News & Latest 25.06.2021

Funding awarded to improve research-led practice in adult social care

A team of ARC EoE researchers has been awarded nearly  £1million by the NIHR to build regional research capacity in adult social care services 

Over one million adults in the UK receive personal and practical care and assistance from social care for a wide range of reasons, including critical support for age-related issues, health conditions and disabilities.

Led by the University of Hertfordshire in collaboration with the University of East Anglia, the project will pave the way for more social care practitioners to undertake relevant research, which can be embedded into their practice to inform and improve quality of care.

In partnership with Hertfordshire and Norfolk County Councils, the three-year initiative will see the researchers create four new Social Care Research in Practice Teams (SCRiPT). Each team member will receive funding to develop their research skills and confidence, and design and implement new research projects to advance social care in the region.

One of six similar schemes across England funded by the NIHR, the project also provides more opportunities for collaboration between social care practitioners in Hertfordshire and Norfolk. Participants will benefit from opportunities to share skills and best practices with colleagues from a range of areas of social care.

“Building research capacity in adult social care across our East of England region, will not only support the development and implementation of evidence-based care to improve outcomes; it will also support the development of future research leaders in social care.”

 

Eneida Mioshi, ARC EoE Deputy Director and co-applicant at the University of East Anglia

"Practitioner-led research has long been seen as a vital resource in healthcare, and I am very pleased to see its value being recognised in social care too. This funding will help us to upskill and empower staff, creating time and space for tailored research projects that directly contribute to better care for vulnerable adults across the region."

 

Kathryn Almack, joint project lead at the University of Hertfordshire

“‘Practitioners have a great deal to offer research so it’s great to see this project being so thoroughly embedded in practice.”

 

Tanya Moore, Principal Social Worker in Adult Care Services at Hertfordshire County Council

This project is led by Kathryn Almack and Frances Bunn at the School of Health and Social Work, University of Hertfordshire.

Project partners

  • University of Hertfordshire (lead)
  • University of East Anglia
  • Kings College London
  • Hertfordshire County Council
  • Norfolk County Council
  • NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East of England
  • Shaping our Lives