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Page 1
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
News & Events ........................ .2
Project Updates ...................... .5
Our Impact ............................ .8
Funding Successes .................. 10
Publications ............................ 11
Seminars and Hub meetings ... 12
FACULTY OF HEALTH & WELLBEING RESEARCH & ENTERPRISE NEWSLETTER
FOREWORD Welcome to this Issue!
Our growing research community continues to be busy and, in this issue, there are news of our contributions in national and international confer-ences in various areas such as critical care, arts and health, assistive technologies in healthcare and mental health peer workers.
A number of developments in relation to our collaborative work with local NHS Trusts and mutual involvement in regional research activity are also reported. We are pleased to announce the launch of a new interna-tional project, EMPOWERCARE, and provide updates of our current projects.
I hope you enjoy reading this issue and we look forward to seeing at our forthcoming events and seminars.
Professor Eleni Hatzidimitriadou
Professor of Community Psychology and Public Mental Health Head of Research and Enterprise
In the last few months we welcomed:
Joanna Apps MOTION
Principal Research Fellow
Nikki Price MOTION
Project Administrator
Dr Ray Smith CASCADE
Research Fellow
Jes Phillips SDH
Research Assistant
Julia Moore SDH
Research Fellow
CONGRATULATIONS!
MOTION Project Administrator, Nikki Price, showcased four pieces of work to accompany her Master’s thesis at the Daphne Oram build-ing during August and September 2019.
Nikki’s research focuses on the family, exploring, after the death of an adult family member, what photographs and objects are kept or discarded, and the memo-ries they evoke.
The launch event on 26th September 2019 was a great opportunity to share stories using displayed photographs as a conversation starter, with many colleagues and the wider public in attendance.
DATES FOR YOUR DIARIES
***** Friday 12th June
2nd Annual ‘Growing Research & Researchers’
Student Conference ———————
Monday 6th July
Faculty Early Career Researcher (ECR) Festival
***** To attend, please email:
Page 2
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter
8th European Conference on Mental Health
Belfast, Northern Ireland, 2nd - 4th October
2019
In October 2019 Victoria Stirrup, Re-
searcher and PhD candidate, School
of Nursing, Midwifery and Social
Work, presented at the 8th European
Conference on Mental Health in Bel-
fast, Northern Ireland.
The conference reception was
opened at Belfast City Hall by Lived
Experience Practitioners (LXPs) from
Enik Recovery College, Utrecht, Neth-
erlands.
Victoria presented one aspect of her
PhD research on organisational sup-
port for mental health peer workers
in an NHS Foundation Trust. This
looked at the example of a co-
produced project steering group and
explored how this had been con-
structed as a relational space by participants in her research.
Victoria’s attendance at the conference was supported by the Facul-
ty’s PhD Support Award.
NEWS & EVENTS
British Association of Critical Care Nurses (BACCN) Conference
Ann Price, Senior Lecturer at the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, attended the BACCN conference
on 16th-17th September 2019 in Edinburgh. She presented the local data around ‘Engagement of Families in ICU
from the nursing staff perspective’ which is part of an international study across 10
countries.
Ann has been working with the International Family
Nursing Association (based in USA) as part of the inten-
sive care cluster to gain insights into family engagement
at time of critical illness.
The final stage of the analysis across the globe is in pro-
gress and findings will be published later in 2020. Ann Price, Senior Lecturer
Victoria Stirrup (left)
Researcher and PhD candidate, School
of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work
WELCOME
Dr Jane Povey
Faculty Visiting Senior
Research Fellow &
EKHUFT Research
Facilitator
Dr Jane Povey, EKHUFT Research Facilita-tor, has been appointed from 1st February 2020 for 3 years as a Visiting Senior Re-search Fellow in our Faculty. Jane’s role was introduced by the Trust to ensure better and easier links with the local Uni-versities, CCCU and University of Kent, in terms of developing collaborative re-search grants and outputs with clinical and non-clinical NHS colleagues.
Our Faculty and University will benefit from Dr Povey’s input in forthcoming bid-ding activity for NIHR and other national/international bids that have as prerequi-site strong relations between Universi-ties, NHS trusts and other stakeholders. She will also be able to engage with rele-vant Faculty Research Hubs and units as well as other parts of the University.
