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Caitlin Pilbeam
Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University of Oxford
Caitlin Pilbeam is an interdisciplinary medical anthropologist with expertise in applied international health research and qualitative methods.2 She has a passion for holistic well-being.234 Pilbeam's experience includes conducting studies, evaluations, ethnography, capacity-building, and teaching.2
Pilbeam's previous positions include:
- Research Fellow at the Australian National University (May 2022 – April 2023)2
- Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University (July 2021 – June 2022)2
- Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Oxford (March 2021 – March 2022), where she held the Mildred Blaxter Postdoctoral Research Fellowship from the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness.2 During this time, she used medical sociological and anthropological insights to challenge dominant narratives of dying and explore how to better understand 'quality' towards end of life.2
- Postdoctoral Researcher with the Epidemic diseases Research Group Oxford (ERGO) at the University of Oxford (February 2020 – March 2021), where she conducted qualitative and mixed-methods research with partners, including the World Health Organisation, into high consequence infectious disease outbreaks.2
- Course Coordinator & Tutor at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford (August 2019 – March 2022), contributing to the design and delivery of qualitative research courses for health professionals and students.2 She also contributed to teaching on the MSc in Evidence Based Medicine, and MSc and MPhil in Medical Anthropology at the University of Oxford.2
- Honorary Academic at the School of Nursing, University of Auckland (January 2020 – January 2021).2
- PhD Researcher at the University of Oxford (October 2016 – September 2019), where she conducted a 2-year ethnography in the UK on living well whilst dying for those with chronic degenerative (terminal) conditions.2
Pilbeam holds a PhD in Primary Care and Medical Anthropology from the University of Oxford (2016-2019), an MSc in Medical Anthropology from the University of Oxford (2015-2016), and a Bachelor of Arts in Social and Biological Anthropology from Durham University (2012-2015).2 She also has several licenses and certifications, including SPELL Framework Training, Informed Consent with Adults Lacking Capacity, Good Clinical Practice (Primary Care), and Mental Health First Aid for Adults.2 She is proficient in English, Spanish, and French.2
Pilbeam's research has covered topics such as COVID-19 policy dynamics, healthcare worker experiences during the pandemic, end-of-life care, and methodological and ethical considerations in qualitative research.1
