This session will focus on women in health data.
The speakers
The speakers will beÌý 51±¬ÁÏÍø Fellow Ethna McFerran, who talks about her fascinating journey from clinician to researcher, and Amy Mizen of 51±¬ÁÏÍø Wales, who discusses her research into the impact of green space on health, as well as her own career path and how she balances life in academia and beyond.
About Ethna
Dr Ethna McFerran is a cancer health economist at Queen’s University Belfast, specialising in oncology health economics, health systems, and policy. She has a background in cancer nursing and a PhD in cancer health economics, she has over twenty years’ experience in cancer care, clinical trials and research applying economic modelling. She has recently secured a significant grant to lead a groundbreaking project (LUNG SHOT) aimed at establishing lung cancer screening programmes across the island of Ireland. She is a leader in cross-sector collaboration and a passionate advocate for equitable healthcare, with significant contributions to cancer care policy, cost-effectiveness analysis, and digital healthinfrastructure.
About Amy
Dr Amy Mizen is a postdoctoral researcher at Health Data Research UK (HDR-UK) Wales & Northern Ireland. Her research interests include the role of the built-environment on physical and mental health outcomes.
Amy’s current role is focussed on generating household-level environmental measures of access to the outdoor environment for an NIHR funded project. The aim of the project is to investigate whether a change in access to the natural environment, has an impact on people’s mental health. This change may be for example because a new park may open or a new housing estate may be built.
Amy has a PhD in Public Health, which investigated the impact of daily access to unhealthy food outlets on BMI in adolescents. Her PhD linked individual-level, daily exposure to unhealthy food, derived from administrative food outlet data, with anonymised health data stored in the SAIL data bank at Swansea University.
Take a look at our collaborative notes and slides from the seminar: