The University of Worcester has received a significant award from the National Institute for Health and Social Care Research (NIHR) to expand our mental health research capacity and develop a programme of research into rural mental health inequality.
Led by the University of Worcester, the programme will be delivered in collaboration with colleagues at the Institute for Mental Health, University of Birmingham. The programme will also involve close partnership working with colleagues drawn from across our Herefordshire and Worcestershire Integrated Care Board, including Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust, Primary Care, Public Health colleagues, and VCSE partners.
We are looking to recruit a new team of researchers to lead and deliver this exciting research programme as follows:
Professor of Mental Health InequalityAssociate Professor of Suicide PreventionResearch Fellow in Mental HealthProgramme of Research
THRIVE: The Tackling Health inequalities and unmet Rural mental health needs in VulnErable communities across Herefordshire and Worcestershire Programme
Mental illness in rural areas can go unnoticed due to social isolation, stigma, and barriers to accessing services. There is an urgent need for more research on rural mental health to better understand and address these issues. The THRIVE programme will bring together researchers, health and social care professionals, and people with lived experience of mental illness to develop and deliver high quality research focused around three thematic areas:
Early Intervention and PreventionSuicide PreventionDigital SupportThe THRIVE programme will be supported by a new Rural Mental Health Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement Network and supports our long-term commitment to improving mental health in rural communities and enhancing our regional research culture.
Overview of the post
The Associate Professor of Suicide Prevention will lead the suicide prevention research theme within this new programme of rural mental health inequality research. They will provide support more broadly across the programme, working closely with researchers drawn from the University of Worcester. They will work in close collaboration with the Institute for Mental Health, University of Birmingham, and the Midlands Translational Centre of the Mental Health Mission, and connect with other regional NIHR infrastructure. They will build capacity through the supervision of doctoral students and support for Early Career Researchers. They will develop new bids for funded research and provide support for the delivery of mental health research across the region, working in partnership with regional stakeholders, including NHS partners. They will support the submission of a bid for a NIHR Mental Health Research Group award, in collaboration with the University of Birmingham.
The postholder will join a new Rural Mental Health Research Unit which sits within the Department of Psychology & Mental Health in the School of Health & Wellbeing, part of the College of Health and Science. The School is focused on impactful research which makes a difference to residents, patients and carers, health and social care professionals, and the VCSE sector, particularly across the region of Herefordshire and Worcestershire, but which also informs decision-makers and policy-makers in the wider, national health and social care ecosystem.
The postholder will engage with other impactful research clusters in the School, including:
Association for Dementia Studies: whose research seeks to build evidence-based practice in a range of contexts (communities, assisted living, care homes, hospitals) to support people living with dementia and their families and carers to live well.Health Inequalities and Social Inclusion Research Group: whose research is focused on understanding the causes of inequalities in health outcomes and in access to health and care services of marginalised groups, so as to inform policy and practice.Living Well with Long-Term Conditions Research Group: whose research seeks to understand the impact of a range of long-term conditions (cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, renal/urology, endocrine/diabetes, neurological/psychiatric and musculoskeletal/trauma) on wellbeing, so as to inform ongoing management of these conditions by both patient and health professional.Mood Disorders research: whose research is focused on understanding genetic and other factors that may contribute to the causes of bipolar disorder and other related affective and psychotic illnesses, so as to inform prevention and treatment of these disorders.The postholder will be expected to work from an approach of interdisciplinarity and to collaborate with researchers in the College’s other constituent Schools: Nursing & Midwifery, Sport & Exercise Science, Science & the Environment, and the Three Counties Medical School.
They will be supported in their role by the University’s central Research, Innovation and Impact Office which oversees the University approval processes for grant applications and ethics, delivers impact development and acceleration programmes and provides advice, guidance, and training on intellectual property protection and exploitation.
For more details or an informal conversation about this opportunity, please contact: Professor Eleanor Bradley, Principal Investigator, e.bradley@worc.ac.uk.
Closing Date: 30 Apr 2025
Sub Department: Research
Salary: £56,021 to £64,914