62 research outputs found

    Practising in a pandemic : A real time study of primary care practitionersā€™ experience of working through the first year of COVID-19

    Get PDF
    Funding This study was supported by the Health Foundation and staff time was provided by the University of Birmingham and the University of Aberdeen. Open access was funded centrally by the University of Birmingham.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Implementing Englandā€™s Care Act 2014: was the Act a success and when will we know?

    Get PDF
    Many countries are reforming long-term care to deal with the social risks created by demographic and social change. However, the passage of legislation is often followed by a new set of challenges as policy is implemented. This article examines Englandā€™s Care Act 2014 through Compton and ā€˜t Hartā€™s criteria of policy endurance to demonstrate the importance of assessing effectiveness at multiple time points. Early success in ā€˜implementation readinessā€™ was followed by the abandonment or dilution of key commitments. Yet, the Actā€™s foundational principles ā€“ well-being, prevention and capping private spending ā€“ continue to shape care policy, much as its original supporters hoped

    Women's Experience of Depressive Symptoms While Working From Home During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Evidence From an International Web Survey

    Get PDF
    The COVID-19 pandemic led to significant changes in workplace practices as social distancing requirements meant that people were asked to work from home where possible to avoid unnecessary contact. Concerns have been raised about the effects of the pandemic on mental health and, in particular, the effects of social distancing on employed women's mental health. In this study, we explore the experiences of working women during the initial stages of the COVID-19 pandemic and explore the factors that may be associated with women experiencing the symptoms of depression. Findings from a cross-sectional survey of European working women (across five countries: France, Italy, Poland, Sweden, and the UK) conducted between March and July 2020 are reported. The data are analyzed using linear regression and mediation analysis. For women, working from home was associated with higher prevalence of the symptoms of depression compared to traveling to a workplace. The study also considers the mechanisms that may explain a relationship between working from home and depressive symptoms. Maintaining contact with people face-to-face and participating in exercise were both significant protective factors against experiencing symptoms of depression during a period of social distancing

    Young people's data governance preferences for their mental health data: MindKind Study findings from India, South Africa, and the United Kingdom

    Get PDF
    Mobile devices offer a scalable opportunity to collect longitudinal data that facilitate advances in mental health treatment to address the burden of mental health conditions in young people. Sharing these data with the research community is critical to gaining maximal value from rich data of this nature. However, the highly personal nature of the data necessitates understanding the conditions under which young people are willing to share them. To answer this question, we developed the MindKind Study, a multinational, mixed methods study that solicits young people's preferences for how their data are governed and quantifies potential participants' willingness to join under different conditions. We employed a community-based participatory approach, involving young people as stakeholders and co-researchers. At sites in India, South Africa, and the UK, we enrolled 3575 participants ages 16-24 in the mobile app-mediated quantitative study and 143 participants in the public deliberation-based qualitative study. We found that while youth participants have strong preferences for data governance, these preferences did not translate into (un)willingness to join the smartphone-based study. Participants grappled with the risks and benefits of participation as well as their desire that the "right people" access their data. Throughout the study, we recognized young people's commitment to finding solutions and co-producing research architectures to allow for more open sharing of mental health data to accelerate and derive maximal benefit from research
    • ā€¦
    corecore