The conference will be in Glasgow, UK, on Nov 25, 2022. You can book your place at the conference through the HG3 booking website here.

A national conference dedicated to new research and cross-sector collaboration in Public Health in the UK and Ireland with the support of the Society for Social Medicine and Population Health
The conference will be in Glasgow, UK, on Nov 25, 2022. You can book your place at the conference through the HG3 booking website here.

Maternal and child health
Unmet vaccination need amongst under-fives attending the Paediatric Emergency Department: a cross-sectional observational study in a large district general hospital – Louise Brennan
Midwives’ survey of their weight management practice before and after the GLOWING guideline implementation intervention: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) – Nicola Heslehurst
Newspaper media framing of maternal obesity in the UK: a review and framework synthesis – Nicola Heslehurst
Parental health in the context of public family care proceedings: a scoping review of evidence and interventions – Claire Grant
Preconception health and care policies and guidelines in the UK and Ireland: A scoping review – Emma Hope Cassinelli
Do first-time parents of one- to two-year-olds in the UK use portion size guidance? A qualitative study exploring portioning practices and awareness of portion size guidance – Alice Porter
Communicable diseases and vaccination
Impact of universal Tuberculosis (TB) vaccination cessation on the epidemiology of paediatric TB cases in Ireland, 2011-2021 – Sarah Jackson
Divergence in pace of decline in TB rates among migrants versus non-migrants in Ireland, 2011-2020 – Sarah Jackson
Implementing Behavioural Science informed letter interventions to increase COVID-19 vaccination uptake in uncontactable London residents. A difference-in-difference study in London, United Kingdom – Sarah Huf
Cervical Cancer Risk Factors Burden in West African Countries, Lesson from Analysis of the Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) – Nike Olajide
Bayesian reconstruction of household transmissions to infer the serial interval of Covid- 19 by variants of concern: analysis from a prospective community cohort study (Virus Watch) – Cyril Geismar
COVID
Mental health of the nursing and midwifery workforce in Wales during the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-sectional analysis – Benjamin Gray
Experience of homelessness during the COVID-19 pandemic in Tower Hamlets – a health needs assessment – Sam Tweed
The prevalence of stigma in a UK community survey of people with lived experience of Long Covid – Marija Pantelic
Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on incidence of long-term conditions in Welsh residents: a population linkage study – Timothy Osborne
Changes in engagement of those aged 14-25 within a digital mental health service during COVID-19: Cohort study on service usage data in the United Kingdom 2019- 2021 – Aynsley Bernard
How were the arts utilised by women with historic experiences of abuse during the COVID-19 pandemic? A qualitative interview study – Alison McKinlay
Health inequalities in childhood
Measuring disadvantage in the early years in the UK: a systematic scoping review – Amanda Clery
Longitudinal analysis of cognitive development across childhood and adolescence: Evidence from the UK Millennium Cohort Study – Michelle Black
Spatial analysis of the association between area deprivation and neonatal outcomes in an ethnically diverse maternal cohort: a retrospective cross sectional study – Shuby Puthussery
Quantifying the contribution of poverty and family adversity to adverse child outcomes in the UK: evidence from the UK Millennium Cohort Study – Nicholas Kofi Adjei
How did living in temporary accommodation and the COVID-19 pandemic impact under 5s’ healthcare access and health outcomes? A qualitative study of key professionals in a socially and ethnically diverse and deprived area of London – Diana Rosenthal
Health inequalities and marginalised populations
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on people experiencing homelessness (PEH): a qualitative interview study with PEH and service providers in the UK – Jo Dawes
Use of intersectionality theories in interventional health research in high-income countries: a scoping review – Anthony Laverty
Lessons for a democratic rejuvenation to tackle the socio-economic drivers of health inequalities: protocol for scoping review of participatory and deliberative processes in the UK related to income insecurity – Anna Baillie
Physical activity interventions to improve the health and wellbeing of people experiencing homelessness: a systematic review – Jo Dawes
How did Voluntary Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) organisations in Northern England respond to the COVID-19 pandemic to address the needs of marginalised communities?: a qualitative focus group study – Sarah Sowden
Triple inequality in common mental health disorders: A new framework and cross- sectional survey analysis across 113 countries – Christoph Henking
Adolescent health
The longitudinal impact of social media use on adolescent mental health in the UK: Findings from the UK Longitudinal Household Study – Ruth Plackett
Youth’s views on user-generated content and influencer marketing of e-cigarettes on social media: focus groups – Marissa Smith
Perspectives of Education and Mental Health Professionals on Adolescent School- Based Mental Health Promotion: A Qualitative Exploration – Simon Alejandro Serka Jiliberto
The Peer Education Project to improve mental health literacy in secondary school students in England: a qualitative realist evaluation – Esther Curtin
Social norms about dating and relationship violence and gender among adolescents: systematic review of survey measures used in dating and relationship violence research – Rebecca Meiksin
To what extent does time spent on social media influence adolescent use of cigarettes and e-cigarettes: a longitudinal analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study – Amrit Kaur Purba
