Research - methodological and clinical innovation
We hold methodological strengths in data science, clinical trials, epidemiology, health economics, health services research, health psychology, psycho-oncology and medical statistics.
We hold strengths in the application of these methods to a number of clinical areas: Child Health, Chronic Disease (Neurology, Renal and Public Health), Primary Care, Rural Health, Urology, and Women's Health and in key research themes that run through these clinical areas such as Cancer and Global Health.
The challenge for the Institute is to continue to strengthen a research environment that encourages and supports individuals to flourish and to address important research questions through innovative methodologies and collaborations both across units. Part of this challenge lies in the organisation of research but part also lies in building a collective sense of belonging and ownership which includes clinical academics, PhD students and those in its smaller units.
At an Institute-level, our research strategy needs to be outward facing and to recognise multi-disciplinarity. Whilst continuing to recognise the many strengths of the individual research groups, at an Institute-level, we need to focus on how these strengths can be applied to address the big societal challenges.
- Use our research strengths to address the big societal challenges as defined by the University's 2040 strategy document - Health, Nutrition and Wellbeing; Social and Cultural Inclusion; Energy Transition; Data and AI and Environment and Biodiversity.
- Build towards cross-cutting programmes of excellence starting with the more established and externally recognised areas of strength such as health data science, health services research, health economics and health psychology. The aim will be to seek external programme recognition in the form of UKRI funded programmes in areas such as AI and Data Science for Health, Food Systems Approach for Healthy People and Healthy Planet; Tackling Multi-morbidity.
- Put structures and processes in place to continue to develop other key areas towards securing external programme funding such as multi-disciplinary cancer research from bench to bedside.
- Developing staff to become PhD supervisors, foster positive supervisory experiences and attract high calibre students. This will include better support for supervision, facilitating the involvement of clinical staff and establishing systems of shadowing (or 3rd supervisor) / mentoring for early career researchers.