Richard Green
University of Surrey
Richard Green
Richard was awarded a prestigious Surrey Future Fellowship in April 2023 to work with interdisciplinary colleagues from the Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI and across the university to develop a programme of research on the use of ‘carebots’ (chatbots and other artificial technologies) to support the health and wellbeing of older adults. Prior to this role, Richard was working as a Research Fellow, project managing The PALLUP Study – Improving home based palliative care for frail elders and his current fellowship continues and extends his research on the health and wellbeing of older adults in later life.
Richard completed a BSc in Criminology and Sociology at Royal Holloway university and then an MSc in Social Research Methods at the University of Surrey, before completing his PhD in Sociology in partnership with both universities on an ESRC studentship. His PhD explored men’s experiences following treatment for prostate cancer in a qualitative interviewing study. Before joining the PALLUP study, Richard worked at the Office for National Statistics as a Senior Research Officer, working on facilitating research access to secure data for research that serves the public good.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Countries | United Kingdom (England); |
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Topics | Access to care; Artificial Intelligence; Autonomy; Care economy; Care in rural and other non-urban settings; Care innovations; Care trajectories; Co-production in LTC; Dementia care and support; End-of-life care and LTC; Ethics and care; Intergenerational approaches; Loneliness among older people; New models of care; Outcome measurement in LTC; Outcomes for unpaid/informal carers; Social connection; Social Innovation in LTC; Social Prescribing; Technology and LTC; Unmet needs; Younger carers; |
Methods | Co-production methods; Dyadic analysis; Simulation models; |
Role | Research; |
Interest Groups | Community-based approaches to dementia care; Data Science; Economics of Long-Term Care; Social Care Reform in England; Strengthening Responses to Dementia; |