Research groups
Colleges
Teaching
Chrysanthi is leading the Technological Innovation and Digital Health module for the MSc in Translational Health Sciences and co-leading the Foundations in Digital Health module for the MSc in Applied Digital Health.
Chrysanthi Papoutsi
BSc (Hons), MSc, DPhil (Oxon), FHEA
Associate Professor
My research focuses on the interdisciplinary study of digital health and innovation, drawing on insights from medical sociology, organisational theory and science and technology studies. Using qualitative and ethnographic approaches, in my work I seek to understand how digital health innovations become introduced and embedded in complex organisational and personal settings.
Currently I lead the Together 2 mixed-methods evaluation of video and hybrid group consultations in general practice (NIHR-funded), with collaborators from the Universities of York and Exeter (2022-2024). This work builds on previous research on video group consultations in Covid-19 (Health Foundation-funded study), as well as face-to-face group consultations in secondary care for young adults living with diabetes in socio-economically deprived settings (NIHR-funded study).
I am also leading qualitative research on the NHS App, the digital 'front door' to the NHS rolled out nationally in England (NIHR-funded evaluation carried out jointly by Imperial College London and the University of Oxford, 2020-2022). Outside the UK, I lead on a substantive work-package, part of a £4m NIHR-funded global health research programme, on co-designing innovations to support post-discharge care in Kenya (2020-24).
Previous experience includes a range of externally funded projects, such as on remote monitoring in epilepsy care, case study methodology to study context in complex interventions, patient safety and artificial intelligence, and the development of the local digital health ‘ecosystem’ in Oxfordshire.
I teach at postgraduate level, on topics related to sociotechnical innovation, implementation and evaluation, spread and scale-up of digital health, social theory, complexity and evidence synthesis. I also supervise DPhil, MSc and undergraduate projects on the social study of technology in healthcare.
Prior to joining the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, I have held research and teaching positions at Imperial College London, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the Oxford Internet Institute.
Key publications
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Evaluating video and hybrid group consultations in general practice: mixed-methods, participatory study protocol (TOGETHER 2)
Journal article
Papoutsi C. et al, (2024), NIHR Open Research, 4
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Spread, Scale-up, and Sustainability of Video Consulting in Health Care: Systematic Review and Synthesis Guided by the NASSS Framework (Preprint)
Journal article
James HM. et al, (2020)
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Interventions to improve antimicrobial prescribing of doctors in training: The IMPACT (IMProving Antimicrobial presCribing of doctors in Training) realist review
Journal article
Wong G. et al, (2015), BMJ Open, 5
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Spreading and scaling up innovation and improvement
Journal article
Greenhalgh T. and Papoutsi C., (2019), BMJ (Online), 365
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UK newspapers 'on the warpath': media analysis of general practice remote consulting in 2021
Journal article
Mroz G. et al, (2022), British Journal of General Practice, 72, E907 - E915
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Using Electronic Health Records for research purposes: key findings from a survey on patient and public attitudes
Conference paper
Papoutsi C. et al, (2013)
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Analysing the role of complexity in explaining the fortunes of technology programmes: Empirical application of the NASSS framework
Journal article
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2018), BMC Medicine, 16
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First Year Report on Scientific Workshop. SESERV Deliverable D1.2, Socio-Economic Services for European Research Projects FP7-2010-ICT-258138-CSA.
Report
Oostveen A. et al, (2011)
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Enhancing precision in the investigation of context: Study findings from Triple C (Case study research to understand Context in Complex health interventions)
Conference paper
Murdoch J. et al, (2021), IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 16
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Promises and perils of group clinics for young people living with diabetes: A realist review
Journal article
Papoutsi C. et al, (2019), Diabetes Care, 42, 705 - 712
Recent publications
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Qualitative evaluation of the implementation and national roll-out of the NHS App in England
Journal article
Reidy C. et al, (2025), BMC Medicine, 23
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Preventing type 2 diabetes: a qualitative study exploring the complexity of health-related practices in people with prediabetes
Journal article
Barry E. et al, (2025), British Journal of General Practice the Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners, 75, e739 - e748
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Experiential caring and the mobilisation of peerhood in group clinics
Journal article
van Dael J. et al, (2025), Social Science and Medicine, 377
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Postdischarge health information tools and information needs for mothers of vulnerable newborns in low- and middle-income countries: a scoping review
Journal article
Rababeh A. et al, (2025), BMJ open, 15
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Digitally Enabled Care in Diverse Environments (DECIDE): protocol for a programme of rapid evaluation of technology-enabled remote monitoring in health and social care
Journal article
Shaw S. et al, (2025)