Elisa  Aguzzoli

Elisa Aguzzoli

PhD student

Department of Health Policy

Room No
FAW 5.01B
Connect with me

Languages
English, Italian, Spanish
Key Expertise
Global health, mental health, dementia

About me

I am an MPhil/PhD candidate in Health Policy and Health Economics. My PhD focuses on factors influencing people with dementia’s adherence to treatments and medication preferences. My aim is to understand decision-making mechanisms related to anti-dementia medication initiation, treatment choices, and access to care. Factors such as cultural background, socioeconomic status, personal beliefs, and ethnicity will be explored in-depth and will help assessing treatment uptake patterns among different populations in the UK.

Alongside my PhD, I will keep collaborating with colleagues at the Care Policy Evaluation Centre (CPEC) at the LSE where I am appointed as Research Assistant. I will be involved in several projects around stigma and dementia in the UK, paid live-in carers, and differences in access to healthcare services across different populations in the UK. In the past, I have contributed to the World Alzheimer Report 2024 with Prof. Evans-Lacko by running a global survey on stigma and dementia, conducting statistical descriptive analysis, and summarising the main findings. Additionally, I co-authored articles submitted to peer reviewed journals (currently under review) on sex and gender differences in dementia care quality and on the benefits of increased physical activity as a preventative measure for dementia.

I hold a BSc with Honours degree in Anthropology from Brunel University London and an MSc degree in Global Health Policy from the LSE.

 

Dissertation title:

Differences in how dementia is understood and in attitudes to treatment and care: implications for equity of access to effective health and social care support.

 

Dissertation supervisors:

Prof. Martin Knapp and Dr. Magdalena Walbaum

 

CV:

Please view from here.

Expertise Details

Qualitative research; evidence synthesis; literature review; survey design; statistical descriptive analysis; anti-dementia medications; dementia prevention and risk factors; sex and gender differences in dementia