Oxford News
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences designated as the WHO Collaborating Centre on Primary Health Care
The four-year designation formalises and builds on the Department’s longstanding collaboration with the WHO, acknowledging its many years of expert support to countries working to strengthen primary health care.
With internationally recognised expertise in health systems analysis, evidence synthesis, clinical trials, digital health, qualitative research and implementation science, the Department is well placed to support the WHO and its Member States in strengthening primary health care-oriented health systems worldwide.
This latest designation follows the recent recognition of our Sustainable Healthy Food Group as the WHO Collaborating Centre for the Promotion of Healthy and Sustainable Diets, underscoring the breadth of the Department’s contribution to WHO’s global health agenda.
Supporting the WHO’s global health strategy
The new WHO Collaborating Centre will contribute to the implementation of the WHO’s 14th General Programme of Work (GPW14), the organisation’s global strategy setting out priorities and goals for improving health worldwide.
A central priority within GPW14, Strategic Objective 3, focuses on advancing the global primary health care approach. In practice, this means supporting countries to organise and strengthen their health systems so that high-quality care is delivered close to where people live, centred on people’s needs, and provided in a coordinated and sustainable way.
What the WHO Collaborating Centre will do
As a WHO Collaborating Centre, the Department will work closely with the WHO to strengthen primary health care through practical, evidence-informed support.
Its work will focus on three priority areas:
- Turning evidence into action
The Centre will synthesise research on priority issues identified by the WHO and translate findings into accessible policy briefs and knowledge products. These resources will support policymakers in designing and implementing reforms aligned with the WHO Operational Framework for Primary Health Care.
- Building leadership and shared learning
The Centre will facilitate global knowledge exchange through leadership development initiatives, training programmes and webinars. By bringing together policymakers, practitioners and researchers from around the world, these activities will promote shared learning and build capacity for primary health care reform.
- Developing tools to support country implementation
The Centre will contribute to the development and refinement of technical tools to help policymakers and planners reorient health systems towards a primary health care approach. This includes creating practical toolkits and sharing real-world examples that demonstrate effective models for strengthening community-based services.
Across all activities, the WHO will provide strategic direction and oversight to ensure alignment with Member State priorities.
A strategic partnership for global impact
The designation reflects both the depth of the Department’s expertise and the growing global recognition that strong primary health care is fundamental to advancing universal health coverage, reducing inequalities and thus improving population health.
Professor Irene Tracey, CBE, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, said: ‘The designation of the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences as a WHO Collaborating Centre on Primary Health Care reflects the University of Oxford’s enduring commitment to addressing the world’s most pressing health challenges through rigorous research and meaningful global partnership. Resilient, equitable primary health care systems are paramount to ensuring the wellbeing of the global population, and this collaboration exemplifies how universities can work with international organisations to deliver impact at scale.’
Dr Kalipso Chalkidou, Director of our Department of Performance, Financing and Delivery, said: ‘Partnerships are central to implementing our WHO strategy for global health. Advancing the primary health care approach lies at the heart of this strategy, making the establishment of this new WHO Collaborating Centre especially timely. I am therefore delighted that the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford has been designated as a WHO Collaborating Centre. Together, through our technical collaboration on Primary Health Care, we have a powerful opportunity to strengthen health systems and make a meaningful difference in people’s lives around the world.’
Professor Sir Aziz Sheikh, OBE, Head of the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences and Nuffield Professor of Primary Care Health Sciences, and a Director of the Collaborating Centre, said: ‘This designation is a tremendous honour for the Department and marks an important step in our ongoing partnership with WHO. It reflects a shared ambition to ensure that high-quality research informs real-world decision-making. As global health challenges grow more complex, closer collaboration between academic institutions and international organisations is essential. We are committed to contributing our expertise in support of countries working to strengthen and sustain health systems based on primary health care.’
Professor Michael Kidd AO, Professor of Global Primary Care and Future Health Systems at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, and a Director of the Collaborating Centre, said: ‘Primary health care is the foundation of effective, equitable health systems. We are honoured to be designated as a WHO Collaborating Centre on Primary Health Care. This partnership formalises our long-standing relationship with the WHO and strengthens our shared commitment to generating evidence that directly supports countries to improve the health and wellbeing of their populations.’
Dr Luke Allen, Co-Director of Global Primary Care and Future Health Systems at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, and a Director of the Collaborating Centre, added: ‘Countries are facing increasingly complex health challenges – from rising non-communicable diseases to ageing populations and the impacts of climate change. Primary Health Care offers the most equitable, sustainable, and cost-effective approach for engaging with these tectonic issues. By working closely with WHO, we can ensure that our Department’s cutting-edge evidence is directly translated into practical tools, policy briefs and learning platforms that support real-world action, supporting the ultimate mission of health for all.’
Over the next four years, the WHO Collaborating Centre on Primary Health Care will work closely with the WHO and its Member States to strengthen primary health care with practical, evidence-informed support. Through this formalised collaboration with the WHO, the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences will help ensure that high-quality research and global learning are translated into practical action, supporting countries to build stronger, more people-centred health systems and improve health outcomes worldwide.
Oxford News
Katy Perry forced to cancel gig ahead of Blenheim Festival
The 41-year-old pop icon was due to perform at Werchter Boutique festival in Belgium last night, Saturday, June 28, when the event was unexpectedly cut short.
