By: Communications
Norwich will be the home of a new state-of-the-art health unit into the study of gastrointestinal infections, thanks to a £1.8m funding boost for the University of East Anglia (UEA) and a further £1m for the Quadram Institute Bioscience (QIB).
The award is part of an £80m nationwide research funding programme from the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) to protect the public from health threats. This includes research into long-term threats - such as antimicrobial resistance and climate change - and acute or emerging threats, such as pandemics and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear incidents.
This new unit is a partnership between UEA, the UK Health Security Agency, The Quadram Institute and Newcastle University, with UEA as the lead institution. The total sum awarded is £5.5m.
The unit will carry out research aimed at reducing the burden of gastrointestinal infections (tummy bugs) on public health by working to improve diagnosis of and prevention of such infections. A key responsibility of the unit will be to strengthen the UK’s readiness for a future pandemic that could be due to a gastrointestinal infection.
£77m of the funding will go towards 13 NIHR Health Protection Research Units (HPRUs) across the country, which will be partnerships between UK universities and the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and form a key research element of the national health security infrastructure.
Dr Carolina Arevalo, Deputy Director for Research, Evidence and Knowledge at the UK Health Security Agency, said:
“It’s fantastic to see this investment in health protection science, supporting our ability to protect our communities from infectious diseases and the impact of chemical, radiological and other environmental health hazards. The Health Protection Research Units bring together expertise from academia and UKHSA to generate the evidence which enhances our ability to protect the public from health threats we are facing now and in the future.”
By delivering high-quality collaborative research, the HPRUs support UKHSA in its objective to protect the health of the public, enabling it to prepare for and respond to major or emerging health protection incidents, as well as building an evidence base for health protection policy and practice.
The aims of the HPRUs are to:
The HPRUs have been funded since 2014, and have previously supported the health response to major domestic and global emergencies including the Salisbury Novichok poisonings, West Africa Ebola outbreak, COVID-19, and the 2022 and 2024 mpox outbreaks.
Professor Paul Hunter, director designate of the new unit said “Gastrointestinal infections cause an estimated 17 million cases in the UK each year. Most commonly they cause diarrhoea and vomiting but can be much more serious and can even be life threatening. The estimated cost to the British economy of food-borne gastrointestinal infections is estimated at about £9 billion pounds annually. Our research will help protect people against these infections and so improve public health and the British economy.”
Prof Martin Warren, Interim Director of QIB, said: “In line with QIB’s mission to deliver healthier lives through innovation in gut health, microbiology and food, we are delighted to be part of this NIHR grant, which will drive innovative research to combat gut infections.
“Through strengthened diagnostics, outbreak detection, prevention strategies, and pandemic preparedness, this project demonstrates how the research happening across the Norwich Research Park aims to protect public health and foster future leaders in health protection.”
Newcastle brings some of the UK’s leading gastrointestinal focused epidemiologists and epidemic modellers to the partnership. Dr Marie McIntyre from Newcastle University will lead the ‘Improving the evidence base for prevention of gastrointestinal infections’ theme within the HPRU, though Newcastle researchers will also work across other unit themes.
Dr McIntyre said: “We are delighted to have been part of this award, and excited to strengthen the food-focused partnerships that we already have with UEA and the Norwich Biosciences Institutes researchers including at the Quadram Institute, as well as begin the new partnership with the UK Health Security Agency.
“With our long history of food-related research at Newcastle, focus on systems-perspectives to food and strong biological modelling skill sets we are focused on providing policy-appropriate ‘living’ evidence collation and synthesis, and risk assessment tools and mechanisms to help keep the UK’s food supplies safe.”
Minister for Public Health and Prevention Andrew Gwynne said: “This vital research funding will help ensure that the government’s readiness to respond to these health threats is fit for the future.
“From pandemic preparedness and antimicrobial resistance to air pollution and climate change, these research units will look at long-term and emerging health threats - bolstering the nation’s health security research infrastructure.
“One of the three core shifts in our 10-Year Health Plan is from treatment to prevention, and protecting public health is essential to this.”
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