Research group

Population, Health and Wellbeing (PHeW)

Museum space viewed from above

Our group combines expertise in population, health and wellbeing with the application of technical excellence in geographic information systems (GIS), spatial analysis, and qualitative, participatory methods.

About

We are a group of researchers addressing the biggest challenges to human health and wellbeing across the globe with studies across numerous Low and Middle Income countries, and within the UK and its diverse, often marginalised, communities.
 
We work with Governments, Policy-Makers, Regulators, Non-Governmental Organisations, Industry and Community Leaders to produce relevant, meaningful and timely research that can support tackling these challenges.
 
Our work answers research questions that address the changing threats to human and planetary health from the climate and biodiversity crisis, including access to safe and sustainable food, clean water, (social) health care delivery, or suitable housing.
 
Our research in diverse geographical contexts spans improving spatial data-infrastructures through to improving understanding of the political, social, cultural and economic context around these challenges. 
 
Our methodologies as a collective are fantastically diverse and often ground-breaking.
 
The global issues our researchers tackle include: 
 
  • disease and pest threats, and their mitigation  
  • poverty alleviation 
  • anti-microbial resistance   
  • clean water and sanitation  
  • food security  
  • food safety in global supply chains  
  • childhood vaccination 
  • supporting census and survey processes 
  • reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health 
  • humanitarian response support 
  • population migration  
  • ‘last mile’ resource delivery 
  • urbanization 
  • population projections 
  • disability social care infrastructure  
  • ethics, cultures of caring and harming (animal research, livestock farming, environments)  
 
Who Funds Us? 
 
  • The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation  
  • The United Nations (UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO, UNHCR) 
  • UKRI Biotechnology and Biological Sciences research council 
  • UKRI Arts and Humanities Research Council 
  • UKRI Economic and Social Research Council
  • The Wellcome Trust 
  • The Leverhulme Trust   
  • UKRI Medical Research Council
  • British Academy 
  • National Institute for Health and Care Research
  • The Royal Geographical Society 
  • The Childrens Investment Fund Foundation 
  • The World Bank 
  • The European Commission 
  • GAVI 
  • USAID 
  • The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office

Research highlights

Population mapping saves lives

A University of Southampton research group is using new ways of mapping and counting populations to help developing countries. WorldPop's datasets have helped to eradicate polio in Nigeria and assist earthquake victims in Nepal.

People, projects and publications

People

Professor Andrew Power

Professor

Research interests

  • Geographies of social care and support for disabled people including personalisation, peer-support and residential care.
  • Relational geographies of the voluntary sector particularly within the social care landscape
  • Family caregiving and the interdependency between care givers and recipients 

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Professor Dianna Smith

Professor

Research interests

  • Small-area estimation for policy analysis

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Dr Edson Utazi

Associate Professor

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Email: [email protected]

Tel: +000

Professor Emma Roe

Professor of More-Than-Human Geographies

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Graham Moon PhD, FAcSS, HonMFPH

Research interests

  • Place effects on health-related behaviour, particularly smoking, diet and alcohol consumption
  • Applications of multilevel modelling in human geography; small area estimation methods
  • Post-asylum geographies and mental health care delivery
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Dr Hannah Fair

Lecturer in Human Geography

Research interests

  • Animal Geography
  • The Anthropocene (and its critiques)
  • Urban Natures

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Professor Jim Wright

Professor in GIS & Int Development

Research interests

  • Safe water access and public health in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Environmental applications of GIS
  • Geospatial analysis for public health, particularly via routine health management information systems

Accepting applications from PhD students

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Dr Ortis Yankey

Research Fellow

Research interests

  • Population Modelling
  • Spatial Epidemiology
  • Health/Medical geography
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