Studies in Co-Creating Assisted Living Solutions
Publications
Analysing the role of complexity in explaining the fortunes of technology programmes: Empirical application of the NASSS framework
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2018), BMC Medicine, 16
Beyond adoption: A new framework for theorizing and evaluating nonadoption, abandonment, and challenges to the scale-up, spread, and sustainability of health and care technologies
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2017), Journal of Medical Internet Research, 19
Studying scale-up and spread as social practice: Theoretical introduction and empirical case study
Shaw J. et al, (2017), Journal of Medical Internet Research, 19
The bright elusive butterfly of value in health technology development: Comment on “providing value to new health technology: The early contribution of entrepreneurs, investors, and regulatory agencies”
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2018), International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 7, 81 - 85
Understanding heart failure; explaining telehealth - A hermeneutic systematic review
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2017), BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 17
Achieving Research Impact Through Co-creation in Community-Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2016), Milbank Quarterly, 94, 392 - 429
SCALS: A fourth-generation study of assisted living technologies in their organisational, social, political and policy context
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2016), BMJ Open, 6
Co-design and implementation research: challenges and solutions for ethics committees
Goodyear-Smith F. et al, (2015), BMC Medical Ethics, 16
Past publications
The following publications were not funded by SCALS but form the background to the current programme of work.
Telecare Call Centre Work and Ageing in Place
Procter R. et al, (2016), Computer Supported Cooperative Work: CSCW: An International Journal, 25, 79 - 105
What is quality in assisted living technology? The ARCHIE framework for effective telehealth and telecare services
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2015), BMC medicine, 13
Co-production in practice: How people with assisted living needs can help design and evolve technologies and services
Wherton J. et al, (2015), Implementation Science, 10
Designing technologies for social connection with older people
Wherton J. et al, (2015), Aging and the Digital Life Course, 3, 107 - 124
The day-to-day co-production of ageing in place
Procter R. et al, (2014), Computer Supported Cooperative Work: CSCW: An International Journal, 23, 245 - 267
What matters to older people with assisted living needs? A phenomenological analysis of the use and non-use of telehealth and telecare
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2013), Social Science and Medicine, 93, 86 - 94
The organising vision for telehealth and telecare: Discourse analysis
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2012), BMJ Open, 2
Technology as system innovation: A key informant interview study of the application of the diffusion of innovation model to telecare
Sugarhood P. et al, (2014), Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology, 9, 79 - 87
Why national eHealth programs need dead philosophers: Wittgensteinian reflections on policymakers' reluctance to learn from history
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2011), Milbank Quarterly, 89, 533 - 563
Studying technology use as social practice: The untapped potential of ethnography
Greenhalgh T. and Swinglehurst D., (2011), BMC Medicine, 9
Why do evaluations of eHealth programs fail? An alternative set of guiding principles
Greenhalgh T. and Russell J., (2010), PLoS Medicine, 7
Designing assisted living technologies 'in the wild': Preliminary experiences with cultural probe methodology
Wherton J. et al, (2012), BMC Medical Research Methodology, 12