ADR Wales Associate Director recognised in New Year’s Honours

Categories: ADR Wales, Health & wellbeing

20 January 2022

Professor Ronan Lyons was appointed OBE for his services to Research, Innovation and Public Health. Professor Lyons is a Clinical Professor of Public Health at Swansea University Medical School and one of the two Directors at the Population Data Science group. His research focuses on the secondary use of health information to support the targeting and evaluation of health and non-health service interventions to improve prevention, care and rehabilitation.

Co-Principal Investigator and Co-Director of the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank (funded by Health and Care Research Wales), said: “I am delighted and honoured to receive this award. It undoubtedly reflects the widespread appreciation of the contribution to society of the research we have conducted using the SAIL Databank. It is great recognition of our wonderful team science approach and national and international collaborations.”

Professor Lyons serves as a public health physician and epidemiologist, with more than 30 years of experience in clinical medicine, public health and health informatics in Ireland and the UK. His abiding interest in preventing, treating, and rehabilitating injuries was forged working in emergency departments.

Since the pandemic's start, Professor Lyons and the team have used insights from the rich health data in SAIL Databank to support governments. They provided intelligence to the Welsh Government's Technical Advisory Group, subsequently feeding into the UK’s SAGE (Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies). Their work has also supported the NHS, and vulnerable communities to combat the Covid-19 pandemic, so that they can protect and save lives now in the UK and globally.

Alongside other leading public health experts, Professor Lyons recently spoke to WalesOnline about the current Omicron variant’s potential impact to Wales based on data from previously dominant variants and other viral threats to public health:

"Probably by the end of February, infection rates will be substantially lower than now. There's lots of uncertainty about how quickly it will tail off. It depends on peoples' behaviour.

"When one virus replaces another, it becomes more transmissible but becomes milder and causes less severe damage. The impact on the population will be a lot less. When we get to that stage the interventions needed to protect the population will also be lessened.

"If you look back to a couple of months ago, we had several months where it felt like we were back to normal almost. Omicron didn't exist and it came along and surprised us. You do expect one to come along, particularly when large parts of the world remain unvaccinated. The proportion of the population who are compromised increases."

Professor Lyons is site director for Wales and Northern Ireland, Research Director and National Lead for Improving Public Health at Health Data Research UK (HDR UK). HDR UK is a £50+ million investment by UK research funders led by the Medical Research Council.

He is also Associate Director of ADR Wales, which is funded by the Economic Social Research Council, Deputy Director of the National Centre for Population Health & Wellbeing Research, Associate Director of the Medical Research Council’s Dementias Platform UK (DPUK) Data Portal and Co-Director of SeRP (the Secure eResearch Platform). His current grant portfolio exceeds £45 million.

Other senior roles include Adjunct Professor at Monash University, Australia; Honorary Consultant with Public Health Wales NHS Trust; and Chair of the International Collaborative Effort on Injury Statistics and Methods , which is funded by the Centre for Disease Control.

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