Showing 9200 results

  • Biodiversity and wellbeing on our doorstep - Greenspace mapping of the NHS Scotland Estate

    • 22 October 2024
    • Blog posts
    • Place

    Andrew Gasiorowski, Principal Information Development Manager from PHS’s Geospatial team and Alba Rozalen Gonzalez, Senior Health Improvement Officer from our Climate and Sustainable Environments team, talk about a recent PHS report on Greenspace and how the data can be used to create benefit for the environment and people’s health.

  • Transport Poverty: A Public Health Issue, One Year On

    • 08 October 2024
    • Blog posts
    • Poverty

    Transport Poverty is one area that is being highlighted during Challenge Poverty Week as the key theme for today. It has serious health and social implications, limiting people's ability to meet daily needs and enjoy a good quality of life.

  • Vaccinations in Pregnancy - Best for babies and parents

    • 06 November 2024
    • Blog posts

    Pregnancy is also the start of an immunisation journey. We’re all familiar with the vaccines that are offered to us throughout our lives to protect us from diseases. Those offered during pregnancy can protect mothers and their babies from the risks of serious illness - both during pregnancy and on into babies’ early vital days.

  • HPV – cancers, warts and all

    • 13 December 2024
    • Blog posts
    • Cancer

    Dr Claire Cameron, Consultant in Health Protection at PHS, writes about the Human Papillomavirus Virus (HPV) and how Scotland has committed to its eradication.

  • Gaining the best value for local economies and health through Community Wealth Building in Scotland

    • 16 December 2024
    • Blog posts
    • Place

    Dr Fiona Scott, Public Health Registrar at NHS Tayside joined Public Health Scotland (PHS) for a year to work on the health impact assessment of community wealth building. Here, she reflects on the importance of the economy for health in local communities.

  • Taking a user-centred approach to waiting times

    • 10 December 2024
    • Blog posts
    • Waiting times

    Scott Heald, Director of Data and Digital Innovation and Head of Profession for Statistics at Public Health Scotland, discusses the importance of keeping people at the centre of data improvement.

  • Turning the tide on Tuberculosis with surveillance and solutions

    • 09 December 2025
    • Blog posts
    • Conditions and diseases

    With cases of Tuberculosis (TB) increasing in Scotland, Hazel Henderson, Consultant in Public Health and Lead of the Respiratory Bacterial Pathogens team at PHS, has written in our latest blog about the importance of surveillance in understanding and beating this persistent, curable and preventable disease.

  • COVID-19 vaccine eligibility: changes over time

    • 30 October 2025
    • Blog posts
    • Immunisations

    Viruses change over time and that means our public health response does too, which includes our vaccination programmes. Consultant in Public Health from our Vaccination and Immunisation Division Dr Daniel Chandler outlines changes to this year’s COVID-19 vaccination programme in our latest blog.

  • The village we need to build: Reflections on the Prevention 25 conference

    • 02 October 2025
    • Blog posts
    • Population health

    In our latest blog, Rishma Maini, Consultant in Public Health and Co-lead of Clinical Health Intelligence and Research Division at PHS, reflects on her recent attendance at the Scottish Prevention Hub’s conference in Edinburgh, which brought researchers, policy makers and community leaders together to discuss how we turn evidence into practice.

  • How the new maternal RSV vaccination prevents serious illness in Scotland: 219 babies and counting

    • 01 December 2025
    • Blog posts
    • Immunisations

    Public Health Scotland (PHS), in collaboration with the Universities of Glasgow, Strathclyde, Edinburgh and Oxford, have published a groundbreaking study in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, showing that infants under three months of age, whose mothers received the RSV vaccination during pregnancy, had around 80% reduced risk of hospitalisation due to an RSV infection compared to infants whose mothers were unvaccinated.