Created from collaboration between the North of Scotland, South East Scotland and West of Scotland regional hubs, the aim of the CAHPR Scotland Consortium is to provide a network, deliver regular events and influence policy and practice to help support AHPs with an interest in research.
We also run a small annual bursary scheme to provide funding for AHPs to develop and disseminate their research.
Hub Leaders
Dr Chris Seenan
Consortium Lead
Dr Lyndsay Alexander
Hub Co-Leads
Robert Gordon University
Dr Jenna Breckenridge
Hub Co-Leads
University of Dundee
Dr Judith Lane
Hub Co-Leads
Queen Margaret University
Dr David Hamilton
Hub Co-Leads
Glasgow Caledonian University
Dr Wendy Cohen
Hub Co-Leads
Glasgow Caledonian University
Dr Gareth Hill
Hub Co-Leads
NHS Education Scotland
Graham Boniface
Hub Co-Leads
Healthcare Improvement Scotland
Dr Swati Chopra
Hub Co-Leads
Golden Jubilee National Hospital (GJNH)
Contact us
If you have any questions or would just like to get in touch please email us at cahprscotland@gmail.com or contact one of us directly.
Join our mailing list via the button at the top of this page.
Find us on X: @CAHPRScotland
CAHPR Scotland – GCU ReaCH Fellowships
Fellowship Information and Q&A
Prof Frederike Van Wijck, Dr Chris Seenan and Dr David Hamilton discuss the Fellowships and provide additional information about the opportunity.
CAHPR (the Community for Allied Health Professions Research) Scotland is delighted to partner with the Research Centre for Health (ReaCH) at Glasgow Caledonian University to deliver the CAHPR Scotland-GCU ReaCH Fellowships 2024.
CAHPR Scotland supports the development of AHP research capacity and quality within Scotland. GCU ReaCH represents the largest concentration of AHP research activity in the country with a focus on enhancing the lives of people with long-term health conditions as well as developing and evaluating public health and lifestyle interventions. The centre brings together research expertise from the allied health sciences alongside other relevant sciences and profession (including bio- and life sciences, social sciences, nursing, epidemiology and population health, bio-engineering and sport/ movement sciences), clustering in research groups that focus on specific themes/areas. These groups are homes for a breadth of active research programmes and will provide a nurturing and collaborative environment, offering our fellows an academic home for a year in which to develop their research ideas. We hope this will facilitate in-depth engagement with the wider research environment and encourage interdisciplinary collaboration. The research groups available are:
– Stroke and Neurological Rehabilitation
– Data Science for Common Good
– Molecular mechanisms of long-term conditions
– Safeguarding Health through Infection Prevention
– Sexual Health and Blood Borne Viruses
Who we are looking for:
We are looking for practising AHPs in Scotland with the potential to be future clinical researchers in the broad fields listed above. This fellowship is an opportunity to work within a professional research group environment as you develop your own project alongside your existing clinical role.
Up to four fellowships are available for 2024 and we hope to support a range of professions undertaking a variety of projects.
For this fellowship, you are encouraged to think about how you might work out with your typical professional boundaries and/or specific clinical practice area to engage with researchers from other fields to address a question of larger scope. It is envisaged that being supported as a CAHPR Scotland – GCU ReaCH Fellow will enhance your clinical research career and lead to future applications for funding e.g. the Chief Scientists Office (CSO) Researcher Development Fellowships or Clinical Academic Fellowships.
What you will benefit from:
Fellows will benefitfrom membership of one or more ReaCH Groups with the opportunity to attend theirresearch group meetings and access to feedback from research leaders to supportyour project development, peer support and mentorship through the CAHPRScotland fellowship program, access to wider networks and resources through GCUReaCH and the national CAHPR infastructure, and up to £1,000 to support anyaspect of their work (e.g. for small consumables or towards presenting yourresearch at a professional conference).
Submission details:
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Call released – 24th January 2024
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Submission deadline– 15th April 2024
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Fellowship begins –1st June 2024
Assessment criteria:
Normally, profession-specific research is well supported by the professional bodies; this call aims to highlight and support work outwith the usual professional research streams and topics and those working indifferent fields. Preference will therefore be given to applicants moving outwith typical professional boundaries and to non-traditional research areas in their profession.
