21 research outputs found
MOESM2 of Development of programme theory for integration of service user and caregiver involvement in mental health system strengthening: protocol for realist systematic review
Additional file 2. Initial search terms to inform search strategy (Service user and caregiver domain) AND (mental disorders domain) AND (health system domains) AND (Models domains)
Additional file 1: of The feasibility of introducing an adult safeguarding measure for inclusion in the Adult Social Care Outcomes Framework (ASCOF): findings from a pilot study
Adult Social Care Safeguarding Survey Interview Schedule – adult at risk. (DOCX 368 kb
MOESM1 of Development of programme theory for integration of service user and caregiver involvement in mental health system strengthening: protocol for realist systematic review
Additional file 1. Definition of realist review key concepts and terms used in this study, adapted from [1–6]
Supplemental Material - ‘I wasn’t on the front line <i>per se</i>, but I was part of health care’: Contributions and experiences of ancillary staff in care homes in England during the COVID-19 pandemic
Supplemental Material for ‘I wasn’t on the front line per se, but I was part of health care’: Contributions and experiences of ancillary staff in care homes in England during the COVID-19 pandemic by Olivia Luijnenburg, Kritika Samsi, Ian Kessler, Caroline Norrie, Stephen Martineau and Jill Manthorpe in Journal of Health Services Research & Policy.</p
Additional file 1: of Improving palliative care in selected settings in England using quality indicators: a realist evaluation
Overview of IMPACT Quality Indicators. (DOCX 18 kb
Additional file 2: of Supporting shared decision making for older people with multiple health and social care needs: a realist synthesis
Table summarising details of included primary studies. (DOCX 79 kb
Calvinist exiles in Tudor and Stuart England
This volume is a synthesis of the research articles of one of Europe’s leading scholars of 16th-century exile communities. It will be invaluable to the growing number of historians interested in the religious, intellectual, social and economic impact of stranger communities on the rapidly changing nation that was Elizabethan and early Stuart England. Southern England in general, and London in particular, played a unique part in offering refuge to Calvinist exiles for more than a century. For the English government, the attraction of exiles was not so much their Reformed religion and discipline as their economic potential - the exiles were in the main skilled craftsmen and well-connected merchants who could benefit the English economy.-- 1. A new horne or a temporary abode? Dutch and Walloon exiles in England -- 2. The French and Dutch congregations in London in the early seventeenth century -- 3. A friendship turned sour: Puritans and Dutch Calvinists in East Anglia, 1603-1660 -- 4. From uniformity to tolerance: the effects on the Dutch church in London of reverse patterns in English church policy, 1634-1647 -- 5. Merchants and ministers: the foundations of international Calvinism -- 6. From persecution to integration: the decline of the AngloDutch communities in England, 1648-1702 -- 7. The schooling of the Dutch Calvinist community in London, 1550-1650 -- 8. Tribute and triumph: Dutch pageants and Stuart coronations -- 9. Calvinist agape or Godly dining club? -- 10. Plague in Elizabethan and Stuart London: the Dutch response -- 11. The attraction of Leiden University for English students of medicine and theology, 1590-1642 -- Inde
Supplementary Table S1 Details of included qualitative studies -Supplemental material for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 2. A systematic review of qualitative studies
<p>Supplemental material, Supplementary Table S1 Details of included qualitative studies for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 2. A systematic review of qualitative studies by Andreas Braun, Daksha P Trivedi, Angela Dickinson, Laura Hamilton, Claire Goodman, Heather Gage, Kunle Ashaye, Steve Iliffe and Jill Manthorpe in Dementia</p
Evidence Table S1 People with dementia -Supplemental material for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 1. A systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions
<p>Supplemental material, Evidence Table S1 People with dementia for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 1. A systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions by Daksha P Trivedi, Andreas Braun, Angela Dickinson, Heather Gage, Laura Hamilton, Claire Goodman, Kunle Ashaye, Steve Iliffe and Jill Manthorpe in Dementia</p
Supplementary Table S2 Quotations to support themes -Supplemental material for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 2. A systematic review of qualitative studies
<p>Supplemental material, Supplementary Table S2 Quotations to support themes for Managing behavioural and psychological symptoms in community dwelling older people with dementia: 2. A systematic review of qualitative studies by Andreas Braun, Daksha P Trivedi, Angela Dickinson, Laura Hamilton, Claire Goodman, Heather Gage, Kunle Ashaye, Steve Iliffe and Jill Manthorpe in Dementia</p