Page 3
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
NEWS AND EVENTS
JOINT WELLBEING SCHOLARSHIP DAY
The Diabetes and
wellbeing
(DWELL) project
Sharon Manship
and Dr Rachael
Morris
Nursing students and the use of
twitter as an educational activity
Nicole South and Victoria Stirrup
Health and well-
being of Nepalese
population
Dr Rajeeb Sah
Education children
and life limiting
conditions
Dr Sally Robinson
and Dr Ian Durrant
Improving wellbeing for people with dementia and their carers through arts engagement
Dr Ann Skingley
Remember to Dance: Supporting quality
of life through a community dance
programme for people living with
dementia.
Dr Trish Vella-Burrows
Photo elicitation
and story telling
Dr Gemma Wells
Midwifery and drama students – development
of professional scenarios
Joan Lawrence
The ADAPT Project: Assistive
Technology (AT) Training for
Healthcare Professionals
Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou
and Dr Maria Stein
Community festivals:
health promoting assets
and ways to wellbeing
Tristi Brownett
Postural care and training.
Dr Eve Hutton and Dr Sue Soan
Getting back to life after stroke:
co-designing a peer-led coaching
intervention to enable stroke
survivors to rebuild a meaning-
ful life after stroke.
Prof Chris Burton
Spiritual care
and student
nurses
Ann Price
On 6th February 2020, the Faculties of Education and Health & Wellbeing organised an inspiring day giving colleagues the opportunity to make new connections and enjoy shared speakers, group discussions, lightening talks and a poster competition.
• 2 Deans with 110 colleagues and students attended
• 2 keynotes both focusing on what is wellbeing from the different approaches of health and education.
• 15 posters entered for the Poster Prize award, which was donated by the Christ Church Sport Wellbeing Team.
• Contributors on the day also included :
Tom Delahunt, Senior Lecturer at the School of Nursing, Mid-wifery and Social Work, Innovative Teacher of the Year award winner, presenting his Creative therapeutics
Christ Church Sport and Wellbeing Team talking about their new More Move app and the Wellbeing Approach
the Research and Innovation Funding Unit talking about the 10 Steps for Bid Development
Debra Towse (Dean of Health and Wellbeing) with poster winners Dr Sue Soan, best poster, (left) and Erin McCloskey highly commended (right)
In the afternoon, sessions included 24 lightening talks, some of which were presented by FHWB colleagues:
Page 4
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter
New Deputy Director of Research & Innovation at EKHUFT
Dr David Stephensen, Visiting Reader at the School of Allied and Pubic Health Professions CCCU, has been appointed as Deputy Director of Re-search at East Kent Hospitals Univer-sity NHS Foundation Trust, leading the innovation elements of the Trust’s R&I strategy.
David is a very experienced, senior physiotherapist based in the Haemophilia Centre at K&CH who has successfully combined clinical practice with an accomplished research career. A previous holder of NIHR fellowships we look forward to our continued collaboration with him and the Trust.
NEWS AND EVENTS
The Interdisciplinary Research Network (IRN) Hallow Research event
30th October 2019
The Interdisciplinary Research Network (IRN), a cross-faculty CCCU staff network for any-one interested in learning about, developing and gaining funding for interdisciplinary re-search (IDR), met for the second time at its Hallow Research event on 30th October 2019.
The Halloween themed Hallow Research event, included presentations showcasing a current IDR project at CCCU, Justice Dogs International (Katarina Mozova, Law, Crimi-nal Justice and Policing), information on IDR friendly funding sources (Joanna Apps, MOTION Principal Re-search Fellow & Academic lead, Research Development)
and project pitches from attendees looking for support for, and feedback on, their IDR project ideas.
