By Lucy Caulkett-
The Department Of Health and Social Care has appointed outstanding academic and researcher, Dr Gail Marzetti, as Director of Science, Research and Evidence. She will help lead National Institute for Health and Care Research
She will take over the role previously held by Dr Louise Wood in July.
She has a wealth of experience and an interest in the inclusion of vulnerable and marginalised people into research. She is an Agricultural Economist with a strong background in development, having worked for many years in Brazil and Mozambique.
A senior civil servant with 25 years of experience across a range of policy areas, she joined DHSC in March 2020 and is currently Director of Refugees and Head of International Workforce. Prior to this she worked for the Department for International Development (DfID) for over 20 years. This included six years as one of the team that established DfID’s Research and Evidence Division, putting evidence at the heart of policy and programmes. More recently she was head of DfID Myanmar, leading the UK response to the Rohingya crisis, and before that head of DfID Nepal.
She has worked for DFID since 2000 in a variety of roles including Head of Office, United Nations/DFID representative and most recently as Deputy Director of DFID’s Research and Evidence Division. Her areas of research are broad, including: suicide and self-harm; LGBT health, education and community; qualitative research; research ethics and researcher self-care; and mental health research
Helping to lead the NIHR and steer research across health and social care, Dr Gail Marzetti will work under the direction of Professor Lucy Chappell, Chief Scientific Adviser to DHSC and Chief Executive of the NIHR. She brings with her a wealth of relevant experience with a background in research funding and a track record in the inclusion of vulnerable and marginalised people.
NIHR aims to improve the health and wealth of the nation through research. Their research helps discover new treatments, improve diagnosis, advance medical technologies and bolster health and care services.
Health research was fundamental in tackling Covid and the NIHR was integral to this. They co-funded and supported the research behind the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine as well as dexamethasone, the first effective treatment of Covid.
NIHR researchers have reported more than 6,500 cases where their research has influenced health and care policy or impacted on practice and guidelines in the last 10 years.
Minister for Innovation, Lord Kamall, said:
”Health and care research is crucial to transform our health service and ensure the NHS is able to deliver world-class care.
It has been vital in our fight against Covid and in saving thousands of lives – whether through the rapid creation of vaccines or the identification of life-saving treatments like dexamethasone.
I want to thank and pay tribute to Dr Louise Wood for her incredible work and leadership. I know Dr Gail Marzetti will build on Dr Woods’ contribution, working alongside Professor Lucy Chappell to ensure the UK remains a world-leader in diverse, ground-breaking research.
Professor Lucy Chappell, Chief Executive of the NIHR and Chief Scientific Adviser at DHSC, said:
This is an exciting new chapter for NIHR.
Louise will be hugely missed, but I am confident Dr Marzetti brings with her a wealth of experience with a background in research funding and an interest in underserved communities. She will be well placed to help deliver the strategic aims of NIHR, focusing on improving care and outcomes for patients and the public, and tackling inequalities across health and care.
Dr Gail Marzetti, incoming Director of Science, Research and Evidence, said: ” I’m thrilled to be joining the leadership of NIHR and once again working in the field of research and evidence. So many of NIHR’s strategic priorities are about inclusion and health inequalities, topics close to my heart, and I’m excited to bring my experience to bear both on NIHR’s national work and on its work in low and middle income countries. I look forward to collaborating with colleagues across the health and care research sector to help NIHR deliver against its vital mission.
Dr Louise Wood has been in DHSC since 2005 and played an instrumental role alongside Dame Sally Davies and Sir Chris Whitty. Louise has co-lead the organisation with great integrity and passion, having watched it grow from inception.