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The Pandemic Institute partners with Aviva to fund vital COVID-19 recovery research

Aerial shot of the Spine building (Pandemic Institute host) overlaid with The Pandemic Institute logo

The Pandemic Institute (TPI) has announced that eight diverse research projects to assess the longer-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on UK and global health have been awarded funding following a £225k donation by leading UK insurer Aviva.

The investment by Aviva aims to build strong, sustainable, resilient communities that are better prepared for future crisis events on the scale of COVID-19 pandemic.

Many innovative research applications were received following the Institute’s funding call in September 2022, inviting project proposals from founding partner institutions including the University of Liverpool, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and Liverpool City Council.

One project will provide a proof of concept to help forecast winter pressures at the level of individual NHS Hospital Trusts, a vital component of hospital planning which is likely to become more challenging in future years.  Another will assess the long-term impacts of the pandemic on accessing health and social care for dementia.

The full list of research projects that will be supported by the Aviva funding is:

The Pandemic Institute aims to build strong, sustainable, resilient communities that are better prepared for future crisis events on the scale of COVID-19 pandemic. The Pandemic Institute has a strategic focus on potential pathogenic global threats including influenza and Mpox, Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever to Ebola and Japanese encephalitis. COVID-19 research however, still has a prominent role in as the pandemic and its effects continue to evolve both in the UK and also globally.

Professor Tom Solomon, director of The Pandemic Institute, said: “We are very proud to announce these eight research projects into differing strands of COVID-19, which have been made possible by Aviva’s generous grant. This will help us take further steps forward in continuing to tackle COVID-19 and also to be better prepared for the future. The work we do from Liverpool has national and international impact and being able to further expand our research through these eight submissions will help keep us at the fore of the challenges around and solutions to COVID-19 and how best to recover from a pandemic.”

David Schofield, Group Sustainability Director at Aviva said: “As the UK’s leading insurer, Aviva exists to be there for our customers when it really matters. Part of Aviva’s Sustainability Ambition is to make 10 million people more resilient by 2025, as part of this we’re committed to help build health and wellbeing resilience by investing in the big challenges our customers and communities face. Funding research into how we can build stronger communities is so important. We are delighted to be able support The Pandemic Institute and look forward to the outcomes of this work.”

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