If you would like to know more about the work of the IRN and future IRN events please contact: [email protected]
Dr David Stephensen
FORTHCOMING EVENT ***********
Annual Growing Research & Researchers
Student Conference 12th June 2020
The 2nd Annual Growing Research & Researchers Student Conference, an event jointly organised with Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partner-ship Trust (KMPT) will be held on Friday 12th June 2020 in Augustine House, Canterbury. Keynote speakers include: * Professor Laura Serrant OBE
* Dr Peter Carter OBE
* Assistant Professor John Gilmore
Page 5
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
PROJECT UPDATES
The aim of the project is to develop a joined-up approach across Kent and Medway to both raise the profile of, and give greater focus to, re-search in quality, safety and transformation.
It will enable nurses, midwives and allied health professionals to become both more visible and more active in research. In addition, the project will enable an integrated approach to quality, safety and transformation that mirrors the aspiration of the NHS Plan to provide integrated health and social care. It will help health care providers to be knowledge rich and evidence based in relation to these vital areas.
Staff from all backgrounds either passionate about, or with an interest in, quality, safety and transformation research are invited to participate in local workshops to co-construct the strategy and identify priorities across Kent and Medway to inform future direction and action.
Prof Kim Manley, with a number of Faculty colleagues, has been working with colleagues from the University of Kent to support the Kent Community Health Foundation Trust (KCHFT) with the development of Research Champions across a num-ber of professions funded by Health Education England, Kent, Surrey and Sussex. Research champions are novice research-ers who are supported through partial backfilling of their posts and formal academic input and mentorship together with internal mentorship support to take forward research ideas in relation to their own practice and service.
Developing a research strategy for quality, safety and transformation
Faculty colleagues and staff working together across CCCU and EKHUFT contributing to the Kent and Medway Strategy
CASCADE Community Areas of Sustainable Care And Dementia Excellence in Europe
In early September, just ahead of the project’s six monthly Steering Group Meeting, Dr Ray Smith joined the CAS-CADE evaluation team as a Research Fellow. Ray has extensive experience as a researcher, is well published, and has worked on projects around improving care for care home residents and volunteer peer support and befriending for carers of people living with dementia.
October 2019 was the month when the newly built CASCADE care facilities - Harmony House in Rochester and Har-monia Village in Dover - opened their doors. The CCCU team were invited to the launch of both units. You can check out the CCCU team’s visits to the openings on our Twitter account. Media links explaining more about Harmony House and Harmonia Village can be found at: Harmony House - BBC Southeast video https://vimeo.com/365529326
The blog on local dementia care initiatives, that the CASCADE CCCU evaluation team wrote collectively with the Fac-ulty Time for Dementia Lead, Mary Kirk, Senior Lecturer at the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, to coin-cide with the opening of Harmony House and Harmonia village, has attracted immense interest. At the time of writing the blog has received almost a thousand visitors. You can read the blog at https://blogs.canterbury.ac.uk/expertcomment/putting-local-top-quality-dementia-care-on-the-map/
In late November 2019, Professor Kim Manley delivered a CASCADE Person-centred Leadership in Dementia Care Module workshop in Antwerp. These sessions aim to train people to deliver the module themselves to others so they can cascade their learning forwards.
You can follow the CASCADE project on Twitter @CCCUCASCADE For any queries regarding the project, please contact [email protected]
Page 6
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter PROJECT UPDATES
DWELL (Diabetes and WELLbeing)
DWELL is a European funded project (Interreg 2 Seas 2014-2020 Programme) which aims to empower patients with Type 2 diabetes in the UK, Belgium, France and the Netherlands to self-manage their condition and improve their wellbeing
Delivery of the DWELL 12-week self-management programme for people with type 2 diabetes is still underway at the 5 project sites in the UK, Belgium, France and the Netherlands. The CCCU DWELL team are collecting and analysing data related to patient outcomes process evaluation and cost-effectiveness analysis on an ongoing basis. In October 2019, our team visited the DWELL Belgium site in Ghent to review how their DWELL programme is delivered there and collect data from the project partner. Interim results of the evaluation study were presented for the first time by Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou at the Diabetes Professional Care Conference at Olympia, London, 29-30 October 2019. A summary of these results was also presented to healthcare professionals at the regional Diabetes Update Event (hosted by Sano-fi) at the Ashford International Hotel, 2 October 2019. A cross-border DWELL Patient Ambassador meeting, roundtable stakeholder event and project Steering Group Meeting took place in Douai, France on 20-21 November 2019 and was attended by representatives of all partner organisa-tions and external stakeholders. The DWELL project has been granted a 3-month extension, which will allow the continuation of the intervention and its evaluation until July 2020 and it is anticipat-ed that the final project report will be ready by end of October 2020.
