Contact information
Colleges
MSc in Translational Health Sciences
Sara is a tutor on the following modules:
Sustainble Health Care
Introduction and Research Methods for Translational Science
Health Organisations and Policy
Technological Innovation and Digital Health
Find out more about the MSc in Translational Health Sciences
Sara Shaw
Professor of Health Policy & Practice
Sara Shaw is Professor of Health Policy & Practice at the University of Oxford and Senior Fellow at Green Templeton College. She has a background in sociology and policy studies and interests in the organisation and delivery of health care including the adoption, spread, scale up and sustainability of health and care technologies.
Sara leads a programme of work on technology-enabled care, including remote consulting, and is Director of DECIDE, a new centre focused on rapid evaluation of technology-enabled remote monitoring. She is the sustainability lead for the Oxford and Thames Valley Applied Research Collaboration, focused on building research and capacity at the intersection of technology-enabled care and sustainable health care, and on supporting the shift to net zero health services by 2045. She has published widely on topics ranging from the adoption and spread of digital health technologies, to integrated care and critical approaches to understanding policy.
Since completing her PhD in 2006, in which she used discourse analysis to examine the development of health-related policy, she has maintained a keen interest in language, communication and power in health service delivery. She has significant experience of qualitative research, and is internationally renowned for her work on linguistic ethnography and interpretive policy analysis.
Sara is interested to hear from potential DPhil students with active interests in understanding the impacts of health systems on the environment and developing more sustainable health care. She has a full quota for 2024 entry.
Key publications
Evaluating video and hybrid group consultations in general practice: mixed-methods, participatory study protocol (TOGETHER 2).
Journal article
Papoutsi C. et al, (2024), NIHR Open Res, 4
Protocol: Remote care as the 'new normal'? Multi-site case study in UK general practice.
Preprint
Greenhalgh T. et al, (2022)
Studying Scale-Up and Spread as Social Practice: Theoretical Introduction and Empirical Case Study.
Journal article
Shaw J. et al, (2017), J Med Internet Res, 19
Fragmentation: a wicked problem with an integrated solution?
Journal article
Shaw SE. and Rosen R., (2013), J Health Serv Res Policy, 18, 61 - 64
Recent publications
Choreographing Triage: Making Patient Requests 'Flow' Through Digitally Enabled Systems of Access and Decision-Making in NHS Primary Care.
Journal article
Brenman N. et al, (2026), Sociol Health Illn, 48
The carbon footprints of single-use and reusable medical devices: a systematic review.
Journal article
Booth A. et al, (2025), BMJ Open, 15
Implementation and use of technology-enabled remote monitoring for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a rapid qualitative evaluation.
Journal article
Newhouse N. et al, (2025), Health Soc Care Deliv Res, 1 - 40
Preventing type 2 diabetes: a qualitative study exploring the complexity of health-related practices in people with prediabetes.
Journal article
Barry E. et al, (2025), Br J Gen Pract, 75, e739 - e748
Social and Ethical Aspects of Remote and Hybrid Care in the Special Allocation Scheme in general practice (SEARCH): A mixed methods feasibility study protocol
Journal article
Brenman N. et al, (2025), NIHR Open Research, 5, 96 - 96
Enabling scale and spread of technology-enabled remote monitoring of blood pressure at home: findings from a rapid qualitative evaluation
Journal article
Wu F. et al, (2025), NIHR Open Research, 5, 81 - 81
