| Qualification Type: | PhD |
|---|---|
| Location: | Birmingham |
| Funding for: | UK Students |
| Funding amount: | See advert |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Placed On: | 10th April 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 28th April 2026 |
During widespread outbreaks of infectious disease, governments may impose population-level interventions to protect public health. Lockdowns are extensive social and economic closure across whole populations to minimise contact between people and limit opportunities for transmission. They encompass multiple measures and behaviours including workplace closures, working from home, closure of non-essential settings (e.g. retail shops, hospitality settings, personal care settings), ‘stay-at-home’ requirements including curfews, and restrictions on internal movement.
Decisions about lockdown (e.g., duration, measures included, when and how to exit) and public communications around these may affect public perceptions, attitudes, and behaviour, including adherence. This project will investigate how lockdown strategies and communications can be optimised for future public health emergencies, using a combination of primary and secondary data relating to effectiveness, impact, public perceptions and behaviour. It will explore public, stakeholder, and decision-maker perspectives on lockdown strategies, exit processes, and communications. Using co-design workshop methods, the student will develop a prototype ‘taxonomy’ for lockdown, detailing different options and factors that should be considered in decision-making. Furthermore, a Delphi study is proposed to achieve consensus among a panel of experts regarding the contents of the taxonomy.
The project will ultimately generate actionable evidence that can inform UKHSA policy and contribute to national and international thinking on pandemic preparedness. For more information, please see here: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/nihr-health-protection-research-unit-in-emergency-preparedness-and-response
Supervision team:
Dmitri Nepogodiev (Associate Professor and Consultant, University of Birmingham); Dale Weston (Principal Behavioural Scientist, UKHSA); Holly Carter (Principal Behavioural Scientist, UKHSA); Charlotte Hall (Behavioural Scientist, UKHSA).
Funding notes:
Funding for this project is available for UK studentship fees (only UK fees will be paid, and any additional PhD fee costs where needed must be paid by the successful applicant), a yearly stipend based on the current UKRI rates, and a research training and support grant.
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