We advise that you discuss your application with the lead(s) of the research group(s) you would be interested in working with to gain a full understanding of how you might align with their programmes of work, ensure that a senior academic has capacity to support your application and get support to develop your application.
Expectation of scope of projects:
The aim of this call is to facilitate development of research experience, research applications or evidence to support applications for future research funding to deliver a significant research project.
Please discuss your ideas with your proposed group lead(s) and provide a realistic plan for what you might achieve in a year by applying your clinical expertise and perspective aligned to the ongoing research activities.
Priority will be given to applications that:
- Articulate how working with a research group will kick-start/ transform your research career and support future applications for funding.
- Represent novel research from normally under-represented professions and/or in areas not traditionally represented by profession-specific research (e.g. in inter-disciplinary topic areas).
- Align to the wider CAHPR mission.
- Align with the ReaCH focus of enhancing the lives of people with long-term health conditions as well as developing and evaluating public health and lifestyle interventions.
Requirements of Fellows:
At an appropriate point in time, CAHPR Fellows will be expected to present their work in the ReaCH group(s) they are affiliated with. Additionally, at the end of the fellowship, recipients will be expected to present at the CAHPR Fellows conference and write a blog about their experience that will be published via the CAHPR and GCU ReaCH websites. Fellows will be supported in preparing their presentations
If you have any questions or would like more information, please contact your cahprscotland@gmail.com or Chris Seenan Chris.Seenan@gcu.ac.uk (CAHPR Scotland Consortium Lead).
How to apply
Please download and follow the guidance in the application form below
Online
13/11/2024
Navigating NHS Ethics
Meet the CAHPR Scotland team
Dr Chris Seenan
Chris is Consortium Lead for CAHPR Scotland, Co-lead for the West of Scotland Hub and Senior Lecturer in the School of Health and Life Sciences at Glasgow Caledonian University. Chris has an interest in pain science, pain education, vascular disease, amputee management and the psychosocial aspects of health and disease.
Dr David Hamilton
David is a reader in musculoskeletal health at Glasgow Caledonian University, joining in 2022 from Edinburgh Napier University where he was formerly associate professor of physiotherapy.
His main research interests are in rehabilitation and orthopaedic intervention trials, predictive modelling and in measuring clinical outcomes in musculoskeletal disease.
Dr Wendy Cohen
Wendy is a Co-Lead for the West of Scotland Hub and a Senior Knowledge Exchange Fellow at the University of Strathclyde. Wendy is also the Head of the Graduate School in Humanities and Social Sciences supporting PGR students at the University. Wendy’s job is a mixture of teaching, research and external collaboration with colleagues in the NHS where she is also Vice Chair of a NHS Research Ethics Committee.
Dr Jenna Breckenridge
Jenna holds a joint, clinical academic role between the University of Dundee and NHS Tayside, where she is the Lead for Allied Health Professions Research.
Dr Lyndsay Alexander
Lyndsay is the Academic Team Lead for Research within the School of Health Sciences. She is an experienced applied health researcher and musculoskeletal physiotherapist with experience in successfully leading and delivering funded research projects using primary and secondary research methods.
Dr Swati Chopra
Swati is the Senior Research Physiotherapist at the Golden Jubilee University National Hospital, Swati has a specialised interest in clinical biomechanics, musculoskeletal rehabilitation, physical activity monitoring and digital health.
Dr Judith Lane
Judith is a Senior lecturer in the Dietetics, Nutrition & Biological Sciences, Physiotherapy, Podiatry & Radiography Division.
Through my work as the South East Scotland Hub Leader of the Council for AHP Research, I also aim to support the develop of research capacity and capability across the allied health professions both in clinical practice and academia.
Graham Boniface
Graham is health service research at Healthcare Improvement Scotland and a physiotherapist by background. Graham is currently near completion of his PhD investigating dose of exercise prescription in rheumatoid arthritis.
Dr Stephanie Valentin
Steph is an Associate Professor in Physiotherapy at Edinburgh Napier University within the School of Health and Social Care, where she is active in both teaching and research. Her main research interest are biomechanics, muscle imaging, low back pain, and injury prevention.
Dr Rebecca Hunter
Rebecca is a Postdoctoral Reseach Fellow at the University of Exeter and a Chronic Pain Specialist Physiotherapist. Rebecca has a special interest in chronic low back pain and mHealth technology with an expertise in realist research.