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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
hospital consultation

Maximising the potential of new non-medical professional roles in general practice: Lessons from Greater Manchester

By Pauline Nelson Filed Under: All posts, Health and Care, Health and Social Care Posted: June 4, 2019

Increased patient demand and GP shortages have led to widespread strain on primary health services. In particular, GPs struggle in their unique roles as both expert medical generalists and holistic providers of patient-centred care. A greater ‘skill-mix’ for the coordination and delivery of care has been introduced, in order to ease capacity and widen support […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Good Health and Well-Being, care quality, Health & Social Care, NHS, NHS improvement, public health

Maximising opportunities to engage healthcare professionals in public health policy

By Chris Keyworth Filed Under: All posts, Health and Social Care Posted: May 22, 2019

‘Prevention’ continues to grow as a focus of public health policy, seeking to enhance general well-being across a population and to avoid the potential future costs of treatment for avoidable conditions. Here, Chris Keyworth discusses one of the NHS’ flagship prevention initiatives, ‘Making Every Contact Count’. Making Every Contact Count has been designed to form […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Good Health and Well-Being, behavioural science, care quality, Health & Social Care, NHS, prevention, public health

Power plant

Net-zero target by 2050? We can do better than that

By Simon Bullock Filed Under: Cities and Environment, Renewables, Science and Engineering Posted: May 16, 2019

Simon Bullock is a PhD student at Tyndall Manchester, working on shipping and climate change. In this blog Simon discusses the Net Zero report published this month by the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) and argues that under the principles the CCC is rightly advocating, this 2050 date is too late. This month the Committee […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Climate Action, #SDG Industry Innovation and Infrastructure, #SDG Reduced Inequalities, #SDG Sustainable Cities and Communities, Business Energy & Industry, carbon budget, climate change, environment, inequalities, net zero, sustainability, Tyndall, Tyndall Centre

Critical social infrastructure for older people

By Sophie Yarker Filed Under: Growth and Inclusion Posted: May 1, 2019

Sophie Yarker is a Research Fellow at the Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing (MICRA), working on the Greater Manchester-based Ambition for Ageing programme. In this blog, she discusses her research into the importance of social infrastructure for older people and the need to think about it in new ways. Face-to-face interactions are the […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Industry Innovation and Infrastructure, #SDG Reduced Inequalities, #SDG Sustainable Cities and Communities, ageing, ageing society, Business Energy & Industry, inequalities, loneliness, micra, older people, sustainability, urban

Fixing the NHS in England: what do NHS England’s proposed changes to legislation mean?

By Kath Checkland Filed Under: All posts, Health and Social Care Posted: April 30, 2019

Professor Kath Checkland of the University’s Health Organisation, Policy and Economics unit (HOPE) investigates what the legislative changes accompanying the Government’s new ‘Long-Term Plan’ for the NHS actually mean in practice. Proposals for legislative change have been included in the Government’s new ‘Long-Term Plan’ for the NHS in an attempt to counteract some of the unhelpful consequences […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Good Health and Well-Being, #SDG Reduced Inequalities, Health & Social Care, Health and Social Care Act, HOPE, inequalities, NHS, NHS England

Setting climate targets: when is net zero really net zero?

By Jaise Kuriakose, James Mason and Brendan Moore Filed Under: Energy and Environment Posted: April 15, 2019

‘Net zero’ and ‘carbon neutral’ have quickly become the go-to phrases for ambitious declarations on climate change action. But what do ‘net zero’, ‘zero carbon’ or ‘carbon neutral’ actually mean in practice? As climate action targets are increasingly announced both locally and nationally, it’s even more important that the assumptions involved are properly understood to […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Affordable and Clean Energy, #SDG Climate Action, #SDG Sustainable Cities and Communities, carbon budget, carbon emissions, Carbon Neutrality, carbon reduction, climate change, Climate Policy, energy, net zero, sustainability, Tyndall

How policy instrument choice will shape attitudes to negative emissions

Terri Lucas By Terri Lucas Filed Under: Energy and Environment Posted: April 11, 2019

The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change has set out commitments to limit the increase in global average temperature to “well below 2°C and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C”. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has concluded that this is still possible, but nearly all of their scenarios assume that it will require […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Affordable and Clean Energy, #SDG Climate Action, #SDG Industry Innovation and Infrastructure, BECCS, bioenergy, Business Energy & Industry, carbon emissions, carbon reduction, climate change, energy, environment, NETs, social opinion

Improving the census question on ‘language’ could help repair community relations and Britain’s international image post-Brexit

Yaron Matras By Yaron Matras Filed Under: Growth and Inclusion Posted: April 1, 2019

Yaron Matras, Professor of Linguistics, discusses the importance of changing the census question “What is your main language?” and the impact this change could have. The census question on language lacks a clear definition of what it means by ‘main language’ and forces multilingual households to select just one language. The Brexit debate includes conversations […]

Tagged With: #SDG, #SDG Reduced Inequalities, Arts & Culture, Brexit, census, census data, communities, European Day of Languages, European Union, inequalities, international relations, language, language diversity, multilingual

Fuel poverty and low-carbon investment: a role for area-based policy?

picture of Stefan By Stefan Bouzarovski Filed Under: Energy and Environment, Growth and Inclusion Posted: March 25, 2019

The GMCA plans to launch a five year plan for carbon neutrality in Greater Manchester by 2038 at the Green Summit today. Stefan Bouzarovski, Professor of Human Geography, will be hosting a discussion table at the public sector space within the Green Summit. Here, he blogs about the importance of area-based fuel poverty and energy […]

Tagged With: #SDG Affordable and Clean Energy, #SDG Climate Action, #SDG No Poverty, #SDG Reduced Inequalities, #SDG Sustainable Cities and Communities, area-based policy, climate change, energy, fuel poverty, Green Summit, Green Summit 2019, inequalities, local government, poverty, sustainability

Worryingly windy weather or a strong tail-wind?

By Laurence Stamford Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Renewables Posted: March 19, 2019

On the 7 March, the long awaited “Offshore Wind Sector Deal” was launched, laying out the UK Government’s vision for the future of offshore wind power to 2030. So far, responses to the deal have been somewhat mixed: it’s been welcomed by various industry players as a sign of the Government’s commitment, but has faced […]

Tagged With: #SDG Affordable and Clean Energy, #SDG Climate Action, #SDG Industry Innovation and Infrastructure, #SDG Responsible Production and Consumption, Business Energy & Industry, climate change, consumption, energy, renewables, sustainability, wind power

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