Research Topics
| J PopaySummaryAffiliation: Lancaster University Country: UK Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Qualitative research and the epidemiological imagination: a vital relationshipJ Popay
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, UK
Gac Sanit 17:58-63. 2003..The paper illustrates these different types of contributions with examples of qualitative research and finally discusses ways in which the "trustworthiness" of qualitative research can be assessed...
Beyond 'beer, fags, egg and chips'? Exploring lay understandings of social inequalities in healthJennie Popay
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster
Sociol Health Illn 25:1-23. 2003..The paper highlights ways in which different methodologies provide different and not necessarily complementary understandings of lay perspectives on the causes of inequalities in health...
Whose theory is it anyway?Jennie Popay
Lancaster University, Alexandra Square, Lancaster LA1 4YT, UK
J Epidemiol Community Health 60:571-2. 2006
Should disadvantaged people be paid to take care of their health? NoJennie Popay
Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YW
BMJ 337:a594. 2008
A proper place to live: health inequalities, agency and the normative dimensions of spaceJennie Popay
Institute for Health Research, University of Lancaster, LA1 4YT, Lancaster, UK
Soc Sci Med 57:55-69. 2003....
Social problems, primary care and pathways to help and support: addressing health inequalities at the individual level. Part II: lay perspectivesJennie Popay
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Alexandra Square, Lancaster LA1 4NT, UK
J Epidemiol Community Health 61:972-7. 2007..This study aimed to describe social problems presented to general practitioners (GPs) in UK inner cities and GPs' responses; describe patients help-seeking pathways; and consider how these pathways can be improved...
Social problems, primary care and pathways to help and support: addressing health inequalities at the individual level. Part I: the GP perspectiveJennie Popay
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Alexandra Square, Lancaster LA1 4NT, UK
J Epidemiol Community Health 61:966-71. 2007..This study aimed to describe social problems presented to general practitioners (GPs) in UK inner cities and GPs' responses; describe patients' help-seeking pathways; and consider how these pathways can be improved...
Mapping the determinants of health inequalities in social space: can Bourdieu help us?Anthony C Gatrell
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Alexandra Square, LA1 4YT, UK
Health Place 10:245-57. 2004..The area of residence of the survey respondents is used to associate them with particular locations in these social spaces...
Describing depression: ethnicity and the use of somatic imagery in accounts of mental distressSara Mallinson
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK
Sociol Health Illn 29:857-71. 2007....
Moving beyond floccinaucinihilipilification: enhancing the utility of systematic reviewsJennie Popay
Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University, Bowland Tower Annex, UK
J Clin Epidemiol 58:1079-80; discussion 1081-8, 1089. 2005
Extending systematic reviews to include evidence on implementation: methodological work on a review of community-based initiatives to prevent injuriesKatrina Roen
Institute for Health Research, University of Lancaster, Lancaster LA1 4YT, UK
Soc Sci Med 63:1060-71. 2006....
The role and theoretical evolution of knowledge translation and exchange in public healthRebecca Armstrong
Cochrane Health Promotion and Public Health Field, VicHealth, Carlton South, VIC 3053, Melbourne, Australia
J Public Health (Oxf) 28:384-9. 2006..Knowledge Translation Strategy, 2004). The most recent conceptualizations consider the complexities of public health decision-making. The role of practitioners and communities is increasingly considered...
How can we synthesize qualitative and quantitative evidence for healthcare policy-makers and managers?Catherine Pope
Health Services Research, School of Nursing and Midwifery at the University of Southampton
Healthc Manage Forum 19:27-31. 2006..In the healthcare context, synthesis methods are less well developed than methods such as systematic review. Nonetheless, synthesis has the potential to provide knowledge and decision support to healthcare policy-makers and managers...
Directly observed therapy and tuberculosis: how can a systematic review of qualitative research contribute to improving services? A qualitative meta-synthesisJane Noyes
Cochrane Qualitative Research Methods Group University of Wales, Bangor, UK
J Adv Nurs 57:227-43. 2007..This paper reports the findings from a qualitative meta-synthesis concerning people with, or at risk of, tuberculosis, service providers and policymakers and their experiences and perceptions of tuberculosis and treatment...
Developing a model to enhance the capacity of statutory organisations to engage with lay communitiesChristine Pickin
Salford and Trafford Health Authority, Eccles, UK
J Health Serv Res Policy 7:34-42. 2002..CONCLUSIONS: Commonly occurring constraints to effective partnerships between statutory organisations and lay communities need to be identified and addressed by applying a dynamic model of the type presented here...
Systematically reviewing qualitative and quantitative evidence to inform management and policy-making in the health fieldNicholas Mays
Health Services Research Unit, Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
J Health Serv Res Policy 10:6-20. 2005..The choice of approach will be contingent on the aim of the review and nature of the available evidence, and often more than one approach will be required...
'Everywhere and nowhere': locating and understanding the 'new' public healthSara Mackian
School of Geography, University of Manchester, Mansfield Cooper Building, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
Health Place 9:219-29. 2003....
PFI is here to stay. Select committee's report used parliamentary privilege unacceptablyAlison Macfarlane
BMJ 324:1584. 2002
Addressing social determinants of health inequities: what can the state and civil society do?Erik Blas
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Lancet 372:1684-9. 2008..Civil society takes many forms: here, we have used examples of community groups and social movements. Governments and civil society can have important positive roles in addressing health inequity if political will exists...
