Award Summary
100% of home tuition fees paid and annual living expenses at UKRI rate, currently £20,780 per year. A research training support grant of £5,000 per year is available to cover research costs (e.g. data costs) and local/national/international travel (e.g. conferences).
Successful international candidates will be required to fund the difference between the home fees and international fees.
Overview
This project will focus on investigating the environmental impact on disability and health in older people and addressing methodological challenges related to quantitative analysis. Based on the World Health Organization, healthy ageing is defined as ‘the process of developing and maintaining the functional ability that enables wellbeing in older age’ and is made up of the interaction between intrinsic capacity (individual’s physical and mental conditions) and the environment (the context of an individual’s life). To investigate how the environment can support healthy ageing, recent epidemiological research has highlighted the potential for integrating geospatial data (e.g., green spaces, local services) and ageing cohorts and investigating the relationships between environmental factors and health conditions in older people. However, there are many methodological challenges, including multiple issues in statistical (longitudinal analysis, measurement errors), epidemiological (confounding effects, selection bias) and ageing research (loss to follow-up, mortality). The PhD student will utilise interdisciplinary data sources of environmental data and cohort studies and choose to investigate some of these issues based on their interests.
Number of awards: 1
Start date: September 2025
Award duration: 3 years full time.
Sponsor: Newcastle University
Supervisors
Dr. Yu-Tzu Wu, Dr. Andrew Kingston (Population Health Sciences institute)
Eligibility criteria
Applicants should possess a minimum 2:1 degree in statistics, epidemiology, public health, data sciences, mathematics or a related field that includes a substantial quantitative analysis component. While a Master's degree in a relevant subject with Merit or higher is preferred, it is not mandatory. Candidates must be eager to develop advanced epidemiological and statistical analysis abilities. A keen interest in healthy aging research is crucial. Familiarity or experience with statistical software (e.g., Stata, R) is a plus. If your first language is not English you need an overall IELTS score of 6.5 (at least 5.5 in all sub-skills) or equivalent language qualification.
How to apply
You must apply through theUniversity’s online postgraduate application systemby creating an account.
All relevant fields should be completed, but fields marked with a red asterisk must be completed. The following information will help us to process your application. You should:
- Click onprogramme of study.
- Insert8370Fin theprogramme codesection and click search.
- SelectProgramme name PhD in the Faculty of Medical Sciences(full time) - Health Services Research.
- InsertPH059in thestudentship/partnership reference field.
- Attacha covering letter and CV. The covering letter must state the title of the studentship. Please quote reference codePH059and state how your interests and experience relate to the proposed project.
- Attach degree transcripts* and certificates and, if English is not your first language, a copy of your English language qualification.
- Non-UK candidates must contactphsipgenquiries@newcastle.ac.ukregarding eligibility for home fees.
*You will not be able to submit your application until you have submitted your degree transcript/s.
Contact Details
Yu-Tzu Wu (yu-tzu.wu@newcastle.ac.uk)