Research Community

These pages provide a 'who's who' of UK research centres and researchers conducting research with Serving and ex-Service personnel and their families, including detail of their specific areas of focus and expertise. The purpose of these pages is to connect researchers with shared interests and orientate service providers and policy makers to who is doing research in key areas of interest. If you would like your information added to this page please email [email protected]

Research Home
  • PhD Student Amanda Bonson

    London, United Kingdom

    Amanda Bonson is a PhD student and a qualified Cognitive Behavioural Therapist. She currently works as a Research Therapist at Combat Stress, the UK's leading Veterans' mental health charity, where she is delivering a novel treatment of moral injury to military Veterans. Amanda's PhD thesis will be an exploration of predictors of treatment outcomes for UK military Veterans with moral injury. Amanda has a special interest in translational research in clinical treatment of trauma, particularly in military and Veteran populations. 

    Affiliation

    • Combat Stress and King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
  • Anna Verey

    London, United Kingdom

    Anna is a Research Associate at KCMHR where she currently leads the qualitative component of ADVANCE-INVEST, a long-term project investigating the experiences and outcomes of battlefield casualties who have left the military. She has previously worked on KCMHR 'Support to Families of Wounded, Injured, or Sick (WIS) Service Personnel – An Investigation of Current Service Provision' Study and 'Potential Gaps and Service Parents’ and Adolescents’ Challenges and Experiences' Study. Anna is particularly interested in post-deployment transition, Veterans and their families, peer support and co-production, Serving/ex-Serving fathers with PTSD and their families, and WIS Service personnel.

    Affiliation

    • King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
  • PhD Student Bethany Croak

    London, United Kingdom

    Bethany Croak is a PhD student and researcher at the King’s Centre for Military Health Research.   Bethany worked in NHS mental health services before joining King’s Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR), King’s College London, four years ago. She has collaborated on various research projects focusing on the mental health of ex-Armed Forces personnel. Bethany is currently working as a research assistant on a project that aims to identify barriers to female Veterans making a successful transition into civilian life.  Bethany’s PhD focuses on the impact of COVID-19 on the mental health, well-being and occupational outcomes of lower-paid NHS staff and her research interests include occupational mental health and healthcare inequalities.

    Affiliation

    • King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
  • Cardiff University Traumatic Stress Research Group

    Cardiff, United Kingdom

    The Traumatic Stress Research Group is an interdisciplinary team with a mission to improve the health and well-being of individuals exposed to traumatic events. The organization aims to improve understanding of traumatic stress through high-quality, externally funded research, as well as develop effective and cost-efficient interventions for individuals experiencing psychosocial difficulties after traumatic incidents. They also aim to build strong interdisciplinary global collaborations, increase research capacity in the traumatic stress field, and disseminate evidence-based knowledge. 

    The logo for Cardiff University.

    Affiliation

    • Cardiff University
  • Centre for Blast Injury Studies

    London, United Kingdom

    The Centre for Blast Injury Studies at Imperial College was established in 2008 following Operation Herrick and aims to capture the hard-learned lessons that produced record levels of survivorship and learn lessons for future conflicts on how to further increase survivability. Their work aims to understand the long-term outcomes of survivors with previously un-survivable injuries and develop medical interventions for injured survivors as they age. The centre is interdisciplinary, bringing engineers, medics, and scientists together to address difficult issues, and translational- driving societal benefits and changes in acute medical care, equipment improvements such as PPE and vehicle design, testing of equipment through new surrogates for use in blast/trauma setting, and changes to relevant UK and NATO Standards

    Affiliation

    • Imperial College London

    Contact

  • Centre for Military Women’s Research

    Chelmsford, United Kingdom

    The Centre for Military Women’s Research (CMWR)’s core mission is to inform and improve the well-being of women in the military and Veteran community through world-leading collaborative research and evaluation. Their work highlights women’s experiences, issues, and support needs and the centre is dedicated to fostering co-production with members of the military community and collaboration with partners and stakeholders.

    Affiliation

    • Anglia Ruskin University

    Contact