Substance use
Prenatal alcohol prevention in the UK: Mapping the landscape through systematic collaborative review – Cheryl McQuire
The distribution of alcohol consumption and heavy episodic drinking across British drinking occasions in 2019: A cross-sectional latent class analysis of event-level drinking diary data – John Holmes
Implementation of the NHS-funded tobacco dependence services in England: a qualitative study to understand the contexts of implementation – Kerry Brennan-Tovey
Risk factors for adolescent smoking uptake – analysis of prospective data from the Millennium Cohort Study – Charlotte Vrinten
A systematic review of smoking cessation interventions for smokers diagnosed with cancer – Kate Frazer
Food access and insecurity
Changes in online food access during the COVID-19 pandemic and associations with deprivation: a longitudinal analysis – Matthew Keeble
UK news media portrayal of mothers living in food insecurity since the 2008 global financial crisis: a mixed methods news media analysis – Ilse Wigman
The UK’s COVID-19 Free School Meals Policy: was it evidence-based? A thematic content analysis of policy documents and debates – Jennie Parnham
Family’s experiences of their children’s nutritional health and wellbeing amongst food insecure households in Europe: a qualitative systematic review and meta-ethnography – Zoe Bell
Food insecurity among pregnant women living in high-income countries: a systematic review – Gemma Andreae
Food systems, diet, and physical activity
Ultra-processed food consumption, cancer risk and cancer mortality: a prospective cohort study of the UK Biobank – Kiara Chang
Exploring the Association between Obesity and Problems with Peer Relationships in Children: a Nationally Representative Cross-sectional Study – Claire Beynon
The association between family structure and adolescent physical activity levels: A systematic review of literature – Maartje Kletter
Exploring relationships between exposure to fast food outlets and childhood obesity at differing spatial resolutions: results from the Born in Bradford cohort study – Kimon Krenz
Changes in diet and physical activity following a complex pilot intervention to tackle childhood obesity in a deprived inner-London community: an observational cohort study – Charanpreet Bijlani
Physical activity and risk of depression: does the type and number of activities matter? Findings from the UK Biobank Prospective Cohort Study – Carlos Celis-Morales
Public health policy
Investigating the implementation of mobile messaging in population screening programmes: A modified Delphi study – Amish Acharya
What do public health professionals think their role is in tackling the climate and ecological emergency? A qualitative study – Anya Gopfert
Impacts of Low Emission and Congestion Charging Zones on physical health outcomes: a systematic review – Rosemary Chamberlain
Impact of the temporary suspension of the Bowel Screening Wales programme on inequalities during the COVID-19 pandemic: A retrospective register-based study – Diana Bright
Natural experimental study of no car zones implemented outside schools: potential and lessons learnt – Jenna Panter
Intervention development and evaluation
Evaluation of the real-world implementation of the Family Nurse Partnership in England: an observational cohort study using linked data from health, education and children’s social care – Katie Harron
A novel approach to the implementation of Making Every Contact Count (MECC) – Sandra Hicken
Evaluation of community outreach feasibility programme on improving cancer related preventive health behaviour – Patricia Fitzpatrick
Challenges and lessons learned from two countries using linked administrative data to evaluate the Family Nurse Partnership – Katie Harron
Implementation of Adaptation to Climate Change in Public Health following Covid-19 in Europe: Qualitative Thematic Analysis – Grace Turner
Charedi Women’s Health Event: A partnership approach to supporting the health and wellbeing of the Charedi (Orthodox Jewish) community in London – Ana Zuriaga & Liam Flannigan
Non-communicable diseases
The influence of neighbourhood level socioeconomic deprivation on developing Type II Diabetes in older age men: a longitudinal analysis of British Regional Heart Study cohort data – Kathryn Bush
Association between individual-level socioeconomic position and incident dementia using UK Biobank data: a prospective study – Ka Yan Lai
Which combinations of health behaviours are associated with highest risk: an exploration of UK Biobank population cohort – Hamish Foster
Associations between a weighted health behaviour score, socioeconomic status, and all-cause mortality in UK Biobank cohort – Hamish Foster
Using agent-based models to address non-communicable diseases: a review of models and their application to policy – Ricardo Luigi Colasanti
Built environment and community health
Associations between residential greenspace exposure and premature mortality: data- linkage study of 4,645,581 adults in London, UK – Samantha Hajna
The impact of indoor soundscape on sexual well-being: a thematic analysis of remote workers’ experiences during the COVID-19 lockdown in London – Francesco Aletta
An explorative study to investigate the qualifications and training needs of social prescribing link workers – Llinos Haf Spencer
Social return on investment of face-to-face versus online lifestyle coaching to improve mental wellbeing – Abraham Makanjuola
Are there socioeconomic differences in adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Recommendations in the UK Biobank prospective cohort study? – Fiona Malcomson & Solange Parra-Soto
Date: Thursday 24 November 2022
Time: 3-6pm
Location: Kibble Suite, Grosvenor Hotel, Glasgow
The UK Public Health Science conference Early Career Researcher (ECR) event provides a platform for Early Career Researchers to connect and exchange knowledge and expertise. This year’s event will feature inspiring talks on the continued importance of public health in our communities, including its successes and challenges, with examples from Scotland.
