
Professor Rachael Gooberman-Hill
M.A.(St.And.), Ph.D.(Edin.)
Expertise
Current positions
Professor of Health and Anthropology
Bristol Medical School (THS)
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
Rachael is Professor of Health and Anthropology and was previously Director of the Elizabeth Blackwell Institute for Health Research. Rachael also leads the Qualitative Research Network in Bristol's NIHR-supported Biomedical Research Centre. Until February 2022 she was a member of the University's Ethics of Research Committee.
In her own research, Rachael is a Social Anthropologist by background who applies techniques from anthropology and qualitative approaches in applied health research. Rachael works within strongly interdisciplinary teams, which includes those delivering research in the UK and in partnerships and global contexts. Interests include long-term painful conditions, implementation science, technology for health, clinical decision-making and public involvement in research.
Among the grants on which Rachael has been a principal or co-applicant include those from the UK’s National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), the Wellcome Trust, Versus Arthritis, the Medical Research Council (MRC), and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).
Rachael’s PhD (1999, Edinburgh) and MA (1991, St Andrews) were both in Social Anthropology. She is currently a Trustee and Council member of the Royal Anthropological Institute, a Trustee of the Bristol Collegiate Research Society, and a member of the Development Board for Equality and Diversity in Science (EDIS). She was previously Networks Officer of the Association of the Social Anthropologists and Treasurer and a Trustee of the European Association of Social Anthropologists. Rachael is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and was formerly external examiner for Durham University's MSc in Medical Anthropology. She provides supervision to research students and delivers training in research methods and writing. Rachael also works as a peer-reviewer for funding applications and serves on funding panels.
In 2014 Rachael's group achieved a University Engagement Award for their work in patient involvement in research, and in 2016 her team won a special prize for their animated film about patient engagement in the NIHR's New Media competition. Also in 2016 she led a team within the SPHERE Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration into a finalist position in Health and Wellbeing category of the National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Involvement's Engage Competition. In 2016 Rachael was given the British Pain Society Medal. Rachael leads the STAR Programme of Research, a national programme to improve treatment for long-term pain after knee replacement, which has recently published findings indicating that the new STAR care pathway is clinically and cost-effective. She also leads and collaborates in numerous other multidisciplinary projects and streams of research including those using mixed methods and ethnographic approaches and with national and international partnerships.
Rachael's University education was in Scotland, she spent her childhood in Saddleworth in North West England, spent some of her teenage years in Ireland, and has lived in South West England since 1999.
Rachael is co-chair of the UK Committee on Research Integrity. The Committee on Research Integrity is a free-standing committee, established following a recommendation by the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee in 2018.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Advanced Pain Discovery Platform: Bristol costs
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (THS)Dates
01/07/2021 to 30/06/2025
Advanced Pain Discovery Platform MRC via Bath MR/W004151/1
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (THS)Dates
01/07/2021 to 30/06/2025
RecUrrent Intra-articular Corticosteroid injections in Osteoarthritis; the RUbICOn study
Principal Investigator
Role
Co-Investigator
Description
Osteoarthritis is a condition that causes joints to become painful and stiff, it is a common cause of pain
and disability. Management of osteoarthritis involves reducing pain and maintaining function. Simple…Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (THS)Dates
01/03/2020 to 31/08/2022
Understanding the impact of HIV infection and its treatment on the effect menopause has on the musculoskeletal health of African women
Principal Investigator
Role
Collaborator
Description
The scale-up of antiretroviral treatment has dramatically improved survival, such that increasing numbers of women with chronic HIV are now reaching the menopause across Africa. The menopause is a period…Managing organisational unit
Dates
01/10/2019 to 31/07/2021
SPHERE2
Principal Investigator
Role
Co-Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Electrical & Electronic EngineeringDates
01/10/2018 to 31/01/2023
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Recent publications
07/01/2025Facilitating translation of trial findings into NHS practice
Bone and Joint Open
Improving patients’ experiences of diagnosis and treatment of vertebral fracture
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
In risk we trust? Making decisions about knee replacement
Social Science and Medicine
Intra-articular corticosteroid injections for osteoarthritis
PLoS ONE
Modelled cost-effectiveness analysis of the support and treatment after replacement (STAR) care pathway for chronic pain after total knee replacement compared with usual care
Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation