Community Rehabilitation
 

Image of Miriam Golding-Day

Miriam Golding-Day

Research Fellow, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

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Biography

Miriam Golding-Day is a Health and Care Professions Council registered Orthotist/Prosthetist and Research Fellow based within the Centre for Rehabilitation and Ageing Research. She is the PPI lead and Nottingham site PI on the BATH-OUT 2 study, Nottingham site coordinator for the FEMUR 3 study and PI for the FEMuR InCLuDe intervention adaptation.

Miriam has experience in mixed methodology research including randomised controlled trials, consensus methods and qualitative interviews and focus groups. She specialises in older people's research with a specialist interest in including those with reduced capacity. An active member of her professional body, the British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists, she established and sat as the inaugural chair of its research committee and continues to lead in their research strategy work streams, advocating for increasing Allied Health Professional research capacity.

Research Summary

NIHR HTA

Falls in Stroke Survivors (FISS)

NIHR Research for Patient Benefit

Developing a falls management tool for older adults with intellectual disabilities in community settings

Recent Publications

Past Research

The Stroke Association

Can early specialist orthotic assessment lead to improved rehabilitation outcomes and reduced complications for patients following a stroke? (OTIS study)

NIHR School for Social Care Research

Bathing adaptations in the homes of older adults: A randomised controlled trial, economic evaluation and process evaluation (BATH-OUT-2)

NIHR School for Primary Care Research

Co-producing resources to support participation in research for adults with intellectual disabilities

NIHR Health Technology Assessment

Fracture in the Elderly Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation - Phase III (FEMuR III)

NIHR Research Capability Grant - Nottinghamshire CCG

Can early diagnosis and orthotic intervention lead to improved rehabilitation outcomes and prevent secondary complications for patients following stroke?

NIHR Research for Patient Benefit

Biopsychosocial Intervention for Stroke Carers (BISC study)

The Stroke Association

Optimising Psychoeducation for Transient Ischaemic Attack and Minor Stroke Management (OPTIMISM study)

Community Rehabilitation

School of Medicine The University of Nottingham
Medical School, B108a
Nottingham, NG7 2UH


telephone: +44 (0) 115 82 30230