The ECR event will take place on Thursday 24 November 2022 from 3-6pm at the conference venue (Grosvenor Hotel, Glasgow) and is open to registered conference delegates self-identifying as Early Career Researchers at no additional cost.
Book your place at the conference and the ECR event through the Hg3 booking site here.
Provisional outline for the event (speaker order and titles may change)
| 15:00 | Welcome and housekeeping |
| 15:05 | Welcome address |
| 15:15 | Talk 1 – Dr David Walsh, Public Health Programme Manager, University of Glasgow Understanding the political dimensions of health inequalities – examples from Scotland |
| 15:45 | Talk 2 – Mike Burns, Assistant Chief Officer at Glasgow City Health and Social Care Partnership Inequalities in child welfare: putting research into practice in Glasgow |
| 16:15 | Comfort break |
| 16:30 | Talk 3 Dr Janet Greenlees, Reader in History, Glasgow Caledonian University Addressing maternal health inequalities – a history of strategies from Glasgow |
| 17:00 | Talk 4 Dr Phil Mackie, Public Health Consultant, NHS GrampianSustainability in research for ECRs |
| 17:30 | Closing |
| 17:35-18:00 | Themed networking session* |
* The 8 themed groups for the networking session will be:
Learn more about our speakers:
Mike Burns
Mike is currently the Assistant Chief Officer for Children’s services in Glasgow Health and Social Care Partnership. A career spanning 36 years in social work and 16 years in integrated services. He has worked in 6 Local Authorities in Scotland and as a Team Leader in Child Protection in Melbourne Australia. His current post spans across over 2,200 staff and a budget of circa £166M. Mike is also the lead for North East Glasgow on the Community Planning Partnership.
He has been a professional representative on the Scottish Governments National Implementation on getting it right for every child (GIRFEC), the Practice Development Panel for GIRFEC, the Children’s Improvement Partnership, the Realigning Children Services Board, Taskforce on Early Years and Early Intervention, the Child Protection Reform Programme, and the Raising Attainment Group. He previously provided advice when Convenor to the Brock review in relation to Child Protection.
Mike has been a member of Social Work Scotland for over 16 years. He was previously the Convenor for the Children and Families Committee from 2013 to 2016 and Vice Convenor from 2016 to 2018. He is currently the Vice convenor of Social Work Scotland.
The venue and catering for the ECR event have been funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD) UK

The Public Health Science: A National Conference Dedicated to New Research in UK Public Health, will be held in Glasgow, UK, on Nov 25, 2022, and we are delighted to invite abstract submissions. This year marks a decade since the inaugural conference, which celebrated the talent and creativity of the public health research community in the UK and Ireland. This vision remains at the heart of the conference, which provides a platform to highlight excellence in public health science and enable discussion of important public health issues; the latest public health perspectives and science; and their implications for public health practice, policy, health services, and research.
COVID-19 has brought new challenges for those working in public health to design, deliver, commission, or evaluate public health services. The impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have amplified many of the inequalities that are pervasive in our communities. However, in the pandemic’s long shadow, the public health community can re-lay the foundations for a fairer society that focuses not only on health outcomes, but also on wellbeing, equity, inclusiveness, and sustainability.
In this tenth anniversary year of the public health conference, we intend to provide a focus on the achievements, strengths, and exceptional talent of public health science over the past 10 years in the UK and Ireland. We therefore welcome submissions from all disciplines that affect public health, and we particularly seek interdisciplinary abstracts that look forward at how best to rebuild and strengthen our public health systems to improve health and wellbeing and reduce health inequalities after COVID-19 in an evidence-based way, whether such evidence is drawn directly from pandemic learning or from broader contexts. We welcome perspectives from those working across all sectors and disciplines, including but not limited to the UK National Health Service, local authorities and commissioned services, charities and advocacy organisations, universities, and government bodies.
