Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
29 Sep, 25
Salary
52586.0
Posted On
10 Sep, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
Yes
Telecommute
Yes
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Good communication skills
Industry
Hospital/Health Care
ABOUT US
Our mission is to maximise and advocate for the holistic health of all children, young people and the adults they will become, through world-class research, education and public engagement. The UCL GOS ICH, together with its clinical partner Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, forms the largest concentration of children’s health research outside North America. The 2024-29 GOS ICH strategy focuses on its five scientific programmes. GOS ICH’s activities include active engagement with children and families, to ensure that our work is relevant and appropriate to their needs. GOS ICH generates the funding for our research by setting out our proposals in high quality applications to public, charitable and industrial funding bodies and disseminates the results of our research by publication in the medical and scientific literature, to clinicians, policy makers and the wider public. The Institute offers world-class education and training across a wide range of teaching and life learning programmes which address the needs of students and professional groups who are interested in and undertaking work relevant to child health. GOS ICH holds an Athena SWAN Charter Gold Award. Please only attach relevant documents to your application (qualifications, cover letters, supporting statements) and avoid attaching large files e.g. research papers, thesis, publications etc.
ABOUT YOU
We are seeking a post-doctoral research fellow with strong skills in evidence synthesis and a demonstrable interest in food policy and public health with: • A PhD (or near completion) in public health, food policy or evidence synthesis or a related field. Candidates without a PhD will be appointed at Grade 6B, with progression to Grade 7 upon final submission of their PhD thesis without corrections. • Experience of and interest in evidence synthesis • Experience of project management and of working with policy makers. • Excellent written and verbal communication skills, with experience in presenting complex findings to diverse audiences. • Ability to work both independently and collaboratively within a research team.
This role is part of a major NIHR-funded study evaluating the effects of voluntary supermarket policies restricting the use of price promotions to sell unhealthy foods. The findings will provide important evidence for UK policymakers working to create healthier food systems. Price promotions or special offers, like two-for-the-price-of-one or get 30% extra free, are commonly used to sell less healthy food. Their use is particularly common in the UK, and evidence shows they encourage consumers to purchase more of these unhealthy products, which are linked to obesity and other diet-related diseases. Voluntary or mandatory restrictions on the use of price promotions have been proposed to limit their use, and support the marketing and sale of healthier products, to improve people’s health. Two UK supermarkets introduced voluntary measures to stop the use of certain types of price promotions in 2016 and 2021. We have observed marked change in the use of price promotions when these policies were introduced, and there is a need to better understand their full and wider impacts. The proposed programme of work will evaluate, from a public health perspective, the impact of these two policies. The overall two-year project is led by Dr Oliver Mytton (PI) from GOS ICH, and includes partners at Universities of Cambridge, East Anglia, Exeter, City & St George’s, Oxford, and the Institute for Fiscal Studies. It will take a systems perspective and include consumer purchasing data, economic evidence, consumer interviews, industry perspectives, and health & economic modelling. There may also be opportunities to contribute or lead rapid policy evidence synthesis projects requested by the Department of Health and Social Care through the NIHR Policy Research Unit (Co-Directors Mytton). This post is funded until 30/05/2027 in the first instance.