The Team
Prof Farooq has international reputation for research in global and public health mental health and working with disadvantaged communities exposed to violence and trauma. He has worked in Pakistan for more than a decade and led several studies that developed and evaluated interventions for use in the humanitarian crisis and improving treatment outcomes for sever mental illness. His research is funded by Medical Research Council and the National Institute of Health Research, UK. He is currently leading a randomised controlled trial of an innovative intervention to improve treatment adherence in schizophrenia which is based on approach used Tuberculosis control worldwide. Prof Farooq is academic secretary for the West Midlands division of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, executive committee member of the academic faculty of the College and is also member of editorial boards of several peer reviewed journals.
My main areas of interest and expertise include the primary care management of people with mental health problems, multiple health conditions and unexplained symptoms; and the mental health of clinicians. I have qualitative research methods expertise, drawing on theories from social sciences and psychology, but always with a focus on clinical practice – trying to answer questions that are important to patients, their families, health care professionals and the NHS.
I am Chair of RCGP ‘Research Paper of the Year’ panel and I am RCGP ‘Curriculum Advisor, Mental Health’. I am Chair of the Society of Academic Primary Care.
I am currently a member of the NICE Clinical Guideline Development Group Depression (update) and a standing member of a NICE Quality Standards Advisory Group - work which directly impacts on commissioning decisions and patient care. I am Editor-in-Chief of the journal Health Expectations.
Dr Kingstone returned to Keele in 2012 having been accepted for an Acorn PhD Studentship. His PhD thesis explored lived experiences of chronic pain among rural dwelling older adults to identify factors to support ageing well. He is now a post-doctoral Research Associate in Mental Health, which is a joint role between the School for Primary, Community and Social Care (Keele University) and the Research and Innovation Department (Midlands Partnership NHS Foundation Trust). He is a key member of the Mental Health Research Programme and works to deliver a joint research strategy shared between the two organisations.
Dr Tajuria’s expertise is in qualitative research, loss and bereavement, learning disabilities, and creative methods in research. She is interested in inclusive research and looking at the effects of loss and bereavement on people’s mental health.