The conference will consist of oral paper presen- tations, chaired poster sessions, and keynote speeches. Submissions are now open for oral and poster presentations. Abstracts can be submitted under any of the three core themes: creativity in public health science; new methodological approaches to public health science; or impact and implementation of public health science in policy and practice. Research described in the abstracts can have been undertaken anywhere in the world, but must be relevant to public health science, practice, and policy in the UK and Ireland. We encourage submissions from individuals in the early stages of their careers.
Abstracts should be a maximum of 300 words, be written in English, and contain no references, tables, or figures. Submissions should include the following sections: background (including context and aim); methods; findings; and interpretation. Please also include a non-declaratory title (including a study descriptor—eg, retrospective cohort study, randomised controlled trial); names, titles, highest degrees, and affiliations of authors; postal and email address for the corresponding author; any funding received (please also state if none); and a brief summary of each author’s contributions and competing interests. Abstract guidelines are available on The Lancet’s website. Any abstracts that are not correctly formatted will be rejected without peer review. Reports of randomised controlled trials should follow the CONSORT extension for abstracts guidance. Abstracts should not have been previously published elsewhere and must include some results (results of ongoing analyses are acceptable). The abstracts that are accepted after peer review will be published online by The Lancet.
Submit your abstract as a Microsoft Word document through The Lancet’s online submission system, stating in your covering letter that the submission is for the UK Public Health Science Conference 2022. All abstracts will be considered for oral and poster presentations. The deadline for abstract submission is May 16, 2022. After The Lancet’s peer review process, successful applicants will be informed of acceptance of their abstract for oral or poster presentation by Sept 16, 2022.
In recognition of the contribution that early career researchers make to public health, we will again be awarding prizes for the best oral and poster presentations by early career researchers. These prizes are sponsored by the NIHR School for Public Health Research, a partnership of UK academic centres with excellence in public health. If you wish to be entered into this competition, please indicate in your covering letter whether you are a pre- PhD researcher (eg, MSc student, foundation year trainee, research assistant, public health trainee, or academic clinical fellow), PhD student, or postdoctoral trainee (eg, clinical lecturers, clinician scientist fellows, early career postdoctoral, or equivalent posts). In addition, the conference will be preceded by an early career researcher event and networking conference dinner on Nov 24, 2022.
In line with our commitment to work towards delivering a net-zero conference, details of the conference carbon reduction plans and carbon offsetting will be published on the website in due course.
We are delighted to announce that the 10th UK Public Health Science conference will take place in person at the Hilton in Glasgow on Friday 25 November 2022. Our Early Career Researcher event and pre-conference networking dinner will take place the day before the conference on Thursday 24 November 2022.
The Call for Abstracts for the conference will be launched mid-March via The Lancet, our website, our mailing list, and our Twitter feed. Abstracts are invited for oral and poster presentations. Abstracts should follow The Lancet guidelines for abstracts. The deadline for abstract submissions is May 16, 2022. Accepted abstracts will be published online in The Lancet.
Research described in the abstracts can be done anywhere in the world but must be relevant to public health science, policy, and practice in the UK and Ireland. We especially invite abstract submissions from those at the early stages of their career and from disciplines not traditionally associated with public health, such as engineering, built environment, energy and resources, planning, and natural sciences, insofar as the research relates to public health.
Registration
Registration for the conference will open in Summer 2022. Registration fees will be announced on our website and via our mailing list. Reduced fees are available for trainees and students.
Keep in touch
Visit our website to sign up to our mailing list or follow us on Twitter: @UKPHSci
We look forward to seeing you in November!
Public Health Science 2022 Organising Committee
Always wanted to know how to most effectively build your career in public health? Then join us for the Early Career Researcher pre-conference event to the UK Public Health Science conference 2021! This year’s ECR event focuses on career progression for ECRs. We’ll be sharing our top tips for a successful career both in and outside of academia.
Date: Thu 25 November
Venue: virtual meeting via Zoom
How to attend: This event is open to all registered delegates of the UK Public Health Science conference 2021. You can register for the conference via the HG3 booking website.
We look forward to seeing you there!
The UK Public Health Science ECR event organising committee.
