| Location: | Glasgow |
|---|---|
| Salary: | £47,389 to £58,225 |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
| Placed On: | 15th June 2026 |
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| Closes: | 23rd June 2026 |
| Job Ref: | 812434 |
We are seeking an enthusiastic and motivated graphic designer Communications Lead for the development and delivery of communications, engagement and knowledge exchange for the NIHR/ESPRC funded SEISMIC SHIFT research project. The system design led health research project seeks to improve the lives of people living with multiple long-term conditions.
In summary, this role has both applied and strategic aspects to it and will involve:
SEISMIC SHIFT (Systems Engineering Innovation Hubs for Multiple Long-Term Conditions: Systemic Health Innovation for Transformation) is an Innovation Partnership funded jointly by the NIHR and EPSRC as part of a £25m investment to improve the lives of people living with multiple long-term conditions. Our vision is to move from disease-based to symptom-focused health delivery - whole person, whole system, whole life. This collaborative research programme brings together the University of Strathclyde, NHS partners, systems design and engineering researchers, clinical and health-services researchers, health and care professionals, patients, carers, and a broad ecosystem of industry and public-sector stakeholders. Together, we aim to drive systemic health innovation transformation. SEISMIC SHIFT is developing and implementing new system-based approaches to re-configuring health and care delivery. By conducting a series of interventions across three integrated workstreams, the partnership is generating research insights and translational knowledge to strengthen and embed systems expertise in real-world health delivery. Our overarching goal is a system-based redesign of health and care that shifts the focus from disease specialisms to symptom clusters - reflecting lived experience and enabling more personalised, comprehensive, and preventative care. This includes attention to modifiable risk factors, health promotion, and a wider salutogenic vision for health and care provision.
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