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Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing

Wolfson Fellow

Professor Sarah E. Curtis, BA (Hons) (Oxon), DPhil

Telephone: +44 (0) 191 33 41830
Professor, Executive Director - Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience in the Department of Geography
Fax: +44 (0) 191 33 41801
Room number: 225
Professor in Geographies of Health and Wellbeing
Executive Director in Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience
Principal Investigator in the Tipping Points Research Project
Room number: 234

Contact Professor Sarah E. Curtis (email at s.e.curtis@durham.ac.uk)

PA Mrs Julie Dobson / Mrs Krysia Johnson ext: 42257. Email: ihrr.admin@durham.ac.uk.

Biography

Professor Sarah Curtis is an internationally recognised specialist in the geography of health, focusing on the geographical dimensions of inequalities of health and health care. Her scholarship elucidates how and why varying geographical settings relate to human health inequalities.

Sarah Curtis was appointed as Professor of Health and Risk at the University of Durham in September 2006. Based in the Department of Geography, she also works closely with colleagues in other disciplines through the Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience and the Wolfson Institute.

Sarah Curtis holds a BA Hons. in Geography from Oxford University and DPhil in Urban and Regional Studies from the University of Kent. Before joining Durham University she worked as Professor in Geography at Queen Mary, University of London.

As well as contributing to theoretical development of health geography, her work has strong applied and international aspects. She has worked on health policy development and evaluation of health services in the UK, France, Russia, Poland, Canada and the USA.

Recent Research Includes

  • Sarah is Principal Investigator for the project ‘BIOPICCC - Built Infrastructure for Older People in Conditions of Climate Change.’ (Co-P.I. is Dr Dimitri Val, Heriot-Watt University), Commencing September 2009 for 3 years. This is Funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council under their ARCC Programme (£427,000 to Durham University and £288,000 to Heriot-Watt University).
  • Research on physical activity and wellbeing in schools (the ‘MJVE’ project) (funded by ESRC).
  • health impact assessment of urban regeneration schemes, (for the Department of Health, and other agencies).
  • development of healthy public policy (with agencies in Canada and UK).
  • research on how the social and physical environment relates to well-being, resilience and health of adults and children (funded by ESRC and the Nuffield Foundation).
  • research on therapeutic design of psychiatric health care settings (funded by British Academy).
  • international collaborative work on migration, health and wellbeing (supported by ESRC).
  • comparative research on geographical variation in psychiatric service use supported by the Office of Mental Health for New York State, USA. This work has been widely disseminated through her research publications.

Sarah has collaborated through research and consultancy with a number of organisations including local and national agencies in the English National Health Service; the Health Protection Agency; the World Health Organisation; the Insitut National de la Santé et Recherche Medicale, France. She has served as: non-executive director of a NHS Community and Mental Health Care Trust; on the Advisory Board for the London Health Observatory; and as board member and advisor for the National Collaborating Centre for Healthy Public Policy, National Institute of Public Health, Quebec, Canada.

Sarah Curtis has been the Senior Editor, Medical Geography, for the leading international journal Social Science and Medicine (from 2003 - 2012), and she undertakes work for national Research Council committees and evaluation panels in the UK and abroad. She is a Member of the Society of Social Medicine, a Fellow, and Chartered Geographer (Founder Member), of the Royal Geographical Society/Institute of British Geographers. She is also an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences and a Registered Practitioner of the Academy for Higher Education.

Sarah Curtis is author of Space, Place and Mental Health (2010) Ashgate. http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9780754673316

Research Groups

Department of Geography

Research Projects

Department of Geography

  • Built Infrastructure for Older People’s Care in Conditions of Climate Change (BIOPICCC)
  • Geographical variation in the provision and use of health services
  • Migration, Health and Wellbeing: Comparative Perspectives from Britain and France
  • Pathways of Housing Wealth and Well-being: precipitants and consequences of mortgage equity withdrawal in BHPS and HILDA
  • Sources of Resilience to Adverse Social Environments
  • Winners and losers in contrasting labour markets? Socio-economic and spatial inequalities in the population health effects of economic recession and economic growth, BUPA Foundation, £130,000

School of Applied Social Sciences

  • Built Infrastructure for Older People’s Care in Conditions of Climate Change (BIOPICCC)

Selected Publications

Books: authored

Books: edited

Books: sections

Journal papers: academic

Journal papers: online

Other publications: research

  • Curtis, S. & Hoyez, A.C. (2012). Public Health and Migration. Wiley Blackwell.
  • Riva, M. & Curtis, S. (2011). Policy Responses and the Physical Environment. Farnham, Ashgate.
  • Riva, M. & Curtis, S. (2011). The Rural, Material and Social Context of Positive Health in England. Farnham, Ashgate.

Reports: official

  • Shucksmith, J., Carlebach, S., Riva, M., Curtis, S., Hunter, D, J., Blackman, T. & Hudson, R. (2010). Health Inequalities in Ex-Coalfield/Industrial Communities. A report to the Improvement and Development Agency for Local Government and the Department of Health.

Show all publications

Media Contacts

Available for media contact about:

  • Health & welfare services: Health inequality
  • Health & welfare services: Geography of Health