BLUE
VGvickigphysio.bsky.social

A day behind the purple door with people living with dementia and family talking about our dreams for dementia and creating some artistic interpretations #ppie@penarc.bsky.social@nihr.bsky.social@gerisoc.bsky.social for hosting us

0

First pie of the season from our apple tree 🥧

Finished crumb top ppie
Filled pie pre-baked
3
Ffrankiesoton.bsky.social

Back to work tomorrow, although WFH. Very excited for our final report on The dynamics of frailty to be published. Possibly this week🤞🏽. I co-authored a chapter on PPIE for the study with my talented SRF colleague Carole, which thanks to Covid proved to be a real challenge!

0
JRjrboehnke.bsky.social

The live Q&A of Session#1 highlights the importance of funders and research teams being diverse, engaging meaningfully w excluded groups, and providing opportunities to become researchers and reach seniority in such roles. #ISOQOL#MWMsymposium#PPIE#Representation#Empowerment

0
Aaafke.bsky.social

Ik ben van mening dat zowel de voor- als tegenstanders elkaar continu uit de tent uit lokken met idiote uitspraken en stellingen om tegen elkaar te strijden. Daarbij halen ze allerlei termen uit de kast als w*ke, N*zi, w*ppie etc. Het helpt ons niet verder. We blijven rondjes rennen!!

0
MBmbbrownsf.bsky.social

The PPIE in 1915 was in reality an ancient city? Good. Grief.

0
DWwpball.com

If the graph is simple enough that you don't really need to explain it, then you could probably just say the important bit in words. My tendency is to sit with a plot & explain in depth. Lay audiences who we've done PPIE work with said they prefer the headline as well (or instead)

1
MTmatthewtosh.bsky.social

Yesterday was a very productive and inspiring day in my public contributor role with the British Heart Foundation Data Science Centre. Putting my experience of living with cardiomyopathy to good use! 💪😀❤️‍🩹 #PPIE#PositiveChangebhfdatasciencecentre.org/team-members...

0
CVchristinahw.bsky.social

Geweldig dit! Enigszins toch jaloers. Mijn ppie is er al zo lang niet meer.. ;(

1
JMjjmarshall.bsky.social

Had a really good day learning about the U.K. research community collaboration coordinated by the Mouse Genetics Network. How they are enabling research, tackling the challenges of new technologies, spreading best practice, training and developing future researchers, and moving into replacement.

Entrance to the National STEM Learning Centre on the campus of the University of York. It’s surprisingly difficult to find within the campus if you walk from the city, but convenient from the car park… I saw a lot of the uni campus whilst being lost!
The meeting was opened by the Director of the network.
The network is spread across all four nations of the U.K. and split into research themes, which each are in multiple centres. This slide describes the themes and their locations. The themes are: Ageing (new! announced and welcomed into the network today), Cancer, Congenital Anomalies, Degron Tagging, Haem, Microbiome, Mitochondria and MURIDAE (early life). Locations include London Cambridge Oxford Edinburgh Glasgow Newcastle Belfast Cardiff (and more).
The MGN is very busy setting up communities and resources - one way it does this is through Working Groups. There are five of these at present: Industry & Translation, Training, Horizon scanning (currently focused on genetics, but expanding to in vivo imaging imminently), Better Models and PPIE (public transparency).
0