You can follow the DWELL Project on Twitter @CCCU_DWELL For any queries regarding the project, please contact [email protected]
ADAPT
CCCU is leading the ‘Training of Health Care Professionals in Assistive Technologies (AT)’ element of the four year European funded [Interreg France (Channel Manche) England] ADAPT Project, which aims to empower disabled people through robotic technologies
We launched the e-learning ADAPT AT Training Programme, with Unit 1 ‘Foundations of AT’ to CCCU staff and students in summer 2019. The team has been busy developing content of the next Units which are more specialist, including Disability and AT, AT for Posture and Mobility, AT for
Communication and Evidence-Based Practice for AT. New Units will be made available from March 2020.
Development of the ‘Train the Trainer’ Unit is also underway in collaboration with engineering partners who are developing the ADAPT technology - a wheelchair simulator incorporating virtual reality software. All Units are being evaluated at the end of the Unit and at 6-month follow up. So far, over 30 CCCU staff and students have undertaken Unit 1 and evaluation data is currently being collated and analysed. Following NHS HRA ethical approval, Unit 1 will be also made available to healthcare professionals in partner NHS Trusts in our region from February 2020.
You can follow the ADAPT Project on Twitter @CCCUADAPT For any queries regarding the project, please contact: [email protected]
Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou with Julie Webster,
Medway Community Healthcare, and DWELL
Patient Ambassadors at the Diabetes Professional
Care Conference, London
Page 7
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
PROJECT UPDATES
EMPOWERCARE EMPOWERing individuals & communities to manage their own CARE is a European
funded project (Interreg 2 Seas) in France, Belgium, Netherlands and the UK
In January 2020 Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou with Dr Toni Wright and
Anne Stone attended the EMPOWERCARE initiation project meeting at
the Cathedral Lodge, Canterbury.
Representatives from all 13 project partners attended the 2-day meeting
and discussed all aspects of the project, including planned work for all
work packages in the next 6 months, project management and commu-
nications arrangements, and planned site visits in the project countries.
The CCCU team had its first project meeting in early February 2020 and
agreed their work plan and next steps for the team.
You can follow the EMPOWERCARE Project on Twitter @CCCUEMPOWERCARE
For any queries regarding the project, please contact [email protected]
MOTION (Mechanised Orthosis for Children with Neurological Disorders)
MOTION is a European funded project (Interreg 2 Seas) to advance the develop-ment, validation and adoption of bionic rehabilitation technology for children with neurological disorders to improve their quality of life
Initiation meeting with EMPOWERCARE Project Partners at the
Cathedral Lodge
In October 2019, Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou, with Joanna Apps, MOTION Research Fellow and Dr Mathew Brown, Senior Lecturer in Sports Biomechanics, met with other project partners in Geel, Belgium. The visit, part of a steering group meeting for project partners in France, Belgium, UK and the Netherlands, provided an opportunity for the research teams to see exoskeletons and other assistive technology in use with adults and children in clinical and specialist children and young people's therapeutic settings and discuss delivery and design issues for the next stage of the work. The CCCU team is currently conducting an early stage part of the project in relation to development of training of healthcare profes-sionals and parents of children with Cerebral Palsy in the use of robotic assistive technologies in aid of rehabilitation practices with this group of children. In this early part of the project, CCCU and partners in other countries will conduct an online survey with pro-fessionals and telephone interviews with parents to explore their views and experiences with robotic assistive technologies for chil-dren with CP . A report of findings will be available later in 2020.
MOTION partners in Geel, Belgium
You can follow the MOTION Project on Twitter
@CCCUMOTION
For any queries regarding the project, please con-
tact [email protected]
Page 8
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter OUR IMPACT
AAATE Conference, Bologna, Italy - 27-30 August 2019
In August 2019, three members of the CCCU ADAPT team Prof Eleni Hatzidi-
mitriadou, Dr Maria Stein and Dr Claire Parkin travelled to Bologna, Italy, to
present alongside project partners as part of a Special Thematic Session at
the 15th Association for the Advancement of Assistive Technology in Europe
(AAATE) Conference titled ‘Global Challenges in Assistive Technology’.
