7. Public Health

Three people wearing face masks talking around a table

Research Summary

Public health is often defined as the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health and wellbeing through the organised efforts of society. It encapsulates three distinct domains:
  • Health improvement, which means promoting healthy lifestyles, healthy contexts and healthy environments, as well as tackling inequalities.
  • Health protection, which means prevention, preparedness for, screening and response to infectious diseases and other threats to health.
  • Health service improvement, which involves providing public health expertise to inform the effective and efficient planning and delivery of healthcare. Public health feeds into every aspect of health and health care; our unique selling point is that we take a population view.
Public health is one of two new cross-cutting themes that began in early 2020.

Objectives

Our aim as a cross-cutting theme is to weave our work in with all the other ARC WM themes. We are actively looking for collaboration with other themes and other researchers, and are particularly looking forward to working on the nationwide ARC cross-cutting themes on Inequalities, Population Health, Behavioural Science and Prevention.

Theme Lead

  • Associate Clinical Professor Dan Todkill d.todkill@warwick.ac.uk University of Warwick
  • Professor Kate Jolly c.b.jolly@bham.ac.uk University of Birmingham
  • Updates

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