Project overview
We will develop and test online resources that address the needs of people with eczema in supporting their use of eczema treatments. The research will focus on meeting the needs of carers of children with eczema, and teenagers and young adults who manage their own eczema. We will also address the concerns of patients and healthcare professionals around the safety of topical corticosteroids.
This project will be carried out through the following five inter-connected work packages (WPs):
WP 1: Explore the support needs and barriers to self-care through reviewing the existing evidence and conducting interviews with people with eczema and people who care for someone with eczema.
Objectives: Gain an understanding of experiences of eczema, including self-care support needs and patient/carer views on, and experience of, using eczema treatments.
WP 2: Systematically review existing evidence on topical corticosteroid safety.
Objectives: Establish current best evidence on the safety of topical corticosteroids and use this to create tools to support shared decision making and shared understanding between health professionals and people with eczema.
WP 3: Develop two online interventions to help support self-care: one for parents/carers of children with eczema and one for teenagers and young adults with eczema.
Objectives: Create two tailored interventions designed to target and influence behaviour.
WP 4: Determine clinical and cost-effectiveness of the online interventions compared to standard care by performing two randomised controlled trials with health economic analyses.
Objectives: Feasibility randomised controlled trials will establish the trial recruitment and viability, and the full-scale trials will determine clinical and cost effectiveness.
WP 5: Investigate how the interventions can be integrated into clinical practice and facilitate their uptake if effective.
Objectives: Support the interpretation of the findings and facilitate uptake of the interventions and engage with clinical communities to promote sign-posting towards interventions.
Contact: ECO@soton.ac.uk
This research is being conducted by the Primary Care Research Centre
This project will be carried out through the following five inter-connected work packages (WPs):
WP 1: Explore the support needs and barriers to self-care through reviewing the existing evidence and conducting interviews with people with eczema and people who care for someone with eczema.
Objectives: Gain an understanding of experiences of eczema, including self-care support needs and patient/carer views on, and experience of, using eczema treatments.
WP 2: Systematically review existing evidence on topical corticosteroid safety.
Objectives: Establish current best evidence on the safety of topical corticosteroids and use this to create tools to support shared decision making and shared understanding between health professionals and people with eczema.
WP 3: Develop two online interventions to help support self-care: one for parents/carers of children with eczema and one for teenagers and young adults with eczema.
Objectives: Create two tailored interventions designed to target and influence behaviour.
WP 4: Determine clinical and cost-effectiveness of the online interventions compared to standard care by performing two randomised controlled trials with health economic analyses.
Objectives: Feasibility randomised controlled trials will establish the trial recruitment and viability, and the full-scale trials will determine clinical and cost effectiveness.
WP 5: Investigate how the interventions can be integrated into clinical practice and facilitate their uptake if effective.
Objectives: Support the interpretation of the findings and facilitate uptake of the interventions and engage with clinical communities to promote sign-posting towards interventions.
Contact: ECO@soton.ac.uk
This research is being conducted by the Primary Care Research Centre
Staff
Lead researchers
Other researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
Kate Greenwell, Katy Sivyer, Laura Howells, Mary Steele, Matthew J. Ridd, Amanda Roberts, Amina Ahmed, Sandra Lawton, Sinéad M. Langan, Julie Hooper, Sylvia Wilczynska, Paul Leighton, Gareth Griffiths, Tracey Sach, Paul Little, Hywel C. Williams, Kim S. Thomas, Lucy Yardley, Miriam Santer & Ingrid Muller,
2022, British Journal of Dermatology
DOI: 10.1093/bjd/ljac115
Type: article
Katy Sivyer, Emma Teasdale, Kate Greenwell, Mary Steele, Daniela Ghio, Matthew Ridd, Amanda Roberts, Joanne Chalmers, Sandra Lawton, Sinéad Langan, Fiona Cowdell, Emma Le Roux, Sylvia Wilczynska, Hywel Williams, Kim Thomas, Lucy Yardley, Miriam Santer & Ingrid Muller,
2022, British Journal of General Practice, 72(719), e378-e389
Type: article
Kate Greenwell, Daniela Ghio, Katy Sivyer, Mary Steele, Emma Teasdale, Matthew J. Ridd, Amanda Roberts, Joanne R. Chalmers, Sandra Lawton, Sinéad Langan, Fiona Cowdell, Emma Le Roux, Sylvia Wilczynska, Hannah Jones, Emilia Whittaker, H.C. Williams, Kim Suzanne Thomas, Lucy Yardley, Miriam Santer & Ingrid Muller,
2022, BMJ Open, 12(4)
Type: article
Emma Axon, Joanne R Chalmers, Miriam Santer, Matthew J. Ridd, Sandra Lawton, Sinead M Langan, Douglas J C Grindlay, Ingrid Muller, Amanda Roberts, Amina Ahmed, Hywel C. Williams & Kim S. Thomas,
2021, BMJ Open, 11(7), 1-12
Type: article
Mary Steele, Laura Howells, Miriam Santer, Katy Sivyer, Sandra Lawton, Amanda Roberts, Emma Teasdale, Ingrid Muller & Kate Greenwell,
2021, Skin Health and Disease Open Access, e59
DOI: 10.1002/ski2.59
Type: article