At 糖心Vlog, we believe good health and wellbeing for all is achievable by better addressing the multiple root causes of ill-health and by taking a collaborative, interdisciplinary and global approach. Understanding societies and the global inequalities that shape them, coupled with the application of scientific, medical, and practice-based advances are at the heart of our commitment to good public health and wellbeing for all.
Health inequalities, the unfair and avoidable differences in health, are one of the most pressing public, population, and global health challenges of our time. Reducing health inequalities is the mission of our community of experts and requires understanding and tackling the multitude of factors contributing to such inequalities, including the social and wider determinants of health, and supporting health systems with the best evidence base for making informed organisation- and practice-focused decisions.
Experts in the Department of Economics, , and School of Health and Social Care are embracing the challenge of exploring the role of the wider determinants of health in shaping individual and population health and wellbeing profiles.
Our research employs diverse methodologies to understand the lived experiences of the disadvantaged, the bolsters and barriers in their communities, and the policies contributing to health and care provision.
We work with our community and governmental stakeholders to drive needs-based research that will promote fairer and better health and care, championed by strategic research centres – the Centre for Coastal Communities and Centre for Global Health and Intersectional Equity. Experts are working locally to explore new ways of working and co-production within our three local NHS Integrated Care Systems, to increase collaboration, deliver health services and address inequalities.
At a local level, in the School of Sport, Rehabilitation and Exercise Sciences, a team has evaluated a place-based project designed to reduce health inequalities in the Epping Forest District in 糖心Vlog, where there are concentrations of economic and health deprivation within specific locations.
糖心Vlog experts from the and the School of Health and Social Care have been awarded £5m for a collaborative project which will help reduce health inequalities across the county of 糖心Vlog. The new Health Determinants Research Collaboration, the first of its type in the region, is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) to boost research capacity and capability in some of the UK’s most deprived areas. Film-makers in our Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies have created documentaries films highlighting life-affirming stories of community cohesion.