Sally Baldwin’s research while affiliated with University of York and other places

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Publications (5)


Table 1 : Number of studies at key stages of review
Table 2 : Quality criteria for mortgage safety nets review
Meeting the challenge: Developing systematic reviewing in social policy
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2004

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890 Reads

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114 Citations

Policy & Politics

Alison Wallace

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Sally Baldwin

English This article uses the experience of reviewing the evidence on the financial support available for defaulting home owners to consider the opportunities and challenges systematic review methods present to social policy. It addresses concerns about examining the strength of given evidence, and perceptions of it being a purely technical method to review existing research. It argues that there is merit in utilising the method to provide research users with transparent summaries of the most robust evidence with minimum bias. The article outlines the challenges presented and suggests that social policy researchers have a valuable contribution to make to the developing methods.

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Review of Respite Services and Short-Term Breaks for Carers of People with Dementia

January 2004

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664 Reads

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34 Citations

H. Arksey

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S. Baldwin

A review of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of respite care and short breaks for carers for people with dementia. The review builds on an earlier scoping study, also for SDO, mapping out the literature relating to support for carers for people with mental health problems (the three reports and briefing paper for this work can be downloaded at www.sdo.lshtm.ac.uk/mentalhealthcarers.htm). Key aims of the new respite study for dementia carers include: - Identifying the full range of respite services for carers for people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia - Examining the evidence from published and grey literature (both national and international) about effective and cost-effective respite services for this group - Identifying examples of good practice of respite care and short breaks in health and social services, as well as the voluntary and independent sectors, for carers for people with dementia - Advising the SDO which areas should be a priority for further research, having identified key gaps in the evidence base A comprehensive literature review of research evidence will be conducted, the review will consider evidence from a wide range of sources, and will take a broad view of how effectiveness is conceptualised.




Citations (5)


... First, the authors (LG-R and MA-B) each independently read the interviews and field notes. They defined codes in terms of the study objectives and following a review of the literature on barriers present in the treatment of elder abuse (structural barriers, barriers related to the organization and availability of health services, and professional/ individual barriers, among others) (Arksey et al., 2003;Hirmas Adauy et al., 2013), as well as of other related, emerging topics. ...

Reference:

Barriers to managing elder abuse in primary care services: experiences of healthcare providers in Mexico City
Access to Health Care for Carers: Barriers and interventions
  • Citing Article
  • January 2003

... It tends to serve as a broad term including various elements within a situation that are relevant to KT in some way but have not been explicitly identified [36]. However, there is a growing interest in delving deeper into what context refers to, as evidenced by increasing research attention [31,32,[37][38][39][40][41]. While the definition of context in the transfer of knowledge to healthcare settings (i.e. ...

Literature Review Report: Services to Support Carers of People with Mental Health Problems
  • Citing Article
  • January 2002

... The Preferred Reporting Items defined the reporting of this review for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) standards [18], [19]. This scoping review employed a framework developed by [20] and an integrated method to collect primary data from various study types: randomized and nonrandomized trials with or without comparison groups; qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method. ...

Services to Support Carers of People with Mental Health Problems

... Finally, flexible at-home respite requires a trained workforce engaged in the process of acquiring knowledge and learning the skills to provide respite services to caregivers of older adults. For example, homecare organizations can offer specific training on various topics, depending on their target clientele: Dementia [44], palliative care [59], or homecare in general [44]. ...

Review of Respite Services and Short-Term Breaks for Carers of People with Dementia

... In this stage, while two authors were extracting the data, one author was involved in the validation of such data to ensure accuracy before the appraising of quality. Wallace et al., 2004 criteria and a modified rating system as suggested by Ohly et al., 2016 were employed in developing a checklist for the quality appraisal for the qualitative studies. This was followed by the preparation of a narrative account of the included studies to present patterns in misinformation, myths, and misconceptions. ...

Meeting the challenge: Developing systematic reviewing in social policy

Policy & Politics