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27 International Journal of Care and Caring • vol 2 • no 1 • 27–48 • © Policy Press 2018 Print ISSN 2397-8821 • Online ISSN 2397-883X • https://doi.org/10.1332/239788218X15187914567891 article Gender-based analysis of working-carer men: a North American scoping review Kevin Maynard, kevin.maynard@mail.utoronto.ca University of Toronto, Canada Chloe Ilagan, ilaganca@mcmaster.ca McMaster University, Canada Bharati Sethi, bharatisethi8@gmail.com Kings College, Canada Allison Williams, awill@mcmaster.ca McMaster University, Canada The purpose of this scoping

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Health Organization ( WHO, 2017 ) has identified as environmental factors that influence the lives of people living with disabilities and, we posit, the lives of carers. Thus, examining and understanding the positive effects of caring may assist with the development of assistive devices, policy interventions or health service delivery. Accordingly, a scoping review was conducted to understand the nature of the most contemporary literature regarding the positive effects of caring for carers of adults aged 65 or older, with an eye to thinking about their implications

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217 Evidence & Policy • vol 12 • no 2 • 217–33 • © Policy Press 2016 • #EVPOL Print ISSN 1744 2648 • Online ISSN 1744 2656 • http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/174426415X14365286808816 Troubling the boundaries: Overcoming methodological challenges in a multi-sectoral and multi-jurisdictional HIV/HCV policy scoping review Kathleen A Hare, khare@dal.ca, Dalhousie University, Canada Anik Dubé, anik.dube@umoncton.ca, Université de Moncton, Canada Zack Marshall, marshall.zack@gmail.com, Memorial University, Canada Jacqueline Gahagan, jacqueline.gahagan@dal.ca, Dalhousie

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attention given by researchers and those who fund it to the needs for care by older adults and the degree to which research outputs provide the information and analytical frameworks necessary to drive conversations on care systems. In this article, we present a scoping review of the evidence and discussions in the extant literature on LTC provision for older people in Southern Africa (Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe). We have defined older persons as those aged 60 and above, in line with definitions

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153 International Journal of Care and Caring • vol 1 • no 2 • 153–73 • © Policy Press 2017 • #IJCC Print ISSN 2397-8821 • Online ISSN 2397-883X • https://doi.org/10.1332/239788217X14937990731749 article Social consequences of family care of adults: a scoping review Norah Keating, norah.keating@ualberta.ca Jacquie Eales, jeales@ualberta.ca University of Alberta, Canada The power of social connections is a contemporary focus of research across world regions. Yet, evidence of challenges to carers’ social relationships remains fragmented and underexplored. We

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PART 2 Theorising via a scoping review: what we know and need to find out

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paper, we utilise the scoping review method to examine implementation studies and determine how peer learning – a process through which knowledge users interact with and learn from ‘peers’ – has been used to build implementation capacity. In the context of peer learning, peers are defined as others engaged as learners in the KTA process who are working to understand and apply the new practice in their own work or organisation) ( Boud, 2001 ). Peer learning Peer learning is an approach rooted in social learning theory and social constructivism. It is defined as a

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-informed solutions that support forward movement on issues of importance to the group. Consensus methods in health research can be used to ensure research users are meaningfully involved in the formation and execution of research and implementation priorities. However, minimal research has examined how consensus methods are used within research partnership approaches. Undertaken by a diverse, partnered research team, the purpose of this scoping review was to better understand and describe how research partnerships involving research users throughout the research process use

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529 International Journal of Care and Caring • vol 2 • no 4 • 529–49 • © Policy Press 2018 Print ISSN 2397-8821 • Online ISSN 2397-883X • https://doi.org/10.1332/239788218X15411705099442 article Hidden carers? A scoping review of the needs of carers of people with HIV in the contemporary treatment era Myra Hamilton, m.hamilton@unsw.edu.au Jessica Botfield, jessica.botfield@unsw.edu.au Asha Persson, a.persson@unsw.edu.au Christy Newman, c.newman@unsw.edu.au Joanne Bryant, j.bryant@unsw.edu.au kylie valentine k.valentine@unsw.edu.au University of New

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. , Brennan , S. , Williamson , A. and Moore , G. ( 2018 ) ‘ What can we learn from interventions that aim to increase policy-makers’ capacity to use research? A realist scoping review ’, Health Research Policy and Systems , 16 . doi: 10.1186/s12961-018-0277-1 Haynes , A. , Turner , T. , Redman , S. , Milat , A.J. and Moore , G. ( 2015 ) ‘ Developing definitions for a knowledge exchange intervention in health policy and program agencies: reflections on process and value ’, International Journal of Social Research Methodology , 18 : 145 – 159 . doi

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