Publications by authors named "S J Kendall"

Background: Bullying, harassment, and undermining behaviour has a profound detrimental effect on the multi-professional team, patient safety, and clinical outcomes. Bullying creates a poor working and training environment , increasing stress, damaging confidence, and impairing wellbeing. We sought to characterize the prevalence and nature of bullying, harassment and undermining within cardiothoracic surgery in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The health visiting service in England leads the government's Healthy Child Programme (HCP) for children under five years. Local authorities and their provider partners deliver this service differently across England.

Objective: To describe local authority variation in the delivery of health visiting to children under five years in England (2018-2020).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Health visiting in England is a universal service that aims to promote the healthy development of children aged under five years and safeguard their welfare. We consulted stakeholders about their priorities for research into health visiting and also used these consultations and a literature review to generate a logic model. Parents wanted research to explore how health visiting teams can provide a caring, responsive, accessible service (the mechanisms of change).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on the health and development review mandated for children in England at ages 2-2½ years, emphasizing the use of the Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ-3) to assess early development and gather population-level data on trends and disparities.
  • - Through 15 focus groups involving parents and health professionals, researchers explored experiences and priorities regarding child development measurements during these reviews.
  • - Two main themes emerged: the desire for a comprehensive measurement approach that promotes open discussions about a child's development within the family context, and the need for clarity in the tool's purpose and consistent implementation among practitioners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In 2013, Kenya implemented free maternity services, later expanded in 2016 into the 'Linda Mama' policy to provide essential health services for pregnant women. This study explored the policy formulation background, processes, content, and actors' roles in formulation and implementation. Using a convergent parallel mixed-methods case study design, we reviewed documents and conducted in-depth interviews with national stakeholders, county officials, and healthcare workers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF