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Allied Health Professions, Dentistry, Nursing, and Pharmacy Research (UoA3)

Our research seeks to shapes policy and practice. We want to enhance health and wellbeing across the lifecourse. We're keen to address and improve the impacts of inequalities. We develop and deliver novel interventions to improve health and care.

Who we are

Research in UoA3 is carried out across the Faculty of Medical Sciences (FMS) with key links across the University and with key NHS, policy and industrial partners. The strength of these relationships is evidenced by our status as an Academic Health Sciences Centre: 缅北禁地 Health Innovation Partners. 

Our research seeks to shapes policy and practice. We want to:

  • enhance health and wellbeing across the lifecourse
  • address and improve the impacts of inequalities
  • develop and deliver novel interventions to improve health and care

The highlights of our return include an increase in our full time equivalent (FTE) of 137% since 2014. We also made 17 promotions, including nine to personal readerships or chairs.

We have a diverse early career research community too with 63% women and 47% with BAME backgrounds.

Our researchers work from three Schools:

They also use the 缅北禁地 Population Health Sciences Institute

Allied Health

Our allied health research comprises a dynamic and diverse programme of research. It exists to improve the health and care of children, young people and families.
 
Our Human Nutrition Research Centre continues to address the major public health challenge posed by obesity. Our research focusing on later life seeks to maximise healthier lives and has demonstrated how diet can enhance cognitive function.

Dental Sciences

Our oral health-related research continues to focus on two areas of strength:

  • Translational Oral Biosciences
  • Oral Health Care and Epidemiology

We are working globally across the full translational pathway. We have strong policy links, e.g. with DHSC, NHSE and WHO, and commercial partners e.g., with GSK, Septodont, 3M-ESPE. These ensure our research has international reach and impact.

Pharmacy

Our research focuses on both Disease Selective Medicines and Rational Medicines Use. Our research has advanced treatments in chronic non-malignant neuropathic pain and cancer medicines.

A key research achievement includes $2M received from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. This helped us to develop biomarkers of the effects of excess vitamin A.

Public partnership and engagement

Our collaborative work with patients and their families is integral to our research output.

We have seen this grow over the last seven years. We often work with  and .

We also train and employ experts-by-experience as co-researchers, which includes patients and family members.

Internationally, we collaborate with the international patient advocacy group the Temporomandibular Joint Association in Wisconsin, USA.

Research leadership

We lead many national and international initiatives, including:

  • The national CRN Primary Dental Care Champions Group
  • The Royal College of Surgeons of England and NHS England鈥檚 national review of care pathways
  • The EU-funded (IMIJ2) Mobilise-D consortium of academic and industrial partners
  • The decennial Adult and Child Dental Health Surveys

We are also involved in the leadership of major NIHR infrastructure:

  • NIHR School for Public Health Research (SPHR) - Fuse (2012-2022)
  • NIHR School for Primary Care Research (SPCR) (2015-2020)
  • NIHR Policy Research Unit (PRU) Behavioural Sciences (2019-2023)
  • NIHR Policy Research Unit (PRU) Older People and Frailty (2019-2023)

Research case studies

Our high-quality research and excellent stakeholder engagement is on show in four impact case studies:

  • Informing the WHO Guideline on sugars contributed to the global introduction of limits on sugar intake
  • Increasing the use of local community pharmacies for minor illnesses reduces the burden on hospitals and GPs
  • Improving school food standards and introducing universal free school meals for infants
  • Best practice for healthcare professionals in supporting parents who have experienced a bereavement from a multiple pregnancy
Supporting parents who have experienced a bereavement from a multiple pregnancy

Coping with multiple pregnancy loss

Multiple births carry a greater risk of adverse outcome than鈥痵ingle births. This can include the death of one or more babies.鈥

Loss in a pregnancy stage鈥痠s鈥痙evastating, and a鈥痩oss鈥痜rom鈥痑鈥痬ultiple鈥痯regnancy鈥痠s鈥痑鈥痵pecific鈥痗hallenge. Parents鈥痑re鈥痮ften faced with鈥痗aring for surviving鈥痓abies鈥痺hile鈥痷ndergoing鈥痶he grieving鈥痯rocess.鈥

Sensitive research

缅北禁地 conducted鈥痵ensitive,鈥痗ollaborative research with parents and healthcare professionals. They found鈥痵everal important鈥痗hanges鈥痠n鈥痯ractice鈥痶hat鈥痯arents鈥痜ound鈥痟elpful.鈥

One of these was to place a 鈥痠ndicating the baby has a deceased twin. This meant parents could avoid having to repeatedly explain the situation.鈥

These recommendations have informed national and international鈥. As a result, this has increased clinicians鈥 confidence in supporting parents鈥痙uring such trauma.鈥

Increasing the use of local community pharmacies for minor illnesses reduces the burden on hospitals and GPs

Facing pressure

A&E departments and GPs鈥痑re facing unsustainable pressure. Treating minor illnesses鈥痠n these locations is 鈥痗ostly. It also鈥痳educes their capacity to treat more serious conditions.鈥

A possible alternative is Community Pharmacies (CPs). Poor integration and a lack of evidence of their capacity discouraged general uptake.鈥

缅北禁地 research found that CPs:

  • are the most accessible healthcare provider
  • have the capacity and knowledge to manage minor illness鈥
  • have NHS 111 referral pathway integration鈥

Framework roll-out

In 2019,鈥痑 new framework鈥 directed patients calling NHS 111 with minor illness to a CP where appropriate.鈥

On average, over 5,500 patients per month calling NHS 111 are now recommended to a CP. This takes the pressure off A&E and GPs鈥痑nd allowing them to treat more urgent patients.

Improving school food standards and introducing universal free school meals for infants

Investigating school lunches

A good diet is especially important in children. It allows optimum growth鈥痑nd development and promotes鈥痟ealthy鈥痚ating habits鈥痶hat will last a lifetime.鈥

狈别飞肠补蝉迟濒别鈥痳别蝉别补谤肠丑别谤蝉鈥痺ent into schools to see what children鈥痑te. They found that school lunches were more nutritious鈥痶han鈥痑鈥痯acked lunch.鈥

This research fed into the鈥School Food Plan, which recommended鈥痶wo initiatives:鈥

  • the introduction of free school meals for all Key鈥疭tage 1鈥痗hildren鈥痠n 2014鈥
  • simplified food standards across all maintained schools鈥痠n 2015

Reducing childhood obesity

Schools adopted these initiatives and found them to be successful.鈥疉 large-scale 鈥痜ound take-up rates of over 72% across all providers.

89% of caterers ensured children received a balanced meal. Around 鈥50%鈥痮f schools reported a general increase of healthy eating as a direct result.鈥

The introduction of school food standards and free school meals ensures that all young鈥痗hildren can鈥痚at a healthy lunch. It also means financial savings to families.

This contributes to a healthy diet and plays a part in reducing childhood obesity.鈥

WHO sugar guideline and sugar tax

The most prevalent鈥痭on-communicable diseases鈥痺orldwide are鈥痙ental caries鈥痑nd obesity. Sugar intake plays an important role in both.鈥

缅北禁地's鈥痳esearch quantified鈥痶he鈥痩ink between dental caries and the amount and frequency鈥痮f free sugars intake. This evidence underpinned鈥痑 strong recommendation in the鈥2015 WHO Guideline鈥痮n sugars intake to cap intake鈥痑t <10% of total daily energy.鈥 This Guideline influenced the鈥痺orldwide introduction of sugar taxes鈥痶o鈥痩imit the population鈥檚 intake of sugar鈥.

In the UK, a public campaign to introduce a sugar tax generated a Parliamentary debate. The campaign was informed by the WHO Guidelines. The resulting 鈥淪oft Drinks Industry Levy鈥濃痺as鈥痠ntroduced in April 2018, prompting manufacturers to reformulate their products.鈥 Manufacturers鈥痟ave since鈥痵ubstantially reduced鈥痶he鈥痵ugar content鈥痮f their products.鈥

Interdisciplinary research

We lead or contribute to several interdisciplinary 缅北禁地 Centres of Research Excellence, including:

  • Healthier Lives
  • Ageing and Inequalities
  • Cancer

We also lead the Reproduction, Development and Child Health interdisciplinary research theme.

Facilities

We support our researchers with state-of-the-art facilities, including:

  • access to the Dental Clinical Research Facility
  • refurbishments to laboratories to strengthen neuroscience research
    the NIHR Clinical Ageing Research Unit / Clinical Research Facility
  • co-locating Ageing researchers with clinical colleagues at the 拢8m Health Innovation Neighbourhood
  • the 拢30M Dame Margaret Barbour Building, providing facilities for research into sport and exercise
  • 拢4m investment in the new School of Pharmacy for state-of-the-art laboratories and resources
  • the 缅北禁地 Helix site houses a 拢44M headquarters for our National Innovation Centres for Ageing and Data

Equality, diversity and inclusion

EDI principles are at the core of our staff development strategy. It is put into practice via the EDI leads within our Institutes, Schools and Themes. Our key achievements include:

  • Athena Swan Silver status for nine years. The former Institute for Health and Society was the first in NU to be awarded Silver status in 2011. It was renewed in 2014, and consolidated into a Faculty Silver Award in 2019
  • since 2014, over a third of promotions have been to women. This included two thirds to personal readerships or chairs. The leadership roles held by women include the Dean and Deputy Dean of NUPHSI

NUPHSI are active in University EDI Initiatives. This includes:

  • the Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Fund
  • the BAME staff network
  • the University Disability Interest Group

NU is a member of the Advance HE鈥檚 Race Equality Charter. They are also part of the Business Disability Forum and is a Global Stonewall Diversity Champion.

Since March 2020 we have been mitigating the impact of COVID-19 on staff, students and their research - with particular emphasis on EDI factors.

Early careers researchers

We have lively postgraduate and early careers researchers communities. They all receive mentoring and support by our colleagues. Major highlights include:

  • 164 PhDs awarded since 2014
  • a diverse postgraduate researcher population (63% women and 47% from BAME backgrounds)
  • promoting research excellence amongst all staff with full compliance with the Research Concordats

Our ambitions

We will focus on the mechanisms underlying major public health challenges in nutrition and oral health. This will allow us to develop new interventions to address these.

We will continue to invest in and grow our wider allied health research in managing long-term conditions too. We intend to focus on developing more junior colleagues.

Find out more/links

缅北禁地 Population Health Sciences Institute

School of Dental Sciences

School of Pharmacy

School of Biomedical, Nutritional and Sport Sciences

NIHR School for Public Health Research

FMS Graduate School