4 results match your criteria: "Policy Institute at King's College London[Affiliation]"
BMC Glob Public Health
January 2025
Department of Women and Children's Health, King's College London, London, UK.
Pre-eclampsia is a leading cause of maternal and neonatal mortality; 30,000 pre-eclampsia-related maternal deaths occur annually, with 70% in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and 16% in South Asia. We have shown that early, accurate detection of hypertension combined with planned early delivery in women with late preterm pre-eclampsia significantly reduces stillbirth and severe maternal hypertension. We describe co-development and delivery of policy labs, working with The Policy Institute (King's College London), and local stakeholders in Sierra Leone and Zambia, to expedite integration of new knowledge into pre-eclampsia care pathways, to improve care for women and babies with the worst outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Res Policy Syst
January 2020
Policy Institute at King's College London, Strand Campus, London, WC2B 6LE, United Kingdom.
Background: Public research funding agencies and research organisations are increasingly accountable for the wider impacts of the research they support. While research impact assessment (RIA) frameworks and tools exist, little is known and shared of how these organisations implement RIA activities in practice.
Methods: We conducted a review of academic literature to search for research organisations' published experiences of RIAs.
Objectives: (1) To test the use of best-worst scaling (BWS) experiments in valuing different types of biomedical and health research impact, and (2) to explore how different types of research impact are valued by different stakeholder groups.
Design: Survey-based BWS experiment and discrete choice modelling.
Setting: The UK.
BMC Med
June 2015
The Policy Institute at King's College London, 1st Floor, Virginia Woolf Building, 22 Kingsway, London, WC2B 6LE, UK.
The impact case studies submitted by UK Higher Education Institutions to the Research Excellence Framework (REF) in 2014 provide a rich resource of text describing impact beyond academia and across all disciplines. Using text mining techniques and qualitative assessment, the 6,679 non-redacted case studies submitted were analysed and the impact described was found to be multidisciplinary, multi-impactful, and multinational. By digging deeper into the data, the health gains from health research in terms of Quality Adjusted Life Years was also estimated.
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