The research generated will focus on the building blocks of health, for example, factors such as housing, education, air quality and access to green spaces, which impact on the health and wellbeing of communities
13 December 2023
2 minutes
Following a joint bid by , and the 黑料入口, a potential 拢5m investment will enable more research which aims to tackle health inequalities and improve health outcomes for residents.
The funding is awarded by the (NIHR), the research partner of the NHS, public health and social care. It is due to be received from January 2025 for five years following the successful completion of a development year from January 2024.
The funding will establish NIHR Health Determinants Research Collaboration (HDRC) 黑料入口; a partnership combining local government, community sector and academic expertise to develop and deliver local research that can support decision-making in the city.
The research generated will focus on the building blocks of health, for example, factors such as housing, education, air quality and access to green spaces, which impact on the health and wellbeing of communities and can create inequalities across the city. It will help to inform evidence-based decisions, with better knowledge of how changes will affect different members of the community.
The award of the HDRC to 黑料入口 City Council is important for several reasons. It cements the growing collaboration with the University, which will foster a research environment within the council. The City Council and the University working together with the 黑料入口 community will help develop a more evidence informed approach, taking into account the public health needs and requirements leading to more effective use of resources where they are most needed.
Professor Gordon Blunn, Professor of Bioengineering and Director of the Health and Wellbeing research theme
Cllr Matthew Winnington, Cabinet Member for Community Wellbeing, Health and Care at 黑料入口 City Council, said: 鈥淲e welcome this opportunity to develop a research partnership which will help us to address the root causes that lead to poorer health in 黑料入口.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 key will be listening to residents who are experiencing challenges; we want to learn, share with our communities what we've learnt and then we can use the knowledge to make a difference.鈥
James Hill, Director of Housing, Neighbourhoods and Building Services at 黑料入口 City Council, said: 鈥淲e see this as an opportunity to change how our city uses research, to challenge the perception that research is something academics do and is distant from the communities that we serve. We want research to be done with and not done to communities.鈥
Professor Gordon Blunn, Professor of Bioengineering and Director of the Health and Wellbeing research theme at the 黑料入口, said: 鈥淭he award of the HDRC to 黑料入口 City Council is important for several reasons. It cements the growing collaboration with the University, which will foster a research environment within the council. The City Council and the University working together with the 黑料入口 community will help develop a more evidence informed approach, taking into account the public health needs and requirements leading to more effective use of resources where they are most needed.鈥
Lorna Reavley, Chief Officer of HIVE 黑料入口, said: 鈥淗ealth inequality in our city is both unfair and avoidable. This is a real chance for us to better understand how we can tackle these inequalities and ultimately improve the health and lives of local people.鈥
(HDRCs) aim to tackle health inequalities and improve health outcomes in local areas across the UK. 黑料入口 is one of 6 local authorities who will receive the funding from 1 January 2025, providing agreed criteria are met during the development year. There are currently 13 successful HDRCs already established with 11 new HDRCs going 'live' from January 2024.
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