PhD Studentship: The experience and impact of workplace bullying on the mental health and wellbeing of women nurses working in healthcare settings in the UK: a qualitative feminist intersectional perspective.

Updated: about 1 month ago
Location: Guildford, ENGLAND
Deadline: 11 May 2025

This fully funded (fees + stipend) PhD studentship sits within a Wellcome Trust-funded project: Revisioning distress and suicidality in women nurses through a feminist, critical suicidology lens .

You’ll be based in the School of Health Sciences and be part of a supportive and vibrant research community within the Workforce, Organisation and Wellbeing expert group.

You’ll have the opportunity to design a research project that may include these objectives:

  • To characterise how workplace bullying affects the mental health and wellbeing of diverse nurses
  • To identify any links between bullying, distress and suicidal distress
  • To identify the manifestations of bullying and contexts in which they are experienced
  • To investigate nurses’ experiences of reporting bullying and to what extent justice was sought or awarded
  • To use the findings to identify recommendations for workforce policy and practice
  • Proposed Methodology

    In line with methodology underpinning the Wellcome Trust Project, we propose a feminist intersectional approach employing qualitative methods.

    Support

    You’ll have a knowledgeable and supportive supervisory team and access to clinical supervision to provide regular emotional and psychological support throughout your PhD.

    Supervisors: Dr Ruth Riley and Professor Aimee Aubeeluck

    Entry requirements

    Open to candidates who pay UK/home rate fees. See UKCISA for further information . Starting October 2025.

    You’ll need to meet the minimum entry requirements for our PhD programme .

    • Completed a MSc/MA, achieving a 2:1 or above in your degree and dissertation module.
    • Some experience of undertaking qualitative research at postgraduate level and/or through work experience.
    • Ability to undertake academic research, organise own research activities to agreed deadlines and standards.
    • Good understanding of how qualitative data are analysed, presented and interpreted.
    • Ability to develop internal and external contacts to enhance knowledge and understanding, and form relationships for future collaboration.
    • Ability to work as part of a team and independently using own initiative.
    • Excellent written and oral communication skills with the ability to communicate complex information effectively to different audiences.
    • Ability to take on board and apply constructive feedback
    • Alignment with a feminist-intersectional perspective and wider-project values
    • Understanding of healthcare contexts
    • Willingness to travel

    The University of Surrey welcomes diverse communities and we strive to be inclusive. We particularly encourage applications from nurses and/or people from ethnically diverse backgrounds, and communities who are underrepresented at the University. We offer family-friendly, flexible working arrangements, with forums and inclusive facilities to support our staff and students. We can offer hybrid working but aren’t able to offer a fully remote PhD.

    How to apply

    Applications should be submitted via the Health Sciences PhD  programme page.

    Please complete the PhD application form, uploading an anonymised CV and cover letter as part of the online application, detailing how you meet the criteria. In your cover letter, please indicate your preferred PhD topic (bullying, whistleblowing or either). Shortlisted applicants will need to provide transcripts from their MSc and two references.

    Funding

    We offer a full UKRI-rate stipend (£20,780 for 2025-26, pro rata for part-time) and home fees for 3 years or part-time equivalent. If part-time, thesis must be submitted by June 2029.

    Application deadline

    11 May 2025

    Enquiries

    Contact Hilary Causer and Anna Conolly

    Ref

    PGR-2425-032