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Research

First place for poster presentation at Faculty of Academic Psychiatry Conference

18 March 2024

 

A poster presentation co-authored by a team from Teesside University has been awarded first place at the Faculty of Academic Psychiatry Conference 2024.

Dr Emma Giles and Dr Narut Pakunwanich
Dr Emma Giles and Dr Narut Pakunwanich

The presentation was titled ‘Evaluating the Nutrition and Body Mass Index Clinical Link Pathway (NBMI CLiP) in Mental Health and Learning Disability Services: A Mixed-Methods Study’.

The presentation was by a team including Professor Emma Louise Giles, Heidi Stevens, Dr Grant McGeechan, Dr Lauren Walker and Vicki Whittaker from Teesside University, as well as Lancaster medical student Saan Dyare, Dr Narut Pakunwanich from the University of Cambridge, and Jo Smith from Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust.

Professor Giles said: “What a fantastic achievement by the presenting authors. This highlights the value of research which looks at the integration of physical and mental health.”

Fourth year medical student Saan added: “To see the evaluation being so well received by an international audience and the professional discourse it will provide, offers an excellent opportunity for forwarding patient care. It has been a pleasure to be part of such a broad multi-disciplinary team and to work under the supervision of Dr Pakunwanich and Professor Giles.”

Lead presenter and external collaborator, Dr Narut Pakunwanich added: "It has been a pleasure to disseminate our important findings to an international community of psychiatrists. It represents my fruitful and long-term collaboration with the Teesside team, with further planned collaboration going forward."

This highlights the value of research which looks at the integration of physical and mental health.

Professor Emma Giles

The aim of the study was to evaluate the NBMI CLiP and its implementation among in-patient wards with Severe Mental Illness (SMI) and Learning Disabilities in Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust.

In England, adults with SMI are almost twice as likely to be living with obesity than the general population. An estimated 37% of people with learning disabilities are classified as having obesity compared to 30% of the general population.

Survey participants largely found the NBMI CLiP easy to use and understand and they were confident in using it. Open-text responses, analysed using content analysis, indicated a need for further training of staff on the NBMI CLiP. Staff also saw dietitian involvement in the training or delivery of the NBMI CLiP as desirable.

The research was funded by the NIHR Applied Research Collaboration North East and North Cumbria, and awarded to Prof Giles and Jo Smith. The project was Sponsored by Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust and undertaken by academics at Teesside University. It was also supported by funding from NIHR School for Public Health Research, which facilitated Dr Pakunwanich joining the team as an intern researcher. Dr Pakunwanich was instrumental in undertaking the preliminary work shaping this survey.


In the News

First Place Awarded for Poster Presentation at Faculty of Academic Psychiatry Conference
India Education Diary, Web, 21/03/2024
The presentation was titled ‘Evaluating the Nutrition and Body Mass Index Clinical Link Pathway in Mental Health and Learning Disability Services: A Mixed-Methods Study’.

 
 
 
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