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We are members of an Athena Swan Workload Allocation Group. In this role, we are preparing to develop a questionnaire exploring how people’s workload is allocated and managed by them; it will be sent to all staff in the new year. Findings will be used to direct departmental policy on workload allocation.
Annual GP Tutors Conference: Sustainable Primary Care Clinical Education
Tuesday, 03 December 2024, 9.15am to 5pm
On Tuesday 3rd December, we will welcome GP tutors from across the region to our Annual Primary Care Tutors Conference. This year’s theme, 'Sustainable Primary Care Clinical Education', will focus on how we can foster a more sustainable future in education and clinical practice.
Career Pathways to Academic Primary Care
Tuesday, 19 November 2024, 2.15pm to 8.30pm
An event for Undergraduate students to explore careers in primary care research and showcases the work of the world-leading Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences.
Society for Academic Primary Care South West Conference 2025 (SW SAPC 2025)
Monday, 31 March 2025 to Tuesday, 01 April 2025
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford is delighted to be hosting the South West regional meeting of the Society for Academic Primary Care (SAPC) in Oxford in 2025 at Keble College. This annual conference brings together clinical and non-clinical academics, researchers and clinicians to share the latest primary care research findings from across the region and Wales.
Evidence-Based Medicine: Why it’s important and why it's controversial
Alumni
Saturday, 21 September 2024, 11am to 12pm
Open to all Alumni – This discussion will take a look at the importance and controversy surrounding evidence-based medicine, in our post-pandemic times.
Transforming healthcare in a digital age
Alumni
Friday, 20 September 2024, 4pm to 5pm
Open to all Alumni – The panel of healthcare and technology experts will focus on how AI could help solve the demand for urgent care, here in the UK and globally.
Inequalities in mental health: economic and policy perspectives
Friday, 19 April 2024, 1pm to 5.30pm
A workshop bringing together academics, clinicians, commissioners and policy makers to discuss the issue of inequality in mental health.
8th International Meeting on Conversation Analysis and Clinical Encounters (CA&CE 2024)
Monday, 01 July 2024 to Wednesday, 03 July 2024, 9.15am - 4.30pm
The aim of the CA&CE meetings is to bring our international community together to share research findings and promote methodological excellence and innovation in the application of conversation analytic (CA) methods to communication during health care encounters; and to consider how we can best ensure that our research is meaningful to patients and their family members, health care professionals, clinical educators, and policy makers.
Health Economics and Policy Evaluation Course March 2024 - Online
Monday, 18 March 2024 to Tuesday, 19 March 2024
This intensive course online offers a comprehensive overview of core concepts, principles, and analytical methods in health economics and policy assessment. Optimized for PhD students, researchers, health professionals, administrators and executives, it provides crucial skills to excel in data-driven health policy roles.
Departmental Seminar (Clinical Informatics & Health Outcomes Research Group)
Thursday, 07 December 2023, 12.15pm to 1pm
Chaired by Lisa Hinton, the last seminar of the year will be given by Merri Leston from the Clinical Informatics and Health Outcomes Research Group. Merri will give a presentation entitled: 'Excess COVID-19 mortality as a novel means of subdividing the immunosuppressed: a systematic review and comparative meta-analysis'. All are welcome.
Health Economics and Policy Evaluation Course
Thursday, 26 October 2023 to Saturday, 28 October 2023
3 day course Oct 26-28, 2023 on health economics, policy evaluation, and Stata software; early booking discount before Oct 21.
Automation tools to improve the speed of evidence synthesis: Workshop
Tuesday, 12 September 2023, 9am to 4pm
Kicking the can down the road, or: how to create research impact in seven (not so easy) steps
Wednesday, 07 June 2023, 2pm to 3pm
Professor Inger Mewburn, better known as @thesiswhisperer on the internet, discusses developing research projects on top of a very full academic life, all the while building a huge following on social media.
The Mysterious Decline in Coronary Heart Disease
Thursday, 04 May 2023, 10am to 11.30am
Departmental Seminars
Thursday, 09 March 2023, 12.15pm to 1.16pm
Leaky Bodies at Work: Leaking bodies threaten social order. (online via Zoom)
Qualitative Research Methods Courses
Monday, 06 February 2023, 3.30pm to 4.30pm
In this talk Jen will draw on qualitative interview data from semi-structured and unstructured interviews with various workplace stakeholders. Showing how the leaky bodies of workers remain poorly theorised and are unrecognised in workplace environment, policy and practice.
Can digital technologies help solve the NHS crisis?
Wednesday, 08 February 2023, 3.30pm to 4.30pm
This event is part of a seminar series from the Oxford Institute of Digital health in partnership with the NIHR: Applied Research Collaboration Oxford and Thames Valley and the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences.
What is the future for integrated care in the National Health Service?
Health economics
Wednesday, 01 February 2023, 1pm to 2.30pm
Green Impact Christmas Market
Green Impact
Tuesday, 06 December 2022, 2.30pm to 4.30pm
Join us for some festive fun and bargains!
Department Seminar
Tuesday, 13 December 2022, 12.15pm to 1.15pm
Chaired by Dr Julian Hancock, the speakers are: Cervantée Wild, Tanvi Rai and Anna Dowrick presenting on: Chronicling injustice: experiences from the Covid-19 pandemic & Jienchi Dorwood presenting on: Point-of-care testing to improve primary care HIV services in South Africa
A presentation - the POETIC study
Global Health
Tuesday, 17 January 2023, 3pm to 4pm
Tamara Mulenga Willows and Jacob McKnight will present findings from their study of the readiness of Kenyan and Tanzanian hospitals to deliver Essential Emergency and Critical Care. The Receipt, Maintenance, and Flow heuristic they develop offers a way for hospital management to identify how and where limitations in human and technical resources, or organisational planning affect the care of the critically ill.