The STS comprised 8 papers linked to the project, 3 of which were presented
by the CCCU team. In particular, they focus on: findings of a literature review
of the challenges encountered in the adoption of Assistive Technology (AT)
and training of healthcare professionals; the results of a survey of AT
knowledge and experiences of healthcare professionals in the UK and France;
and the training needs and development of online AT training for healthcare
professionals.
The AAATE Conference was an important opportunity to raise the profile and work of the ADAPT Project
amongst stakeholders in Europe and further afield. During the conference, the organisers invited the dele-
gates to endorse the Bologna Declaration ‘Unlocking Human Potential: A Call for Action to Improve Access to
Quality Assistive Technology for Realising Fundamental Human Rights and Achieving the Sustainable Devel-
opment Goals in a Full Inclusive Manner’.
For more information, please visit: https://aaate.net/the-bologna-declaration/
The CCCU team with other ADAPT partners
Celebration of Sidney De Haan Centre’s 11-Year Singing Legacy
On 10th November 2019, Dr Trish Vella-Burrows, SDH Principal Re-
search Fellow, led a celebratory singing session at Age UK, Canter-
bury. Members of Age UK Canterbury continue to enjoy regular singing
and music sessions eleven years on from the first cohort of CCCU stu-
dents who engaged in a placement scheme as part of the Music, Arts &
Health module in 2008.
Launched by former Co-Director of
the SDH Centre, Prof Grenville
Hancox, the activities are now run
by community partners of the Cen-
tre, Music4Wellbeing - of which
Trish is a Director - which designs
activities based on the Centre’s
research outputs.
The long-term initiative is testament to the positive impact of the Univer-
sity’s engagement with the community.
Dr Trish Vella-Burrows, Nicola Wydenbach and trainees at Trinity Laban Conservatoire
Page 9
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
Peer Review RIFU have recently made some updates to our peer review guidance and form
that can be used by colleagues who are bidding and by those that have been
asked to review applications. To view and download this form please visit the
RD webpages: https://cccu.canterbury.ac.uk/research-development/applying-for-
external-funding/bid-development-procedure.aspx
Peer review is intended to identify areas of improvement to the quality of a re-
search grant proposal. The purpose of peer review is to provide formative feed-
back to help the Principal Investigator develop the proposal and to demonstrate
to institutional approvers that a process of feedback has taken place.
Funding Workshop
On 25th September 2019, the CCCU
Research and Innovation Funding
Unit (RIFU) hosted a workshop for
researchers in the Faculty interested
in bidding for external funding.
The workshop was attended by aca-
demics from across Faculty and it
was facilitated by Dr Harriett Kersey,
Research and Innovation Manager.
Areas of discussion included: how to
get started with searching for appro-
priate funding schemes, top tips for
bidding, and the CCCU Bid Develop-
ment Policy.
OUR IMPACT
REF 2021 UPDATE The REF (Research Excellence Framework) is the system for assessing research in UK Higher Education Institu-
tions with a primary purpose to produce assessment outcomes for each submission made by institutions. The
principles of equality, equity and transparency govern the conduct of the REF and each submission is assessed by
expert panels.
Our Faculty is submitting outputs and impact evidence under Unit of Assessment 3 (Allied Health Professions,
Dentistry, Nursing and Pharmacy). We are planning to submit two Impact Case Studies in the areas of singing
and creative arts for health and wellbeing, and in enhancing the care and role of service users and carers in men-
tal health settings. These ICSs build on our past research, include new developments, and firmly include collabo-
rations with NHS Trusts, Charities, Local Authorities and other organisations. As always we value this collabora-
tion immensely and would like to take this opportunity of thanking those involved.
November and December 2020 will see the culmination of extensive work which includes internal assessment of
research outputs, gathering of evidence of impact, reach, significance of our research and developing a narrative
of our research environment. The REF submissions are due in December 2021 and outcomes of this exercise for
all Universities will be made public in January 2022.
