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Harnessing the expertise
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Davis, D., & Pradeep, A. Harnessing the expertise

This is a briefing paper submitted to the Dean of the School of Health and Society, University of Salford

Migrant Roma in the United Kingdom: population size and experiences of local authorities and partners
Report
Brown, P., Scullion, L., & Martin, P. Migrant Roma in the United Kingdom: population size and experiences of local authorities and partners

The overall objective of this study was to provide an evidence-base with the aim of informing a more comprehensive and accurate
development of measures to support the inclusion of migrant Roma in the UK. There were two specific objectives:
1. To ob... Read More about Migrant Roma in the United Kingdom: population size and experiences of local authorities and partners.

Eating as a means to combat distress: A novel pathway to explain the association between household food insecurity and food choice
Presentation / Conference Contribution

Food insecurity is a lack of the financial resources needed to ensure reliable access to food to meet dietary, nutritional, and social needs. In the UK, 8.4 million people were food-insecure in 20141. Household food insecurity is associated with poor... Read More about Eating as a means to combat distress: A novel pathway to explain the association between household food insecurity and food choice.

NOT THE LAST RESORT: the impact of an interprofessional training care home on residents, care home staff, and students
Report
Stephens, M., Kelly, S., Clark, A., Granat, M., Garbutt, R., & Hubbard, L. NOT THE LAST RESORT: the impact of an interprofessional training care home on residents, care home staff, and students

Care homes are a fundamental part of the health and social care system, and with demand in the
sector expected to increase, it is important to better understand how the sector can improve
recruitment and retention, be sustainably staffed, and promo... Read More about NOT THE LAST RESORT: the impact of an interprofessional training care home on residents, care home staff, and students.

Transdisciplinary ethical principles and standards for mobile mental health
Presentation / Conference
Bowie-DaBreo, D., Iles-Smith, H., Sünram-Lea, S., & Sas, C. Transdisciplinary ethical principles and standards for mobile mental health. Presented at Mental Wellbeing: Future Agenda Drawing from Design, HCI, and Big Data, Online

This position paper addresses the continued ethical challenges in mobile mental health and the need for transdisciplinary ethical principles and standards to facilitate the development of ethically designed mental health technologies. By comparing an... Read More about Transdisciplinary ethical principles and standards for mobile mental health.

Development of eczema care online, a digital intervention to support eczema self-management in young people
Presentation / Conference Contribution

Background: This research aimed to develop Eczema Care Online (ECO), a digital
intervention to support eczema self-management in young people (13-25 years).
Methods: Theory-, evidence- and person-based approaches to intervention development
were u... Read More about Development of eczema care online, a digital intervention to support eczema self-management in young people.

A systematic review of chronic pain assessments with children and young people : exploring administrative, scoring and classification issues
Presentation / Conference
Lee, R., Rashid, A., Ghio, D., Thomson, W., & Cordingley, L. A systematic review of chronic pain assessments with children and young people : exploring administrative, scoring and classification issues. Poster presented at 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, USA

Background/Purpose: Pain is often the most troubling feature of musculoskeletal disease in children and young people (CYP). In paediatric pain research, recent attempts to standardise the assessment of chronic pain for CYP have been pivotal in establ... Read More about A systematic review of chronic pain assessments with children and young people : exploring administrative, scoring and classification issues.

Investigating children's beliefs about juvenile arthritis : a study using cognitive interviewing
Presentation / Conference Contribution

Background/Purpose: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common chronic rheumatic illness in childhood. An understanding of how children make sense of their JIA symptoms is important for long-term management and treatment. There is increas... Read More about Investigating children's beliefs about juvenile arthritis : a study using cognitive interviewing.

Validating a pain perception questionnaire for young people with juvenile arthritis
Presentation / Conference
Ghio, D., Calam, R., Hyrich, K., Thomson, W., CAPS, C. A. P. S., & Cordingley, L. Validating a pain perception questionnaire for young people with juvenile arthritis. Poster presented at Rheumatology 2015, Manchester, UK

Background: The ways in which people perceive their illness are known to affect long-term outcomes. The Common Sense-Self-Regulatory Model (CS-SRM) is used as a theoretical framework to investigate the influence of illness beliefs on outcomes and the... Read More about Validating a pain perception questionnaire for young people with juvenile arthritis.

Beliefs about pain in juvenile idiopathic arthritis are significantly associated with higher reported pain and more negative affect in children and young people
Presentation / Conference
Lee, R., Muckian, C., Damaraju, S., Ghio, D., Thomson, W., & Cordingley, L. Beliefs about pain in juvenile idiopathic arthritis are significantly associated with higher reported pain and more negative affect in children and young people. Poster presented at Paediatric and Adolescent Rheumatology Conference 2019, Millenium Point, Birmingham, UK

Background
Persistent, unpredictable pain is one of the most burdensome features of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) which is a relapsing-remitting inflammatory musculoskeletal condition presenting in children and young people under 16 years. Rec... Read More about Beliefs about pain in juvenile idiopathic arthritis are significantly associated with higher reported pain and more negative affect in children and young people.

How do paediatric pain experts and healthcare professionals prioritise patient-reported pain information from children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
Presentation / Conference
Lee, R., Rashid, A., Ghio, D., Thomson, W., & Cordingley, L. How do paediatric pain experts and healthcare professionals prioritise patient-reported pain information from children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. Poster presented at British Society for Paediatric and Adolescent Rheumatology 2017, Sheffield, UK

Background: Patient self-report of pain is regarded as the gold standard of assessment. There is increased recognition of the importance of using electronic, real-time data capture with multi-dimensional methods for children who have chronic pain. No... Read More about How do paediatric pain experts and healthcare professionals prioritise patient-reported pain information from children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis.