Dr Gill McGill
Newcastle, United Kingdom
Dr Gill McGill is Co-director of the Northern Hub for Veterans and Military Families Research at Northumbria University, supporting its development since 2015. Gill has a growing portfolio of expertise and publications in the field of Veterans and military families research including leading research projects exploring access to health and social care for alcohol-related issues, bereavement, maintaining independence following limb loss and social isolation and loneliness among the LGBT+ Veteran population. Gill also has significant experience in participant recruitment from ‘hard or reach’/seldom heard populations as well as in the design of peer-informed research projects. Gill is also employed as an Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Social Care in the Department of Nursing, Midwifery and Health at Northumbria University. Gill has a background in Public Health, working as a commissioner and service provider, and she has extensive experience in project management and strategy development in the NHS, Local Authority and Third Sector settings.
Affiliation
- Northumbria University
Dr Hilary Engward
Chelmsford, United Kingdom
Hilary is an Associate Professor in the Veterans and Families Institute for Military Social Research (VFI) at Anglia Ruskin University. There she leads research exploring how Veterans and their significant others live in their comunities with changing health needs and co-morbidities. Hilary's research interests cover health and well-being needs in relation to limb loss, loss of use of limb, long term health needs, chronic pain and how people live adaptively accordingly.
Affiliation
- Anglia Ruskin University
- Email hilary.engward@aru.ac.uk
- Telephone 07787226525
- Web www.aru.ac.ukpeoplehilary-engward
Dr Howard Burdett
London, United Kingdom
Howard received his PhD in epidemiology for research on mental health and socioeconomic status of UK Armed Forces personnel transitioning to civilian life. Veterans and transition remain his primary areas of interest, including mental health, social, and economic outcomes. His experience is in mixed-methods research, including cross-sectional studies, longitudinal studies, randomised controlled trials, meta-analysis, and data linkage. He has published on the long-term mental health and socioeconomic outcomes of Veterans, as well as other areas of Armed Forces well-being and return from deployment. His current main study is ADVANCE-INVEST, on the consequences of battlefield injury to the transition outcomes of Veterans.
Affiliation
- King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
- Email howard.burdett@kcl.ac.uk
Dr Jamie Barker
Loughborough, United Kingdom
Dr Jamie Barker is a researcher from Loughborough University, working in partnership with Dr Craig White on the Veterans' Resilience Programme. This programme aims to optimise Veterans' resilience and mental health and well-being and strengthen peer support networks for those Veterans that suffer from mental health and well-being issues. Their work uses a holistic approach to enhancing resilience, mental health, and well-being in Veterans by promoting a more active and healthier lifestyle and enhanced feelings of a positive social identity for those who participate. Dr Barker and Dr White are also currently producing an academic paper and policy documentation for the Office of Veterans’ Affairs. This will emphasise the potential positive impact of non-clinical interventions on Veterans suffering from mental health and well-being issues. Additionally, they are applying for additional funds to expand the Veterans' Resilience Programme nationwide.
Affiliation
- Loughborough University
Dr Juan Fernando Maestre
Swansea, United Kingdom
Fernando is a Lecturer in the Department of Computer at Swansea University. While in the United States, he was a President's Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Minnesota, and obtained a PhD degree in Informatics from the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering at Indiana University. His research investigates the use of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) research methods with vulnerable populations to design technologies with them rather than for them in both in-person and online/remote settings. His research uses surveys, interviews, observation, as well as co-design methods under the lenses of value-sensitive and speculative design to involve stakeholders in the design and development of a more ethical, inclusive, and equitable technology from the very beginning and throughout all the stages of the design process. Ultimately, he strives for amplifying the voice of those who are impacted by technology and allowing researchers and practitioners to be aware of potential negative impacts that such technologies may have on end users and stakeholders.
Affiliation
- Department of Computer, Swansea University
Dr Karishma Jivraj
London, United Kingdom
Dr Karishma Jivraj is a chartered psychologist who has worked in the field of mental heath research since 2012 across various academic institutions, the National Institute for Health Research and the NHS. Her doctoral work demonstrated ways to improve service delivery in community mental health services and recent projects she has led have drawn on positive psychology approaches to enhance the mental health and wellbeing of clinical and non-clinical populations. She led on the OUTCOMES study, exploring the psychosocial benefits of Military Service and impact on post-Service life.
Affiliation
- Centre for the Armed Forces Community, King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
Dr Laura Rafferty
London, United Kingdom
Dr Laura Rafferty is a researcher at King’s Centre for Military Health Research at King’s College London. She is currently working across a number of projects centred on exploring the experience of females within the Armed Forces, during transition out of the military and into civilian life. Dr Rafferty is interested in understanding, and supporting, the mental health of the Armed Forces community and her previous research has spanned topics ranging from: exploring the impact of Post-Traumatic Disorder and Major Stress Disorder on the development of dementia in military Veterans; to developing an app to support military Veterans with their mental health (Met4Vet).
Affiliation
- King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
Dr Lauren Godier-McBard
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Lauren is an Associate Professor of Women & Equalities at Anglia Ruskin University and Co-Director of the Centre for Military Women’s Research (CMWR). She is a mixed methods researcher with a background in psychiatric research and currently has funding from the National Institute for Health and Care Research and the Office for Veterans Affairs for her research. Lauren’s main research interests include the needs and experiences of women during and after military service, and interpersonal/sexual violence in the military context.
Affiliation
- Anglia Ruskin University
Dr Liam Satchell
Winchester and Portsmouth, United Kingdom
Dr Liam Satchell is the Director of the Impact Centre at the Service Children's Progression (SCiP) Alliance and a Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Portsmouth. He has research expertise in applied research design, quantitative analysis, and the psychology of individual differences / mental health. Overall, his work focuses on practical, everyday, approaches to research methods and interpretation. In both his roles he is research active in understanding effective ways to support children and young people in armed forces families. Alongside his military-connected families work, he has published books on supporting children's mental wellbeing, and is active in research in educational, forensic, policing, and other applied psychology topics.
Affiliation
- SCiP Alliance, University of Winchester, University of Portsmouth
Dr Lucy Robinson
Oxford/Cardiff United Kingdom
Dr Lucy Robinson is an Economic and Social Research (ESRC) Postdoctoral Fellow at Cardiff University. Her one year fellowship aims to consolidate her recently completed ESRC-funded DPhil at the Department of Education, University of Oxford. Her doctoral research involved working creatively with groups of service children to explore how military life shapes their identity and school experiences. Lucy is the proud winner of the Centre for Evidence for the Armed Forces Community's 2025 Early Career Researcher Award. Outside of her research, Lucy is a Trustee of the Armed Forces Education Trust (AFET), a grant-giving charity which supports service children's education which has been compromised or put at risk as a result of parents’ past or current service in the British Armed Forces.
Affiliation
- School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University
Dr Marie-Louise Sharp
London, United Kingdom
Marie-Louise is a Senior Research Fellow at King's College London. She is a mixed methods researcher and has research expertise in psychological medicine and epidemiology. Her research interests include the health and well-being of Armed Forces and Emergency Responders and has a focus on methods to extend research impact. She has previous experience in healthcare policy working in the voluntary sector, has postgraduate training in political science and has leadership training through the Clore Social Fellowship.
Affiliation
- King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
Dr Martin Robinson
Belfast, United Kingdom
Martin is a Lecturer in Psychological Trauma and Mental Health in the STARC Research Centre at Queen’s University Belfast. Broadly Martin’s research interests concern the study of health and well-being among hidden and hard to reach groups who have experienced trauma and adversity, including: military Veterans in Northern Ireland, incarcerated populations, and families experiencing pregnancy and child loss. His previous work has investigated the well-being of Veterans, including experience of complex traumatic stress, psychological comorbidity, and helpseeking.
Affiliation
- Queen's University Belfast