Evaluation of the 0-5 Public Health Investment in England: a mixed methods study integrating analyses of national linked administrative data with in-depth case studies Population health and social care Local Authority digital Health economics and data public health children & young people
Healthy Places, Healthy Planet Population health and social care health equity ethnic minority groups co-production nutrition research design public involvement physical environment
How can we define and identify household overcrowding affecting the wellbeing of families, using publicly available and council-held data? Population health and social care families Local Authority children & young people physical environment social welfare public health
The Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition (NEON) Programme Local Authority children & young people ethnic minority groups nutrition families co-production Population health and social care maternal health
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
Mapping patterns of inequality in students’ access to mental health services in London Mental Health Local Authority Schools children & young people health equity self-management prevention communication health policy
Using linked health use data and council data to examine health and social care use at the end of life Health economics and data Integrated Care Systems social care Local Authority
Identifying cancer recurrence within patient care pathways across linked national clinical datasets Health economics and data older adults cancer bowel
Talking medicines: conversations between people with dementia and informal carers Multimorbidity older adults prescribing carers
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