Oluwagbemiga Oyinlola
McGill University, School of Social Work
Oluwagbemiga Oyinlola
Oluwagbemiga Oyinlola is a recent graduate of McGill University’s School of Social Work Doctoral Program. His research focuses on Afrocentric approaches to dementia caregiving, long-term care transitions, and palliative care planning among older adults in Africa, emphasising health systems, sociocultural dynamics, and intersecting policy issues affecting ageing populations. Oluwagbemiga is passionate about bridging research, community knowledge, and practice to improve care pathways for historically underrepresented groups.
FURTHER INFORMATION
| Countries | African Union; Canada; Canada (Ontario); Nigeria; |
|---|---|
| Topics | Access to care; Ageing in place; AI Ethics; Artificial Intelligence; Assistive Technologies; Attitudes and Expectations about Long-Term Care; Autonomy; Care and social protection in Southern Africa; Care economy; Care Homes; Care in rural and other non-urban settings; Care innovations; Care justice; Co-production in LTC; Community-based LTC; Continence Care in LTC; Culturally appropriate LTC; Demand for Long-Term Care; Financing LTC; New models of care; Outcomes for unpaid/informal carers; Person-centered care; Relationship between LTC use and hospital use; Stigma and discrimination; Unmet needs; Workforce capability; Younger carers; |
| Methods | Case studies; Causal inference in Long-Term Care; Co-production methods; Creative research methods; Delphi surveys; Ethnography; Grounded Theory; Interviews; Process tracing; Quantitative data analysis; Social Return on Investment; |
| Role | Research; |
| Interest Groups | Ageing and Place; Climate Change and LTC; Community-based approaches to dementia care; Continence Care in Long-Term Care; Integrated Long-Term Care; Long-Term Care Policy; Qualitative Research; Strengthening Responses to Dementia; Technology and Long-Term Care; Unmet need inequalities and care poverty (UNICAP); Working Conditions and Wages in Long-Term Care; |