Programme
13.00 Welcome and housekeeping
13.05 Welcome address by Professor Ashley Adamson
Director of NIHR School of Public Health Research
13.15 Experiences working in global health by Dr Julianne Williams
Technical Officer at World Health Organization
13.45 Learning from mistakes – how to successfully apply for grants as a postdoc by Dr Georgia Black
Principal Research Fellow at Department of Applied Health Research, UCL
14.15 Comfort break
14.30 The changing expectations of progressing from ECR to senior researcher and beyond by Professor Rob Aldridge
Professor of Public Health Data Science at the Institute of Health Informatics, UCL
15.00 Navigating career uncertainty like an entrepreneur by Dr Amina Aitsi-Selmi
Transformational Coach and Consultant and Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, Epidemiology and Public Health Department, University College London.
15.30 Closing
15.35 – 16.00 Themed network sessions in breakout rooms
The conference will be a virtual conference held on Friday 26 November, 2021. You can book your place at the conference through the HG3 booking website here.
* We gratefully acknowledge the NIHR School for Public Health Research for sponsoring prizes at the conference *
10:00 Welcome and introduction to the day
Charlotte Vrinten
10:05 Creativity and innovation in public health science
10:45 Comfort break
11.00 New methodological approaches to public health science
11.40 Lightning presentations session A
12.30 Lunch break
13.00 Implementing public health science in policy and practice
13.40 Lightning presentations session B
14.30 Keynote speech
Katherine Trebeck
15.00 Closing remarks and prize announcement
Audrey Ceschia, The Lancet Public Health

We are delighted to invite abstract submissions for Public Health Science: A National Conference Dedicated to New Research in UK Public Health, to be held as a virtual conference this year on 26 November, 2021. Now in its ninth year, this annual conference aims to showcase the diversity, quality, and impact of public health research in the UK and Ireland. The conference provides a platform for researchers, practitioners, and policy makers – including those early in their careers – to discuss important public health issues; the latest public health perspectives and science; and their implications for public health practice, policy, health services, and research.
One of the greatest challenges of our time is the climate crisis and its impacts on environments, livelihoods, health, and wellbeing. Climate change has been called the biggest threat to global health in the 21st century and especially affects the most vulnerable populations in society. The COVID-19 pandemic, and the social and health inequalities that it has laid bare, highlights converging climate and health crises.
Although submissions can be related to any area of public health, for this year’s conference we welcome interdisciplinary submissions from researchers, charities, local authorities, National Health Service workers, and policy makers at the intersection between environment, sustainability, and public health, including the COVID-19 pandemic.
The conference will consist of oral paper presentations, chaired poster sessions, and keynote speeches. Submissions are now open for oral and poster presentations. Abstracts can be submitted under any of the three core themes: a) creativity in public health science; b) new methodological approaches to public health science; or c) impact and implementation of public health science in policy and practice. Research described in the abstracts may have been undertaken anywhere in the world, but must be relevant to public health science, practice, and policy in the UK and Ireland. We particularly encourage submissions from individuals in the early stages of their careers. Contributions are also encouraged from disciplines not traditionally associated with health, such as engineering, built environment, energy and resources, planning, and natural sciences, where the research relates to public health.
In recognition of the contribution that early career researchers make to public health, we will again be awarding prizes for the best oral and poster presentations by early career researchers. These prizes are sponsored by The Lancet and the NIHR School for Public Health Research. If you wish to be entered into this competition, please indicate in your covering letter whether you are a pre-PhD researcher (eg, MSc student, foundation year trainee, research assistant, public health trainee, or academic clinical fellow), PhD student, or postdoctoral trainee (eg, clinical lecturers, clinician scientist fellows, or equivalent posts).
Abstracts should be a maximum of 300 words, be written in English, and contain no references, tables, or figures. Submissions should include the following sections: background (including context and aim); methods; findings; and interpretation. Please also include a non-declaratory title (including a study descriptor – eg, retrospective cohort study, RCT); names, titles, highest degrees, and affiliations of authors; postal and email address for the corresponding author; any funding received (please also state if none); and a brief summary of each author’s contributions and competing interests. Abstract guidelines are available on The Lancet’s website. Reports of randomised controlled trials should follow the CONSORT extension for abstracts guidance. Abstracts should not have been previously published elsewhere and must include some results (results of ongoing analyses are acceptable). Abstracts accepted after peer review will be published by The Lancet, online and in print.
Submit your abstract as a Microsoft Word document through The Lancet’s online submission system, stating in your covering letter that the submission is for the Public Health Science conference. All abstracts will be considered for oral and poster presentations. The deadline for abstract submission is 14 June 2021. After The Lancet’s peer review process, successful applicants will be informed of the acceptance of their abstract for oral or poster presentation by September 15, 2021.