Ada joined the York Trials Unit in April 2024 as a senior research associate to work on the 5-year NIHR-funded UPTURN study, which aims to support people with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), particularly from ethnic minority groups.
With over five years of post-doctoral experience as a qualitative researcher, she’s worked extensively on projects spanning fertility care, inflammatory bowel disease and mental health. Her work includes capacity-building in low-middle-income countries, policy development with the Gambian Ministry of Health, and creating interventions for young people with chronic illnesses.
From 2022-23, Ada was the lead qualitative researcher on an NIHR-funded study along with a team from Sheffield Health and Social Care to understand services for people with complex mental health difficulties. These are people diagnosed with personality disorders, childhood and adulthood traumas, self-harm and complex PTSD. Her work included recruitment, conducting several interviews with the patients and healthcare professionals, analysing the data, writing reports, presenting the work at national conferences and developing a toolkit which could help primary care providers better identify these groups of patients.
Ada’s research focuses on health inequalities, mental health and ethnic minority reproductive health. This includes research into experiences of African women with infertility and developing culturally appropriate health information. Additionally, Ada’s doctoral experience has led her to advocate for and mentor student’s involved in emotionally sensitive research.
Ada would be interested in supervising undergraduate and postgraduate students working in the following areas: health inequalities, mental health, and reproductive medicine.
Working with vulnerable people and its effect on the researcher. (Page 28)