Dr. Annalijn Conklin

Assistant Professor, University of British Columbia

Social determinants of health, Social policy, Food and nutrition, Obesity, Gender, Gender and health, Social influences on men and women in health, Economic influences on diet quality and obesity, Chronic disease management

Media

Social Isolation Tied to High Blood Pressure in Women

Obesity in older women linked to lack of social ties, UBC study

Social isolation puts women at higher risk of hypertension

Health effects of social isolation strikingly different in older men and women: study

Obesity linked to social ties in older women, more so than in men

Biography

Dr. Annalijn Conklin is a former CIHR Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA’s WORLD Policy Analysis Center following the completion of her PhD from the University of Cambridge. She also holds an Bachelor of Science (Honours) from the University of Toronto, a research Master of Science from the University of Edinburgh, and a Master of Public Health from Columbia University. Conklin’s research examines the broader social-level factors that influence nutrition-related behaviours and outcomes among adult populations, with a strong policy interest in better designing and evaluating interventions to prevent and manage chronic conditions. She uses novel approaches to assess how social and economic factors predict individual variations in diet and weight status using existing survey data.

Previously, Conklin worked as an analyst at RAND Europe, a not-for-profit research organization, for four years and thus brings a strong background and research experience in health policy, evidence reviews, and evaluation. In addition to over two dozen technical reports, she has published articles on a variety of public health topics including disease management evaluation, integrated care, public involvement in health decision-making, and gender, human rights, and global health.

Additional Titles and Affiliations

Scientist at the Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences

http://www.cheos.ubc.ca/

Expertise

  • Social determinants of health
  • Social policy
  • Food and nutrition
  • Obesity
  • Gender and health
  • Social influences on men and women in health
  • Economic influences on diet quality and obesity
  • Chronic disease management