EXPERTS II – How are patient and caregiver participation in health and social care shaped by experienced burden of treatment and social inequalities? A qualitative synthesis decision making physical environment adults implementation long-term conditions health equity Innovation and Implementation Science co-production families
Better Care Moves for Older People Population health and social care social care Commissioner quality improvement older adults secondary care
Development of a haemophilia physiotherapy intervention for optimum musculoskeletal health in children Health economics and data children & young people quality improvement primary care integrated care long-term conditions
Living alone with dementia: managing without formal support to contact and navigate services Population health and social care social care older adults quality improvement care pathways dementia
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
Physical health and multimorbidity in people with severe mental illness and impact on secondary care utilisation Multimorbidity Mental Health secondary care
Involvement of young carers in acute treatment of patients with psychosis families children & young people Mental Health carers acute care
Somatic and psychotropic polypharmacy in people with long-term mental health problems Multimorbidity Trust primary care prescribing Mental Health long-term conditions
Facilitating digital play for young children with neurodisability Multimorbidity children & young people Mental Health digital neurodisability