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Keyi Li

LSHTM


Keyi Li

My background is in health economics, with two master degrees (MSc) from the London School of Economics (LSE) and Imperial College, and a PhD from University College London (UCL). My PhD research focused on health economics, specifically examining the impact of unemployment and fragile employment on health and social care utilisation, based on the evidence from a large, linked dataset in East London.

I currently work with the Policy Innovation, Research and Evaluation Unit (PIRU), where I focus on evaluating health and social care policy. I am involved in a project evaluating the UK Concussion Guidelines for Non-Elite (Grassroots) Sport, and I also work on the Climate-Care project, which maps the impact of extreme weather events and adaptation strategies within adult social care.

In parallel, I work with the NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Systems and Commissioning (PRU HSSC) on the LOCATED project. This work focuses on the adult social care market, analysing geographical variations in the composition of care homes and home care services across England.

FURTHER INFORMATION

Countries China; United Kingdom; United Kingdom (England); United Kingdom (Northern Ireland); United Kingdom (Scotland); United Kingdom (Wales);
Topics Access to care; Age-friendliness; Assistive Technologies; Care Homes; Care in rural and other non-urban settings; Care trajectories; Climate Change and LTC; Costs of LTC; Demand for Long-Term Care; Ecosystems of care; Home/domiciliary care; Housing Adaptations; Housing and care; Living arrangements; LTC Systems; Outcomes for unpaid/informal carers; Person-centered care; Primary Health Care; Unmet needs; Unpaid / informal care;
Methods Analysis of administrative data; Causal inference in Long-Term Care; Cost analysis; Data science and LTC research; Delphi surveys; Difference-in-differences; Economic evaluation; Implementation science; Interviews; Literature reviews and synthesis; Observational studies; Panel data analysis; Qualitative studies; Quasi-experimental methods; Regression Discontinuity Design; Service mapping; Surveys; Theory of Change;
Role Research;
Interest Groups Ageing and Place; Climate Change and LTC; Economics of Long-Term Care; Long-Term Care in China; Long-Term Care Policy; Social Care Reform in England; Workforce Capacity and Capability;