The University of Essex is hiring a professor to direct a new Centre for Coastal Communities, which aims to address public health in deprived seaside聽towns.
The professorship 鈥 for which a job advert closed on 19 February 鈥 will be based mainly at the university鈥檚 forthcoming research centre in Clacton, part of the Essex town鈥檚 Civic Quarter Project that has won 拢20 million from the UK government鈥檚 Levelling Up Fund.
Clacton, about 15 miles from Essex鈥檚 main campus in Colchester, is in the district of Tendring, ranked as the 40th聽most income-deprived local authority area out of 316 in England, with life expectancy significantly below the national average. Meanwhile, the coastal village of Jaywick, near Clacton, is ranked as the most deprived of all 32,844 neighbourhoods in England in the Index of Multiple Deprivation, which looks at a range of measures including health.
Essex鈥檚 move comes as universities start to think in greater depth about how to extend the benefits of their education and research to struggling communities, including those at geographical distance from higher education institutions.
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Chris Greer, Essex鈥檚 pro vice-chancellor for research, said the new post and centre would focus on 鈥渁ddressing the health and well-being of coastal communities as one of the biggest challenges of our time鈥, while aiming to unlock 鈥渉uge potential鈥 in coastal聽towns that have 鈥渧ery tight-knit communities鈥 and 鈥渁 proud history of reinvention and survival鈥.
鈥淲e are an anchor institution; we were established in 1964 by and for the people of Essex, and we want to play our full part in addressing this through a range of initiatives in partnership with local, regional and national partners,鈥 he added.
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Professor Greer highlighted a 2021 report on health in coastal communities by chief medical officer for England, Sir Chris Whitty, which he said pinpointed 鈥渁 real lack of data in coastal communities about the health inequalities鈥.
Essex is home to the UK Data Archive, the UK鈥檚聽largest collection of social, economic and population聽data.
The professorship and centre would involve 鈥渄ata curation, production and analysis about understanding鈥he wider determinants of health in coastal communities,鈥 said Professor Greer.
Essex was part of Tendring District Council鈥檚 successful bid for levelling up funding, billing the Centre for Coastal Communities as leading on adult education, 鈥渂ringing further footfall into the area, diversifying the demographic of visitors and establishing a nationally significant academic centre which will help to build the profile of Clacton and help to create greater private sector confidence to invest in the area鈥.
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Coastal communities 鈥渄on鈥檛 tend to get the research investment; they don鈥檛 tend to get the public and private sector investment. So this 拢20 million is sensational,鈥 said Professor Greer.
Essex is finalising an agreement with Tendring on the centre, which will be part of the university鈥檚 Institute of Public Health and Wellbeing, established in Colchester in 2022.
The hope is that the centre will be able to bring in the public along the lines of the institute鈥檚 model, providing public clinics, GP services, continuing professional development teaching health workers best practice, alongside the university鈥檚 research excellence in healthcare, health technology and data analysis 鈥渢o really create a force for significant impact to benefit people鈥檚 lives鈥, said Professor Greer.
He added: 鈥淐oastal communities around the country will hopefully benefit from the knowledge transfer this will generate, from the research impact that will come out of this, the policy significance that will come out of this.鈥
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Essex seeks tonic for seaside towns
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