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IRIHS is a research institute at the University of Oxford dedicated to interdisciplinary research, teaching, and applied scholarship in various fields related to health services, health policy, translational science, digital health, and the patient experience. information about the academic staff and their research projects in these areas. Academic staff include Clinical Professors, Associate Professors, Senior Researchers, Clinical Research Fellows, Postdoctoral Researchers, Research Fellows, and Research Assistants. Their research fields cover primary health care, health policy, psychology, sociology, linguistics, nursing, social sciences, and anthropology. Some notable research projects include improving access to high-quality primary care, workplace-based mindfulness programmes, and preventing type 2 diabetes.
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IRIHS is a research unit within the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford. It is led by Professor Trisha Greenhalgh and Associate Professor Sara Shaw. IRIHS aims to undertake high-quality interdisciplinary research, teaching and applied scholarship in fields relating to clinical practice, organisation and delivery of health services, health policy, translational science (covering the social and behavioural science of innovation and adoption), digital health and the patient experience.
Name Role Academic field FTE Trisha Greenhalgh Clinical Professor and Co-Director of IRIHS Primary health care, social sciences
Sara Shaw Associate Professor and Co- Director of IRIHS Health policy, sociology 80% Nick Fahy Senior Researcher Health policy 100% Joe Wherton Senior Researcher Psychology / computing 100% Geoff Wong Clinical Research Fellow GP 4 0% Gemma Hughes Postdoctoral Researcher Social sciences 7 0% Stuart Faulkner Postdoctoral Researcher Medical innovation and health systems policy
Suzanne Ii Postdoctoral Researcher Social sciences 60% Chrysanthi Papoutsi Postdoctoral Researcher Social sciences 100% Alexander Rushforth Postdoctoral Researcher Social sciences 100% Lucas Seuren Postdoctoral Researcher Linguistics 100%
Teresa Finlay Postdoctoral Researcher Nursing / social sciences 80% Christine A’Court GP Researcher Primary health care 40% Claire Duddy Research Fellow Systematic reviews 60% Fernando Gouvea Reis Research Assistant Global health 20% Luke Allen Academic Clinical Fellow (GP) Primary health care 20% Asli Kalin Academic Clinical Fellow (GP) Primary health care 20% Salman Waqar Academic Clinical Fellow (GP) Primary health care 20% Michael Walker Academic Clinical Fellow (GP) Primary health care 20% Eleanor Barry Doctoral Fellow Primary health care 50% Julian Treadwell Doctoral Fellow Primary health care 75 %
Name Role Main focus FTE Ben Clyde Patient and Public Involvement PPI strategy 6 0% Polly Kerr Patient and Public Involvement PPI liaison / teaching 9 0% Linnemore Jantjes Administrator General support 40% Caroline Jordan Administrator General support 20% Jill Fardon Administrator / manager BRC theme liaison / PA 80% Charlotte Thompson-Grant Administrator General support / PA 6 0%
Name Role Academic field Aileen Clarke Honorary Clinical Professor (application pending) Health services research Alexander Finlayson Past Academic Clinical Fellow (GP) Primary health care Christian Collins Academic F2 Neurology Higher degree students (including those on staff payroll) BASED IN OUR DEPARTMENT (INCLUDING DPHILS in EBHC REGISTERED WITH CONT ED) Name Background Supervisor Funding Topic of doctorate From (FT/PT) Progress Gemma Hughes Social policy / manager Greenhalgh, Shaw Wellcome Trust Integrated care in practice 2012 (PT) Passed with minor corrections Dec 18 Dominic Hurst Dentist Greenhalgh, Mickan Self Dentists’ knowledge- in-practice 2012 (PT) Full draft of thesis completed Adrian Rohrbasser GP / Educator Wong, Harris, Mickan Self Quality circles in primary health care: realist evaluation 2013 (PT) CoS report submitted (viva Jan 19) Samantha Roberts Doctor / manager Greenhalgh, Shaw Self Policies to prevent type 2 diabetes 2015 (PT) CoS passed Apr 18; writing up Caitlin Pilbeam Anthropology Greenhalgh, Potter Wellcome Trust Living well while dying 2016 (FT) ToS passed Jan 18; CoS report in progress Sietse Wieringa GP Greenhalgh, Engebretsen Norwegian Research Council Mindlines (socially shared knowledge) among GPs 2016 (PT) ToS passed July 17; CoS report in progress Richard Gleave Policymaker Shaw, Fahy, Greenhalgh Public Health England How national public health bodies use evidence 2017 (PT) Draft ToS report completed
June and November 2018. Around 80 attendees at each from total of 8 countries.
overdue paradigm shift. BMC Medicine. 2018 ; 16 (66): 95.
