a result of prevention programmes may be distorting the arguments for public health. Prevention spend needs to be considered purposefully, resulting in a strategic commitment to spending. The role of economics in this process is to provide evidence demonstrating that information and support can be provided cost effectively to individuals to change their lifestyles thus avoiding lifestyle related morbidity and mortality. There is growing evidence that prevention programmes represent value for money using the currently accepted techniques and decision making metrics such as those advocated by NICE. Summary: The issue here is not one of arguing that the economic evaluation of prevention and early intervention should be treated differently, although in some instances that may be appropriate, rather it is about making the case for these interventions to be treated and evaluated to the same standard. The difficulty arises when a higher standard of cost saving may be expected from prevention and public health programmes. The paper concludes that it is of vital importance that during times of budget constraints, as currently faced, the public health budgets are not eroded to fund secondary care budget shortfalls, which are more easily identifiable. To do so would diminish any possibility of reducing the future burden faced by the NHS of lifestyle-related illnesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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