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John Wright FRCP FFPH FRSA is a British specialist in epidemiology, an applied researcher, and a doctor in the National Health Service (NHS). He established the Bradford Institute for Health Research, based at Bradford Royal Infirmary, in 2007, based at the Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

His interests in early life health and disease prevention led to his launching the Born in Bradford longitudinal birth cohort – a research study that has been featured as a long-running BBC Radio 4 radio series 3 hosted by Winifred Robinson for more than a decade.

The project also played a key role in cementing Bradford’s successful bid to become UK City of Culture in 2025. Wright also designed a first-of-its-kind study that uses medical research to measure the benefits arts and culture can have on the health and wellbeing of the local population.

He has authored over 500 papers and been awarded over £150 million in research award funding, £50 million as chief investigator.

Early life and education
Wright grew up in Romford where he went to St Edmund Campion comprehensive school. He trained as a doctor at the University of Leeds where he received his Mb ChB in 1987 and trained in hospital medicine gaining his MRCP in 1990.

He worked in rural district hospital in Eswatini between 1990-92 and then returned to do public health training in Yorkshire.

Professional career
Wright became a consultant in clinical epidemiology at Bradford Royal Infirmary in 1996 and authored three books on health needs assessment, global public health and clinical governance. In 2004 he was appointed Director of Research.

He established the Born in Bradford longitudinal birth cohort study in 2006. The study recruited almost 14,000 mothers and their partners in pregnancy and has followed the lives of 13,500 children born in the city between 2007-2011.

In January 2022, plans were unveiled by Wright to build on this study by launching a new health research project called Age of Wonder with the aim of tracking more than 30,000 adolescents on their journey into adulthood. The seven-year study was backed by a £7m grant from the Wellcome Trust.

He leads the ActEarly City Collaboratory programme, funded by the Medical Research Council to develop ways to improve the health and life chances of children living in deprived communities.

He established the Bradford Institute for Health Research in 2007, uniting NHS organisations and the University of Bradford, University of Leed s and University of York to develop a centre for applied health research. In 2019 he established the Wolfson Centre for Applied Health Research.

He set up the Yorkshire and Humber Improvement Academy in 2013 to support the translation of research evidence into clinical practice. In 2017 he established the Connected Bradford programme to safely and securely link health, education, environmental and social care data for over 600,000 citizens.

He has run an international health partnership with Good Shepherd Hospital in the Lubombo region of Swaziland for over 25 years. In 2002, the link-up benefited from a £120,000 donation 31 from the Foundation set up by the British singer, pianist and composer Sir Elton John to help fight AIDS.

In 2021, he was instrumental in launching City of Research, a new initiative to encourage more volunteers from across Bradford, Airedale and Craven to sign up to take part in health research.

He is also a strong advocate of the new Clean Air Zone being introduced across Bradford

Media work
Since March 16 2020, the day of the first address to the nation on the pandemic by Prime Minister. Boris Johnson, he wrote the Coronavirus Doctor’s Diary, a weekly feature commissioned and hosted by BBC News.

Between March 2020 and May 2021, 47 of his diaries were published.

Entries covered a fascinating range of COVID-related subjects, ranging from The Yorkshire cemetery struggling to keep up with burials to The fake news about schools that's misleading parents.

Many of his diary entries were also featured in other national media, such as the Daily Mirror 13 and The Sun

He also recorded from the COVID wards at Bradford Royal Infirmary for BBC Radio 4's The NHS Front Line.

The series was named Podcast of the Year 2021 by the Medical Journalists’ Association.

His fly-on-the wall experiences were later captured in a book. The Coronavirus Doctor’s Diary: Stories from the NHS Frontline, which was launched at the Bradford Literary Festival in 2022. Many of the characters and stories were used as the basis for the Sky Atlantic series This England directed by Michael Winterbottom.

As one of the initial wave of medics to travel to the high-risk area, has also reported for the BBC  for series on Ebola in Sierra Leone.

Awards and recognition
He was elected a Fellow of Faculty of Public Health in 2001, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 2005 and Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 2022

In 2015 he was awarded the Ebola Medal for Service in West Africa, known simply as the Ebola Medal, for his work in leading the response to the Ebola epidemic in Sierra Leon e with Médecins du Monde, also known as Doctors of the World.

It was the first time a medal had been created specifically to recognise those who have tackled a humanitarian crisis.

In 2020, he was awarded an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Health by the University of Bradford for his long-standing contribution to the field of healthcare and support for the University and wider Bradford community.

He is Visiting Professor at the University of Bradford, University of Leeds and University of York in the UK as well as the University of Adelaide, Australia

In 2021, Wright led the team that picked up a prestigious national local government award from the The Municipal Journal (MJ) for its partnership work during the COVID-19 pandemic. It secured its win in the ‘Innovation in Building Diversity’ category