skip to content

Department of Public Health and Primary Care (PHPC)

The Department of Public Health and Primary Care (PHPC) is one of Europe’s leading academic departments of population health sciences. It comprises over 400 staff and graduate students, including more than 25 professors, readers, university lecturers, and other senior academic staff.  

Groups in the Department are underpinned by major programme grants, such as those from the UK Medical Research Council (MRC), the Wellcome Trust, the British Heart Foundation (BHF), Cancer Research UK, the UK National Institute of Health Research (NIHR), the European Union, the US National Institutes of Health, industry, and other sources.   

The Department holds silver Laboratory Efficiency Assessment Framework (LEAF) accreditation for the Strangeways Research Laboratory. Contributors toward this accreditation include The Centre for Cancer Genetic Epidemiology (CCGE) led by Professor Antonis Antoniou and Professor Nora Pashayan; the Cardiovascular Epidemiology Unit (CEU) led by Professor John Danesh; The Primary Care Unit (PCU) led by Dr Juliet Usher-Smith; The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute led by Professor Mary Dixon-Woods; and the Department of Oncology SRL Lab Team, led by Professor Alison Dunning.

The Department provides internationally-recognised expertise in: genetic epidemiology, biomarkers, cohort studies, quantitative methods, public health, primary care, and behavioural sciences.  

Major areas of application include common chronic diseases (eg, cardiometabolic diseases, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases), and major behavioural risk factors driving these conditions (e.g., consumption of tobacco, alcohol, and adverse diets).   

The Department benefits greatly from the expertise arising from its strategic collaborations with the Genome Campus, Quantitative MRC Units and genomic medicine. 

It provides excellent training and educational programmes in biostatistics, epidemiology, public health, and primary care, at both undergraduate and graduate levels, including training of Academic Clinical Fellows. 

Latest news

Physical and mental health professionals perspectives of providing mental health care for young people

20 March 2026

A new study explores how physical and mental health professionals experience delivering mental health care to young people in paediatric hospital settings. This publication from the Cambridge Children’s Hospital Project, was written by Jessica Folwell, a medical student at the University of Cambridge. The multi-...

Two-year follow-up of neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients with systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases

19 March 2026

New research shows that the memory and cognitive problems often experienced by people with systemic rheumatic diseases do not get worse over time as many patients fear. This research was led by Dr Melanie Sloan from the School of Medicine at University of East Anglia and the University of Cambridge, Primary Care Unit, with...

Setting research priorities for the use of digital technology in the self-management of heart health

18 March 2026

Dr Rakesh Modi has co-authored a paper in a collaboration with Edinburgh Napier University and patient, public, professional and carer representatives on the research priorities for cardiovascular technology. Through a James Lind Alliance approach, they co-produced questionnaires, surveyed public, private and patient...