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Health Sciences

Evidence-Based Health Care
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Sporadic, late-onset, and multi-stage diseases

Dr Anthony Webster, University of Oxford gives a talk on combining mathematical modelling with big data statistics to distinguish between sporadic, late-onset, and multi-stage diseases.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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How do you carry out a realist synthesis of an intervention when there's 'no evidence'?

Joanne Greenhalgh, Professor of Applied Social Research Methodology (University of Leeds) on the experiences of conducting a realist synthesis of the feedback of aggregated patient reported outcome measure (PROMs) data to improve patient care.
Translational Health Sciences
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Knowledge for bright ideas – how research can support innovative health systems

Guest lecturer Dr Nick Fahy is a research group director for health and wellbeing at RAND Europe, where he oversees research in such areas as health systems and healthcare innovation, and the behavioural and social determinants of health and wellbeing.
Translational Health Sciences
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Justice and the Egalitarian Research Imperative

In his new book, 'For the Common Good: Philosophical Foundations of Research Ethics' (Oxford University Press), Prof Alex John London argues that there is a moral imperative to carry out research with human subjects...
Translational Health Sciences
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Using theory, evidence and person-based co-development to improve infection control during COVID-19

Until a vaccine can prevent COVID-19, protective behaviours (such as social distancing, handwashing, cleaning/disinfecting) must be used to limit the spread.
Translational Health Sciences
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Health Technology Assessment: Global alignment of systems, stakeholders and emerging trends

This talk will introduce and explore, the global mechanisms and initiatives that align process, strategy and methodology for Health Technology Assessment (HTA).
Translational Health Sciences

'Why would anyone hesitate to help kids with cancer?' or: understanding competing perspectives on innovations

'Homebound' students are unable to attend school for health-related reasons. To lessen their predicament, schools have begun experimenting with 'telepresence robots' for remote participation.
Evidence-Based Health Care

How do species postpone or even escape from senescence?

Dr Rob Salguero-Gomez, Associate Professor in Ecology, Department of Zoology, gives a talk on lessons for a longer, better human life for the EBHC podcast series.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Overdiagnosis and Lung Cancer Screening

Recent results of the NELSON Lung Cancer Screening Trial reports reductions in lung-cancer survival but not overall survival - The desire to detect disease even earlier means Overdiagnosis is on the rise.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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When meta-analyses of the same question find different things

Dr Jamie Hartmann-Boyce discusses a case study of systematic reviews of electronic cigarettes for smoking cessation, looking across meta-analyses in this area.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Conflicts of Interest in Medicine: Why it’s time for a UK Sunshine Act

Should doctors with commercial interests lead research on their products? Should we forget ‘conflicts’ and discuss ‘declarations of interest’ instead? Who should hold and maintain conflicts of interest registers for doctors?
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Realist research in practice - informing a new TB policy in Georgia

Professor Bruno Marchal gives a talk illustrating the principles of realist evaluation using the case of the development of a new Tuberculosis control policy in Georgia.
Evidence-Based Health Care

Evidence isn't enough: The politics and practicalities of communicating health research

The logic and principles behind the drive for evidence-based health care are so compelling that often the limitations of evidence go unacknowledged.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Operationalising the potential of Applied Digital Health research

The increased reliance of health systems on the digital record as the primary mechanism for storing data on consultations and other health interactions has opened new opportunities for research, healthcare innovation, and health policy.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Everything is a poison

Professor Jeffrey Aronson, Consultant Physician and Clinical Pharmacologist, Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, gives a talk on dose-response curves for the EBHC podcast series.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Safe and effective drugs: The need to use all the available evidence to inform the effectiveness of commonly used medicines

Carl Heneghan, Professor of Evidence-Based Medicine, employs evidence-based methods to research diagnostic reasoning, test accuracy and communicating diagnostic results to a wider audience.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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The secret diary of a health ethnographer - what's it *really* like doing qualitative observation in operating rooms, ambulances, triage call centres and other health care settings?

This guest lecture draws on nearly thirty years' experience of doing qualitative research in a variety of health settings that contain people, blood, injury, disease, emotions, and technologies.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Big data in heart failure - opportunities and realities

The global health burden of heart failure is high, both as the common end-point for many cardiovascular diseases (e.g. hypertension and heart attacks) and a common point on the trajectory of non-cardiovascular diseases (e.g. chronic respiratory disease).
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Behavioural Interventions to Improve the Quality of the Grocery Shopping

This evening lecture is given in conjunction with the Introduction to Study Design and Research Methods accredited short course, part of the Evidence-Based Healthcare programme at the University of Oxford's Department for Continuing Education.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Are we really advancing qualitative methods in health research?

For many good reasons, semi-structured interviews, focus groups, thematic analysis, and realist tales have become key tools within the qualitative researcher's methodological toolkit.

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