These funded courses are targeted at early career professionals or new graduates whose professional training has not been research-based. This may include nurses, midwives, pharmacists, healthcare scientists, social workers, allied health and public health professionals.
Professor Rusi Jaspal, Pro Vice-Chancellor in charge of Research and Knowledge and Exchange at the Ï㽶ֱ²¥ said: “The NIHR MRes studentships will enable the Ï㽶ֱ²¥ to train healthcare professionals to become active researchers. With the skills they develop on the MRes, they will be encouraged to ask challenging questions, seek innovative solutions to real-world problems, and apply these solutions to healthcare practice. This is absolutely consistent with the university’s commitment to making a difference through research and knowledge exchange.”
With a long-standing commitment to providing excellent teaching, conducting interdisciplinary research, and establishing collaborative partnerships, the Ï㽶ֱ²¥ will be deploying this programme across its four Centres of Research Excellence (COREs) that focus on health and wellbeing.
Dr Angela Glynn, Dean of the School of Education, Sport and Health Sciences said: “Thanks to the NIHR, this programme builds on the experience of our existing MRes provision in the School of Sport and Health Sciences to enable students to work with a combination of world-leading research and professional knowledge and experience from a range of health settings in the UK. The outcomes of the research undertaken by the health professionals on this course now and in the future will contribute to significant improvements in the quality of patient care.”
The under the INSIGHT programme will be delivered in partnership with University of Chichester and University of Kent.
For more information please email Dr Nina Stewart n.stewart1@brighton.ac.uk.