The University’s new research re-
pository, Research Space, is now
live! It contains full-text outputs of
all publications our academics are
producing and it can be accessed:
internally via StaffNet (under Aca-
demic on the left hand side)
or externally at: https://
repository.canterbury.ac.uk/
Page 10
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter FUNDING SUCCESSES
EMPOWERCARE EMPOWERing individuals & communities to manage their own CARE
EMPOWERCARE is a social innovation project that aims to evaluate the impact of different models of asset-based community inno-vation in France, Belgium, Netherlands and the UK. The project combines partner expertise in: health technology, social cohesion solutions, and integrated work-force approaches, and local organisations with appropriate access to the target population.
Partners aim to tackle the problem of caring for an ageing population, using technology & community capability in order to co-create a service that will effec-tively meet the needs of many older people in their own homes. EMPOWERCARE will ensure that older people do not end up unnecessarily in hospitals or care homes when the service they need can be provided within their community.
Living labs in partner countries will allow professionals and communities to share best practice and create approaches that ensure a maximum number of older people across the project areas have as many options as possible for their own wellbeing.
The EMPOWERCARE project will develop and test three initiatives around em-powering communities to better care for themselves, and in so doing specifically aim to improve health and well-being outcomes for elder people:
A strategy that will enhance existing community based elder care services through the adoption of best prac-tices shared among the project partners
A package of resources to enable transformation of the workforce to empower communities to better care for themselves
Technology blueprint on technologies that support enablement at individual and community level
The CCCU team, comprising interprofessional expertise from nursing, occupa-tional therapy, mental health, health services improvement, will lead the evalu-ation of the project’s interventions. The evaluation will take a comprehensive multiple-case approach including cost-benefit, health and well-being outcome analysis.
Congratulations to Dr Toni Wright and Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou and all the project team!
Looking for funding opportunities?
Don’t forget the Research and Innovation Funding Bulletins are available on StaffNet to download and search.
If you have an idea for a research project and you would like advice on external grants, please contact [email protected]
or have a look at: https://cccu.canterbury.ac.uk/research-and-enterprise-development-centre/finding-funding/funding-links-and-resources.aspx
Page 11
Issue 6, Autumn Winter 2019/20
PUBLICATIONS
RECENT PUBLICATIONS BY FACULTY COLLEAGUES
Faculty Writing Retreat
In February 2020, Sharon Manship, Research Fellow, Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, or-
ganised a successful Writing Retreat. The idea was to bring together Researchers to aid
focus and productivity.
It is hoped that further sessions will run throughout the year.
GRANT WRITING WORKSHOPS The Graduate College and Researcher Development unit are running two grant writing workshops in March 2020.
WORKSHOP 1 - Overview and preparation for grant writing - 3rd March, 11-3pm, Ns09 (11-1) and Nt01 (1-3)
This session will provide an overview of the funding landscape in the UK and consider experience at CCCU in successful (and unsuccessful) application; CCCU processes and procedures; finding ideas; finding funding and identifying resources.
WORKSHOP 2 - Writing a grant application - 5th March, 1-6pm, OS1.14
This session will include some structured writing exercises and 'shut up and write' sessions to get you started. We will also consider some practical issues around costing your project.
Simkhada, B., Sah, R.K., Mercel-Sanca, A., van Teijlingen, E., Bhurtyal, Y.M. & Regmi, P.R. (2020). Perceptions and experiences of health and social care utilisation of the UK-Nepali population. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. DOI 10.1007/s10903-020
-00976-w
Yoon Irons J., Hancox, G, Vella-Burrows T., Han E-Y., Chong, H-J., Sheffield, D. & Stewart, D.E. (2020): Group singing improves quality of life for people with Parkinson’s: an international study, Aging & Mental
Health, DOI: 10.1080/13607863.2020.1720599
Manship, S., Hatzidimitriadou, E., Morris, R., Chapman-Hatchett, A., Webster, J. & Jasper, K. (2019)The DWELL Project: develop-ment and evaluation of an innovative psychoeducational pro-gramme for people with type 2 diabetes. Presented at: Diabetes
Professional Care, 30 October, London, UK.
