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Elisa Ruiz Burga

University College London


Elisa Ruiz Burga

Elisa Ruiz Burga is a research fellow at the University College London, Institute of Health Informatics. She has dedicated her career to studying infectious diseases and social inequalities affecting the health outcomes of vulnerable groups. She is a mixed-methods researcher with skills and expertise in designing and implementing epidemiological studies, qualitative research, and prevention interventions. She has national and international experience of working with multi-partner collaborations in different regions. Her work aims at the reduction of social and health disparities.

FURTHER INFORMATION

Countries United Kingdom;
Topics Ageing in place; Attitudes and Expectations about Long-Term Care; Care inequalities; Co-production in LTC; COVID-19 and other infectious diseases and LTC; Data science; Epidemiology and ageing trajectories; Ethics and care; Healthcare access in LTC; Infection prevention; Local care ecosystems; Perinatal mental health; Person-centered care; Primary Health Care; Relationship between LTC use and hospital use; Research gaps and priorities in LTC; Residential LTC services; Stigma and discrimination; Survey measures; Unmet needs;
Methods Case studies; Co-production methods; Critical Discourse Analysis; Data science and LTC research; Delphi surveys; Discourse analysis; Ethnography; Focus groups; Longitudinal data analysis; Mixed methods; Narrative evaluation methods; Observational studies; Qualitative studies; Quantitative data analysis; Questionnaire; Research ethics; Thematic analysis; Theory and frameworks; Theory of Change; Training materials; Trials and other evaluations;
Role Research;
Interest Groups Ageing and Place; Care and social protection in Southern Africa; Care home markets and regulation; Climate Change and LTC; Community-based approaches to dementia care; Data Science; Economics of Long-Term Care; Employment Education and Family carers; Long-Term Care in Spain; Long-Term Care Policy; Migration Mobility and Care Workers; Pain in Care Homes; Quasi-experimental methods; Strengthening Responses to Dementia; Technology and Long-Term Care;