Other outputs

New Blog Published in collaboration with the Health Foundation: Intersectional modelling in health policy: a case study on remote GP appointments and patient experience

A nice simple work through of causal MAIHDA – in this case thinking about how the effect of GP appointment type – online vs F2F – impacts patient satisfaction, and how that effect varies by intersectional strata:

https://medium.com/healthfdn-data-analytics/intersectional-modelling-in-heatlh-policy-a-case-study-on-remote-gp-appointments-and-patient-a374353d2484

Centre for Multilevel Modelling

The Centre for Multilevel Modelling now has a webpage dedicated to MAIHDA. It includes an overview, alongside links to the tutorial, videos, projects and papers. Please see here: https://www.bristol.ac.uk/cmm/research/imaihda/

Intersectionality and Health Explainer Video

We commissioned Posh Gecko to produce a 3 minute explainer animation on intersectionality and health, aimed at non-specialist audiences. Take a look! If you are using or plan to use the video in your own work, please get in touch so that we can track its use and support you.

Intersectionality: buzzword or key to solving health inequalities?

Holman, D., Salway, S. and Bell, A. Fuse Open Science Blog, 2021.

We have published a new blog on Fuse Open Science which summarises the paper we co-produced with stakeholders on the policy potential and challenges of an intersectional health perspective (Can Intersectionality Help with Understanding and Tackling Health Inequalities? Perspectives of Professional Stakeholders). We explore some of the key policy suggestions in this area and offer suggestions for the way forward.

Take a look here.

Intersectionality and the life course

Holman, D. and Walker, A. Ageing Issues Blog, 2020.

We published an accompanying blog to the below paper on unequal ageing on the British Society of Gerontology’s Ageing Issues. The blog argued that it is axiomatic that the life course perspective is fundamental to understanding unequal ageing. People move through various life stages as they age, experiencing different social roles and relationships with others, who are each doing the same. Social and cultural processes and policy encounters provide the context for these experiences, shaping what is possible, and the attendant life chances. Life course researchers have shown that ageing is unequal with respect to a number of key axes of dis/advantage such as social class, gender, and ethnicity – but what about the ways in which these axes of dis/advantage overlap and interact with each other?

Take a look here.