Evaluating the costs and benefits of implementing the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) adult social care guidelines: A scoping study social care Population health and social care health policy
Mobilising knowledge in applied health, public health and social care research social care implementation
Constructing the entire care pathway of bowel cancer patients undergoing emergency surgery to improve care Health economics and data cancer bowel Trust care pathways safety
Implementing effective primary care responses to poverty-related mental distress (DeStress-II) Mental Health physical environment primary care families minoritised experiences medical education quality improvement social welfare
Investigating the utility of machine learning methods to predict prognosis and guide treatment decisions for people with lung cancer (Lung-ORACLE) artificial intelligence care pathways cancer Innovation and Implementation Science long-term conditions cardiovascular quality improvement decision making
Improving breast cancer outcomes whilst reducing inequalities by enhanced activities in prevention, screening and early symptomatic diagnosis prevention adults cancer patient-reported outcomes quality improvement race inequality women's health Population health and social care
What are the costs and consequences of implementing NICE adult social care guidelines from a local systems perspective? social care Population health and social care health policy implementation
Cross-sector implementation of NICE-recommended CBT-based interventions for young people in care Mental Health children & young people implementation social care behaviour change
Understanding hearing and dementia care pathways and exploring the barriers and facilitators impacting relevant stakeholders regarding addressing cognition in hearing services for older adults Innovation and Implementation Science hearing Trust implementation dementia older adults public involvement integrated care
Improving uptake of bowel cancer screening (ASCEND) primary care prevention cancer bowel behaviour change