S
Suzanne Fitzpatrick
Researcher at Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
Publications - 161
Citations - 4591
Suzanne Fitzpatrick is an academic researcher from Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public housing & Poverty. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 154 publications receiving 3669 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne Fitzpatrick include University of York & University of Glasgow.
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Journal ArticleDOI
What works in inclusion health: overview of effective interventions for marginalised and excluded populations.
Serena Luchenski,Nick Maguire,Robert W Aldridge,Andrew Hayward,Alistair Story,Patrick Perri,James Withers,Sharon Clint,Suzanne Fitzpatrick,Nigel Hewett +9 more
TL;DR: This work identified numerous interventions to improve physical and mental health, and substance use; however, evidence is scarce for structural interventions, including housing, employment, and legal support that can prevent exclusion and promote recovery.
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Explaining Homelessness: a Critical Realist Perspective
TL;DR: The authors argue that the prevailing "new orthodoxy" in explanations of homelessness, which attempts to integrate both structural and individual causes, is useful at a descriptive level, but is unsatisfactory at a more profound conceptual level.
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Pathways into Multiple Exclusion Homelessness in Seven UK Cities
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify five experiential clusters within the MEH population, based on the extent and complexity of experiences of homelessness, substance misuse, institutional care, street culture activities and adverse life events.
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Ending Security of Tenure for Social Renters: Transitioning to ‘Ambulance Service’ Social Housing?
Suzanne Fitzpatrick,Hal Pawson +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine recent policy moves to withdraw security of tenure in social housing in England and Australia and argue that there are theoretical and empirical grounds for believing that tenure security is crucial both to social housing tenants themselves and to conceptualisations of the sector.
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Biology-inspired microphysiological systems to advance patient benefit and animal welfare in drug development
Uwe Marx,Akabane T,Tommy B. Andersson,Elizabeth Baker,Mario Beilmann,Beken S,Brendler-Schwaab S,Murat Cirit,Rhiannon David,Dehne Em,Isabell Durieux,Lorna Ewart,Suzanne Fitzpatrick,Olivier Frey,Florian Fuchs,Linda G. Griffith,Geraldine A. Hamilton,Thomas Hartung,Julia Hoeng,Helena T. Hogberg,David J. Hughes,Donald E. Ingber,Anita R. Iskandar,Toshiyuki Kanamori,Kojima H,Kuehnl J,Marcel Leist,Li B,Peter Loskill,Donna L. Mendrick,Neumann T,Giorgia Pallocca,Ivan Rusyn,Lena Smirnova,Thomas Steger-Hartmann,Danilo A. Tagle,Alexander G. Tonevitsky,Tsyb S,Trapecar M,van de Water B,Van den Eijnden-van Raaij J,Paul Vulto,Watanabe K,Wolf A,Zhou X,Adrian Roth +45 more
TL;DR: It is found that the level of qualification of MPS-based assays for a given context of use and communication gaps between stakeholders are the major challenges slowing industrial adoption by end users, which in turn is causing a regulatory acceptance dilemma.