Hatzidimitriadou, E., Stein, M., Parkin, C., Manship, S., Gallien, P. & Laval, D. (2019) Training needs and development of online AT training for healthcare professionals in UK and France. Presented at: AAATE
2019 conference, 27-30 August, Bologna, Italy.
Marsh, I. (2020) The social production of psychocentric knowledge
in suicidology. Social Epistemology. 34 (1).
Che, C. (2019) Curating indigenous knowledge and practices for sustainable development: possibilities for a socio-ecologically mind-
ed university. Sustainability. 11(15), pp. 2-11.
Manship, S., Hatzidimitriadou, E., Stein, M., Parkin, C., Raffray, M., Gallien, P. & Delestre, C. (2019) A literature review of the challenges encountered in the adoption of assistive technology (AT) and training of healthcare professionals. Presented at: AAATE 2019 conference, 27
-30 August, Bologna, Italy.
Parkin, C., Hatzidimitriadou, E., Manship, S., Stein, M., Achille-Fauveau, S., Blot, J., Laval, D. and Delestre, C. (2019) A survey of assistive technology (AT) knowledge and experiences of healthcare professionals in the UK and France: challenges and opportunities for workforce development. Presented at: AAATE 2019 conference,
27-30 August, Bologna, Italy.
Scott, J., Dawson, P., Heavey, E., De Brún, A., Buttery, A., Waring, J., & Flynn, D. (2019) Content Analy-sis of Patient Safety Incident Reports for Older Adult Patient Transfers, Handovers, and Dis-charges: Do They Serve Organizations, Staff, or Patients? Journal of Patient Safe-
ty, DOI: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000654
Gill, N., Ellis, V., Clift, S., (2019) Cultural activities linked to lower mortality. British Medical Journal, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/
bmj.l6774
Jones, J., Buckley, J. & Sheppard, G. (Eds) (2020) Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation in Practice (2nd Ed.). London: Wiley-
Blackwell.
Health & Wellbeing - Research and Enterprise Newsletter
Page 12
Issue 6, Spring-Summer 2020
If you have content for the next issue of the Faculty RKE newsletter, please contact
RESEARCH HUB HUB LEAD
Education for Health & Social Care Professionals Julie Taylor & Dr Jacqueline Wier
Care for Long Term Conditions & End of Life Care Prof Eleni Hatzidimitriadou
Service User & Carer Involvement Dr Bob Cecil
Mental Health Prof Doug MacInnes
Arts & Health Prof Stephen Clift
Practice & Workforce Development Prof Kim Manley
Child Health & Wellbeing Dr Eve Hutton
Clinical & Medical Sciences Paul Lockwood
Social Inclusion & Health Inequalities Esther Coren
FACULTY RESEARCH HUBS
Faculty Research Hubs continue to meet and welcome new members at any stage of their research career
Hubs meet regularly and have a dedicated Blackboard area for members to share research profiles, meeting notes and any other resources
that may be of interest to colleagues with similar research interests.
If you wish to join any of the hubs, please contact [email protected]
LUNCHTIME RESEARCH SEMINAR SERIES
26th February 2020: “Suicide on the Railways: Multi-Disciplinary and Lived Experience Approaches to Preven-
tion” presented by Dr Ian Marsh
18th March 2020: “Sexual abuse of vulnerable women in mental health services – tracing the history of ap-
proaches to consent in UK mental health law and professional regulation” presented by Dr Janet Melville-
Wiseman
22nd Apr 2020 will be presented by Dr Bob Cecil
20th May 2020 will be presented by Dr Pat Chung
17th Jun 2020 will be presented by Athene Lane-Martin
15th Jul 2020 will be presented by CASCADE project team
The seminars will run from 12:30—13:30 with a light lunch offered at 12:00 and the opportunity to remain for networking until 14:00. To reserve a place
please email [email protected]
Please keep an eye on the RKE noticeboard (Newton first floor corridor) for an updated list and details of rooms which will be added when bookings are con-
firmed.
Anyone interested in presenting their research, please do get in touch by email [email protected]