PhD Candidate Methods for comparative assessment of the environmental impact of healthcare interventions
The Department of Epidemiology & Health Economics of the Julius Center offers an exciting position as PhD candidate to develop and validate tools that facilitate the consideration of the environmental impact in healthcare decision making.
Healthcare has a significant ecological impact. This underscores the urgency of integrating ecological sustainability into healthcare decision-making, i.e., considering and formally assessing the environmental burden caused by a healthcare intervention compared to an alternative, including the effects on air, land, water, and ecosystems. Such integration requires practical decision-support tools (DSTs) to incorporate environmental impact in care management decisions. The MECH-I project addresses this by creating two DSTs in co-creation with relevant stakeholders:
DECISION-I: A tool that aggregates the environmental impact of care pathways for comparative assessment.
DECISION-II: A tool that Integrates environmental impact into healthcare policy decisions.
By combining quantitative data with stakeholder-informed methods, MECH-I supports a transition to healthcare that is effective and environmentally responsible.
You will participate in developing these tools as part of a large national consortium consisting of clinical epidemiologists, health economists, implementation scientists, ethicists, sustainability & planetary health experts, policy makers, and insurers. Key activities in your PhD will be: (i) performing desk research, i.e., reviewing scientific literature and policy documents, (ii) conducting stakeholder consultations to prioritize and weight environmental impact measures, (iii) developing two decision support tools (see above) and testing these in specific case studies, and (iv) developing together with end-users guidance to guarantee relevance and usability of the tools.
Department of Epidemiology and Health Economics
In this position, you will work and be supervised in the Department of Epidemiology and Health Economics of the Julius Center at the UMC Utrecht. Specifically, you will work in the Methods of Epidemiological Research team; in this team we evaluate and develop new research methods and guidelines for the evaluation of different types of innovations. You will be part of an energetic, enthusiastic team of more than 30 colleagues from different backgrounds. The Julius Center has an extensive national and international network.
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