Greenhalgh T, Shaw S, Wherton J , Vijayaraghavan S, Morris J, Bhattacharya S, Hanson P, Campbell- Richards D, Ramoutar S, Collard A: Real-world implementation of video outpatient consultations at macro, meso, and micro levels: mixed-method study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2018, 20(4).
Greenhalgh T , Thorne S, Malterud K. Response to Faggion. European Journal of Clinical Investigation 2018: e12946.
Greenhalgh T , Thorne S, Malterud K. Time to challenge the spurious hierarchy of systematic over narrative reviews? European Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2018;48(6):e12931.
Greenhalgh T, Wherton J, Papoutsi C , Lynch J, Hughes G , Hinder S, Procter R, Shaw S : Analysing the role of complexity in explaining the fortunes of technology programmes: empirical application of the NASSS framework. BMC Medicine 2018, 16(1):66.
Greenhalgh T. How to Improve Success of Technology Projects in Health and Social Care. Public Health Research and Practice. 2018; 28(3): e2831815.
Greenhalgh T. Of lamp posts, keys, and fabled drunkards: A perspectival tale of 4 guidelines. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice. 2018; 24:1132– 1138.
Greenhalgh T. What have the social sciences ever done for equity in health policy and health systems? International Journal for Equity in Health 2018; 17:124-126.
Hatefi A, Allen L. Donors, non-communicable diseases and universal health coverage to high-quality healthcare: an opportunity for action on global functions for health J Epidemiol Community Health 2018;72:665-667.
Hatefi A, Allen LN , Bollyky TJ, Roache SA, Nugent R. Global susceptibility and response to noncommunicable diseases. Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 2018 Aug 1;96(8):586.
Hauerslev M, Allen L. Young people and noncommunicable diseases–vulnerable to disease, vital for change. Int J Noncommunicable Diseases. 2018 Apr 1;3(2):45.
Hughes, G, Emerich N. Ethnography and Ethics: Securing Permission for Doctoral Research in and From the National Health Service. SAGE Research Methods Cases [Online, e-pub 2018].
Hughes, G. Symbolic, Collective and Intimate Spaces: An ethnographic approach to the places of integrated care, in Garnett, E., Reynolds, J. & Milton, S. (eds.) Ethnographies and Health: Reflections on empirical and methodological entanglements : Palgrave Macmillan 2018, pp. 123-140.
Hurst D, Greenhalgh T. Knowing in general dental practice: Anticipation, constraint, and collective bricolage_. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice_. 2018; DOI: 10.1111/jep..
Ii SS, Fitzgerald L, Morys-Carter MM, Davie NL, Barker R. Knowledge translation in tri-sectoral collaborations: An exploration of perceptions of academia, industry and healthcare collaborations in innovation adoption. Health Policy 2018; 122 (2): 175-183.
Ii S , Fitzgerald L et al, Knowledge translation in tri-sectoral collaborations: An exploration of perceptions of academia, industry and healthcare collaborations in innovation adoption. Health Policy 2018; 122 ( 2 ): 175 - 183, doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2017.11.010.
Kastner M, Cardoso R, Lai Y, Treister V, Hamid J, Hayden L, Wong G , Ivers N, Liu B, Marr S, Holroyd- Leduc J, Straus S. Effectiveness of interventions for managing multiple high-burden chronic diseases in older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis. CMAJ 2018;190(34)E1004-E1012.
Macfarlane A, Greenhalgh T : Sodium valproate in pregnancy: what are the risks and should we use a shared decision-making approach? BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 2018, 18(1):200.
Papoutsi C , Mattick K, Pearson M, Brennan N, Briscoe S, Wong G. Interventions to improve antimicrobial prescribing of doctors in training (IMPACT): a realist review. Health Serv Deliv Res 2018;6(10).
Papoutsi C , Poots A, Clements J, Wyrko Z, Offord N, Reed JE. Improving patient safety for older people in acute admissions: implementation of the Frailsafe checklist in 12 hospitals across the UK. Age and Ageing 2018;47(2):311-17. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afx194.
Procter R, Wherton J, Greenhalgh T. Hidden Work and the Challenges of Scalability and Sustainability in Ambulatory Assisted Living. ACM Transactions in Computer-Human Interaction 2018; 25 (2), Article
Pullar J, Allen L , Townsend N, Williams J, Foster C, Roberts N, Rayner M, Mikkelsen B, Branca F, Wickramasinghe K. The impact of poverty reduction and development interventions on non- communicable diseases and their behavioural risk factors in low and lower-middle income countries: a systematic review. PloS One. 2018 Feb 23;13(2):e0193378.
Roberts S, Craig D, Adler A, McPherson K, Greenhalgh T. Economic evaluation of type 2 diabetes prevention programmes: Markov model of low and high intensity lifestyle programmes and metformin in participants with different categories of intermediate hyperglycaemia. BMC Medicine 20 18; 16: 16.
Rushforth A, Franssen T, de Rijcke S. Portfolios of Worth: Capitalizing on basic and clinical problems in biomedical research groups. Science, Technology & Human Values 2018:0162243918786431. doi: 10.1177/0162243918786431.
Shaw S, Wherton J , Vijayaraghavan S, Morris J, Bhattacharya S, Hanson P, Campbell-Richards D, Ramoutar S, Collard A, Hodkinson I, Greenhalgh T. Virtual Online Consultations: Advantages and Limitations (VOCAL). A mixed-method study at micro, meso and macro level. Health Serv Deliv Res 2018; 6: 21.
Shaw SE , Cameron D, Wherton J, Seuren LM , Vijayaraghavan S, Bhattacharya S, et al. Technology- Enhanced Consultations in Diabetes, Cancer, and Heart Failure: Protocol for the Qualitative Analysis of Remote Consultations (QuARC) Project. JMIR Research Protocols. 2018;7(7).
Stephens TJ, Peden CJ, Pearse RM, Shaw SE, Abbott TEF, Jones E, Kocman D & et al. (2018) Improving care at scale: process evaluation of a multi-component quality improvement intervention to reduce mortality after emergency abdominal surgery. Implementation Science , 13: 142. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012- 018 - 0823 - 9.
Wherton J , Greenhalgh T , Shaw SE , Procter R. Wandering as a socio-technical practice: extending the theorisation of GPS tracking in cognitive impairment. Qualitative Health Research 2018; e-pub DOI://1d0o.i.1o1rg7/71/01.10147977/13024391738273918375983.
WHO [ Allen – co-author]: Progressing primary health care: a series of country case studies. Geneva: WHO, 2018.
Wieringa S , Engebretsen E, Heggen K, Greenhalgh T : How knowledge is constructed and exchanged in virtual communities of physicians: qualitative study of mindlines online. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2018, 20(2).
Wieringa S , Engebretsen E, Heggen K, Greenhalgh T. Rethinking bias and truth in evidence-based health care. J Eval Clin Pract. 2018;(July):1-9. doi:10.1111/jep.13010.
Williams J , Allen L , Wickramasinghe K, Mikkelsen B, Roberts N, Townsend N. A systematic review of associations between non-communicable diseases and socioeconomic status within low-and lower- middle-income countries_. Journal of global health_ 2018 : 8 (2).
Wong G. Methods Commentary: Realist reviews in health policy and systems research. In: Langlois E, Daniels K, Akl E, editors. Evidence Synthesis for Health Policy and Systems: A Methods Guide. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2018.
Wong G. Data gathering for realist reviews: Looking for needles in haystacks. In: Emmel N, Greenhalgh J, Manzano A, Monaghan M, Dalkin S, editors. Doing Realist Research. London: Sage, 2018.
Wong G. Making theory from knowledge syntheses useful for public health_. Int J Public Health_ 2018; 63 (5): 555 - 556. Major keynote lectures, workshops and conference presentations 2018
Greenhalgh T. Patient and Public Involvement – Achievements and Challenges. Annual Guest Lecture, Cambridge Centre for Health Services Research, November 2018.
Greenhalgh T. Nonadoption, abandonment and challenges to scale-up, spread and sustainability: explaining the varied fortunes of technology projects in health and care. Invited keynote lecture, WHO high-level meeting ‘Leaving no-one behind’, Tallinn, Estonia, May 2018.