Emily is a Research Fellow in the Mental Health and Addiction Research Group at the University of York's Department of Health Sciences. Emily specialises in health research using mixed methods, with a particular interest in the development and evaluation of complex interventions.
Much of Emily's research to date has focused on the development and evaluation of complex interventions in dementia care or mental health inpatient settings. Emily currently works on the NIHR-funded SCEPTRE research programme, aiming to promote smoking cessation and prevent relapse in people with mental illness after a smoke free mental health inpatient stay.
Emily also works in the area of Human-Animal Interaction. Emily was involved in the large-scale survey investigating interactions and attachment to companion animals in the Covid-19 pandemic, and has investigated 'what works' in robotic animal interventions within an inpatient dementia care context.
Before joining the Mental Health and Addictions Research Group in York in 2020, Emily obtained her PhD at Leeds Beckett University. Emily designed and developed an evidence-based psychosocial intervention for people with dementia, and assessed its feasibility and acceptability in care settings.
Emily is a Research Fellow with expertise in mixed-methods and has an interest in the development and evaluation of complex interventions. Her research to date has focused on the development and evaluation of interventions to support health and wellbeing within vulnerable populations (particularly people with dementia and people with severe mental illness). Emily is also very active in contributing to the Human-Animal Interaction research theme, focusing on human-animal interactions and human health and wellbeing, with a special interest in mental health.
Tobacco
Emily is a Research Fellow on the NIHR-funded Programme Grant for Applied Health Research (PGfAR), SCEPTRE: Promoting Smoking CEssation and PrevenTing RElapse in people with mental illness after a smokefree mental health inpatient stayHuman-Animal Interaction (HAI)
Emily is involved in various interdisciplinary research projects on human-animal interactions in health