IMS Epidemiology

IMS Epidemiology Research to improve population health in the UK and around the world, at the University of Cambridge.

Formerly the MRC Epidemiology Unit - https://linktr.ee/imsepidemiology Obesity, type 2 diabetes and related metabolic disorders present a major and growing global public health challenge. These disorders result from a complex interplay between genetic, developmental, behavioural and environmental factors that operate throughout life. The mission of the MRC Epidemiology Unit is to investigate the i

ndividual and combined effects of these factors and to develop and evaluate strategies to prevent these diseases and their consequences. In this way, we are working to improve the health of people in the UK and around the world. We are a Medical Research Council Unit embedded as a department of the University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine. The Unit is part of the Wellcome – MRC Institute of Metabolic Science (IMS) on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, where the principle offices and laboratories of the Unit are physically located. Unit Director Professor Nick Wareham is Co-Director of the IMS with Professor Sir Stephen O’Rahilly. Being embedded in the IMS is critical to our aspiration to follow up associations between exposures and metabolic disease outcomes to determine possible causality and mechanisms. The Unit is also a part of Cambridge Population Health Sciences, a three department partnership of the Department of Public Health and Primary Care and the MRC Biostatistics Unit. Collectively, the Partnership pursues a wide range of research across epidemiology, biostatistics, population health and primary care, and delivers the Masters courses in Population Health Sciences. We are delivering on our mission through eight High Level Objectives which connect all our research programmes and infrastructure.

- To investigate the causes of obesity, diabetes and related metabolic disorders
- To develop understanding of mechanisms identified by population-based studies
- To develop and evaluate individual level approaches to the prevention of diabetes, obesity and related metabolic disorders in children and adults
- To inform, develop and evaluate population-based approaches to improving health
- To develop new methods, resources and tools for epidemiological and public health research
- To investigate approaches to improving global health, particularly in low and middle income countries
- To build capacity for conducting, understanding and using local, national, and international epidemiology and public health research
- To contribute to the translation of research evidence into policy and practice

The main objectives of each individual research programme are mapped to one or more of these High Level Objectives, which therefore provide a unifying framework to illustrate and augment the cross-links and collaborations between programmes.

TODAY 12:00 to 13:00Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Div...
12/06/2026

TODAY 12:00 to 13:00

Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Diverse Populations

Professor Sonia Anand from McMaster University, Canada will examine how global dietary patterns influence cognitive performance and brain structure across diverse populations.

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Anne Presanis, Chair of the Bradford Hill Seminar organising committee.

Register here to attend online - http://buff.ly/FjfjFr7

FRIDAY 12 JUNE 12:00 to 13:00Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimagi...
11/06/2026

FRIDAY 12 JUNE 12:00 to 13:00

Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Diverse Populations

Professor Sonia Anand from McMaster University, Canada will examine how global dietary patterns influence cognitive performance and brain structure across diverse populations.

The seminar will be chaired by Dr Anne Presanis, Chair of the Bradford Hill Seminar organising committee.

Register here to attend online - https://buff.ly/FjfjFr7

The Food Foundation has just published the   report, which shows price gap between healthier and less healthy food is no...
10/06/2026

The Food Foundation has just published the report, which shows price gap between healthier and less healthy food is now at its widest level in over a decade.

This should act as a wake-up call for policymakers to take action to protect the health of people and the planet.

With contributions from three of our researchers Jean Adams, Thomas Burgoine, and Élisabeth Demers-Potvin, the report uses 16 key markers to provide a snapshot of the current food environment; it shows how good food has become increasingly hard to access and afford, and how high rates of obesity, tooth decay, and decreasing healthy life expectancy are common for our children.

Read the report - https://buff.ly/rZwUQj9

Webinar: The power of metaphor in public health2 June 2026 12:00 – 13:00Metaphors are the conceptual tools through which...
01/06/2026

Webinar: The power of metaphor in public health
2 June 2026 12:00 – 13:00

Metaphors are the conceptual tools through which we make sense of complex issues, the causes of policy problems and the legitimate responses to these. We must reflect critically on the metaphors we use in public health policy, practice and advocacy.

This interactive session will provide an overview of the evidence of the role of metaphor in human reasoning, decision-making and action, with the aim of making this evidence relevant for public health practitioners.

Register here - https://buff.ly/2NuWKQl

The speakers are Dr Benjamin Hawkins (IMS Epidemiology, University of Cambridge, and PHI UK Local Health and Global Profits); and Dr May van Skalkwyk (University of Edinburgh)

Organised by PHI UK Local Health and Global Profits

PLEASE NOTE THE CHANGE OF DATE AND TIMEBradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and ...
26/05/2026

PLEASE NOTE THE CHANGE OF DATE AND TIME

Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Diverse Populations

Professor Sonia Anand from McMaster University, Canada will examine how global dietary patterns influence cognitive performance and brain structure across diverse populations.

This is a hybrid event on June 12 @ 12:00noon - 1:00 pm
Register here to attend online - https://buff.ly/FjfjFr7

How does climate change reshape cities, behaviour & health?Join our interactive workshop on 4 June, 14:00 BST, which bri...
20/05/2026

How does climate change reshape cities, behaviour & health?

Join our interactive workshop on 4 June, 14:00 BST, which brings together experts in climate science, transport, environmental exposures, and health modelling to examine the threats a changing climate poses to infrastructure and communities, their effects on behaviour, exposures, and health, and how methods need to adapt to changing times.

Register here - https://buff.ly/0hS0jKG

Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Diverse PopulationsProf...
18/05/2026

Bradford Hill Seminar – From Plate to Brain: Global Diet, Cognitive Function and Neuroimaging in Diverse Populations

Professor Sonia Anand from McMaster University, Canada will examine how global dietary patterns influence cognitive performance and brain structure across diverse populations.

This is a hybrid event on June 11 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Register here to attend online - https://buff.ly/FjfjFr7

IMS Epidemiology’s Dr Marie Spreckley was a keynote panellist at the Society of Behavioral Medicine 47th Annual Meeting ...
17/05/2026

IMS Epidemiology’s Dr Marie Spreckley was a keynote panellist at the Society of Behavioral Medicine 47th Annual Meeting & Scientific Sessions.

Marie’s presentation focused on how definitions of success in obesity treatment may need to evolve alongside the emergence of incretin-based therapies. She explored themes including food noise, nutritional adequacy, psychological wellbeing, treatment burden, weight regain following discontinuation, and the importance of defining success not only through weight loss, but through sustainability, quality of life, and patient-centred outcomes.

Address

IMS Epidemiology, University Of Cambridge School Of Clinical Medicine, Box 285 Institute Of Metabolic Science, Cambridge Biomedical Campus
Cambridgeshire
CB20QQ

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