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Zhuoyi WEN

The Education University of Hong Kong


Zhuoyi WEN

Dr. WEN Zhuoyi is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Sciences and Policy Studies at the Education University of Hong Kong. His research interests include policy sciences, comparative social policy, state–society relations, and nonprofit management. His work has appeared in Journal of Social Policy, Ageing and Society, China Information, Social Policy and Administration, Social Policy and Society, Public Administration and Development, Journal of Social Service Research, and VOLUNTAS. He has been engaged in funded research projects with support from the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong and the Policy Innovation and Co-ordination Office of The Hong Kong SAR Government. He received the 2019 Best Paper Award from the Association of Chinese Political Studies, and the 2019 Regulating for Decent Work fellowship from the International Labour Organisation.

FURTHER INFORMATION

Countries Hong Kong SAR;
Topics Access to care; Accountability; Ageing in place; Artificial Intelligence; 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 inequalities; Care innovations; Care integration/ coordination; Care needs poverty and deprivation; Care outcomes; Care trajectories; Care work and migration; Cash benefits; Climate Change and LTC; Co-production in LTC; Community-based LTC; Continence Care in LTC; Costs of LTC; COVID-19 and other infectious diseases and LTC; Culturally appropriate LTC; Data catalogues; Data science; Day Care; Deinstitutionalisation; Dementia care and support; Economics of LTC; Ecosystems of care; Eligibility for public LTC; Employment education and family carers; End-of-life care and LTC; Epidemiology and ageing trajectories; Ethics and care; Evaluation of LTC systems and services; Exercise and healthy ageing; Financing LTC; Gender and care; Global Maternal Mental Health; Governance and LTC systems organisation; Healthcare access in LTC; Home/domiciliary care; Housing Adaptations; Housing and care; Implementation; Infection prevention; Information and data systems in LTC; Information needs; Intergenerational approaches; International Day of Care and Support; Living arrangements; Loneliness among older people; Long term care subsidies; LTC and people with learning disabilities; LTC and people with mental health conditions; LTC and younger people; LTC insurance; LTC Policy; LTC Reforms; LTC Systems; LTC systems in LMIC countries; LTC utitilisation; LTC Workforce; Minorities and LTC; New models of care; Outcome measurement in LTC; Outcomes for unpaid/informal carers; Pain assessment and management; Pain management in care homes; Parent carers; Pensions; Perinatal mental health; Person-centered care; Prevention and rehabilitation and LTC; Primary Health Care; Provider sector; Psychotropic use in care homes; Public procurement; Quality of care; Quality regulation and accreditation for LTC services; Relationship between LTC use and hospital use; Research gaps and priorities in LTC; Residential LTC services; Rights and people’s voices in LTC systems; Risk in Long-Term Care; Science communication; Shaping LTC markets and provider behaviour; Social connection; Social Innovation in LTC; Social Insurance; Social Prescribing; Social Protection; Stigma and discrimination; Survey measures; Technology and LTC; Universal design and LTC; Unmet needs; Unpaid / informal care; Workforce capability; Workforce pay and conditions; Younger carers;
Methods Analysis of administrative data; Assessment tool development; Case studies; Causal inference in Long-Term Care; Co-production methods; Comparative policy analysis; Cost analysis; Critical Discourse Analysis; Data science and LTC research; Discourse analysis; Discrete choice experiments; Document analysis; Economic evaluation; Ethnography; Expert consultations; Feasibility studies; Focus groups; Grounded Theory; Implementation science; Interviews; Knowledge-exchange; Legal analysis; Literature reviews and synthesis; Longitudinal data analysis; Longitudinal qualitative studies; Machine learning; Mixed methods; Narrative evaluation methods; Panel data analysis; Participatory research methods; Policy analysis; Political decisions analysis; Practice-based approaches; Qualitative studies; Quantitative data analysis; Quasi-experimental methods; Questionnaire; Scoping reviews; Social media text analysis; Social network analysis; Surveys; Systematic Review; Thematic analysis; Time series analysis; Trials and other evaluations;
Role Research;
Interest Groups Ageing and Place; Care home markets and regulation; Climate Change and LTC; Community-based approaches to dementia care; Continence Care in Long-Term Care; Data Science; Economics of Long-Term Care; Employment Education and Family carers; Integrated Long-Term Care; Long-Term Care Policy; Migration Mobility and Care Workers; policy; Quality improvement in Long-Term Care; Quasi-experimental methods; Social Care Reform in England; Technology and Long-Term Care; Unmet need inequalities and care poverty (UNICAP); Workforce Capacity and Capability; Working Conditions and Wages in Long-Term Care;