The festival’s committee decided to end the day’s performances early, at 9pm just after a set from Pitbull, due to a weather forecast of ‘severe thunderstorms from midnight onwards at the earliest’ and a government warning.
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Perry wrote on Instagram: “Sadly my set at Werchter Boutique tonight can’t happen due to a government mandated cancellation because of the incoming inclement weather and crowd safety concerns.
“I was backstage at the show in the middle of hair and makeup when this news was delivered, and they gave me no choice.
“I am just as unhappy as you are. Unfortunately this is beyond my control, but the safety of all 55,000 of you always comes first and foremost.”
The performance was due to mark the popstar’s return to the one-day event held in Belgium’s Festivalpark for the first time in more than 15 years.
READ MORE: Sara Cox in new venture as UK charity collapses with £430k owed
Perry added: “I am sorry I can’t change the weather, and even sorrier that all of us can’t be together tonight. I was looking forward to being back after 17 years, I was even gonna wear the same outfit from that 2009 show again. I love you all, and please get home safe.”
It comes just a week before the star’s next scheduled festival appearance, at the brand-new Blenheim Festival in Wodostock, Oxfordshire, where she is due to perform on July 4.
The current forecast for that date is sunny skies and temperatures in the mid-20s.
Oxford News
BBOWT shares tips for helping wild bees this summer
CAN you imagine summer without the sight of bumblebees buzzing from flower to flower, or a summer lunch without juicy tomatoes or strawberries?
If we don’t help our wild bees, this could be a glimpse of the future.
Our bees are in trouble.
Bees pollinate flowers, but also many of our favourite food crops, equivalent to every third mouthful of food we eat.
But they’re losing the habitat and plants they need to survive.
In the countryside, 97 per cent of lowland meadow has already been lost and the dramatic decrease in suitable habitats isn’t just confined to rural areas.
Gardens used to act as ‘green corridors’ for wildlife to move around towns and cities, and into and out of urban areas, but are increasingly being paved over or even covered with fake grass – with no real plants at all.
Helping bees is easy though.
Anyone can take action to help wild bees whether you have a wall for vertical planting, window box, or back garden.
It’s easy to plant a bee haven and fun choosing between bee-friendly beauties like borage, foxglove and honeysuckle.
There are 15 million gardens in the UK.
Put together they cover an area that’s seven times the size of the Isle of Wight.
If we all made our gardens more bee-friendly it would have a huge impact on our wild bees.
So, what should you plant in your garden?
Bees need a supply of pollen and nectar throughout the year, from late winter/early spring when some emerge from their winter hibernation right through until the end of the year.
Plant a selection of perennials, such as bergamot, globe thistle and knapweeds, for pollen through the summer.
These will provide bees with food year after year.
Add a few annuals each year, such as borage, cornflower and sunflower for variety.
Later in the autumn, hebe and ivy provide food when summer plants have gone to seed.
Then make sure you’ve got a few winter-flowering crocuses and hellebores to help bees as they emerge on warmer winter or early spring days in need of food after their winter hibernation.
Did you know there are around 250 species of bee in the UK?
Just one species of bee, the honeybee, actually makes honey.
Then there are bumblebees, which are familiar to most of us, and many different kinds of solitary bee.
Solitary bees are fantastic pollinators for our garden plants.
They don’t live in colonies, but instead the females make their own nest without any ‘workers’ to help them.
Some make their nests in gaps in the walls of old buildings or dig holes in bare ground (look for small piles of earth with a tiny hole in the middle).
You can help some species of solitary bee in your garden by providing a ‘bee hotel’.
Cut lengths of old bamboo and tie together, or drill long holes in old pieces of wood.
Hang somewhere sunny and sheltered and, in time, the bees will move in.
The exposed cliffs at BBOWT’s Dry Sandford Pit nature reserve near Abingdon are a haven for many types of solitary bee, which burrow into the soft, sandy layers.
Look for the ‘honeycomb’ of tiny holes.
You may see the UK’s newest bumblebee in your garden – the tree bumblebee.
These were first recorded here in 2001 but they’ve now spread throughout much of England and Wales.
They have a distinctive ginger-coloured back (thorax) and black and white abdomen.
Some make their homes in old bird nest boxes as they prefer to nest above the ground.
Help ensure our bees’ survival by making your garden bee-friendly this summer.
You’ll be making a real difference to our bees and helping to ensure our summer strawberries are here to stay.
Find out more about bees and how to help them at bbowt.org.uk/different-kinds-bees.
Oxford News
Buckland Primary School Weins Homes Badbury Green village
Year Six pupils from Buckland Primary School visited Wain Homes’ Badbury Green site to learn about the housebuilding process and future career opportunities.
During the visit, students explored the stages of construction, the importance of green spaces, and the wide variety of roles available in the industry.
James Stevens, class teacher at Buckland Primary School, said: “Thank you to the Wain Homes team for giving our children an enjoyable and informative experience in a way they could easily understand.
“The children now have knowledge of how the homes they live in are built and some of the careers they may be interested in as they get older. They particularly enjoyed looking round the show homes and having a go at laying some bricks.”
The pupils toured two show homes and tried their hand at bricklaying.
A time capsule, filled with children’s notes describing life in 2026, was also buried during the visit, set to be be opened in 2076.
Tim Lund, regional sales director at Wain Homes, said: “We hope the visit inspired some of the children to consider construction as a future career. They were eager to learn and now understand each stage of the process of building a modern energy efficient home.”
Wain Homes is building 125 energy-efficient homes at the site.
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