Dawn Edge
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Dawn Edge | |
|---|---|
| Born | Dawnette Ethilda Edge[1] |
| Alma mater | University of Salford University of Manchester |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Health research Schizophrenia Perinatal mental health Ethnicity[2] |
| Institutions | University of Manchester |
| Thesis | Perinatal depression among women of Black Caribbean origin : a longitudinal cohort study of prevalence, beliefs and attitudes to help seeking (2002) |
| Website | www |
Dawnette Ethilda Edge is a British medical researcher and senior lecturer in psychology, who is professor of mental health and inclusivity at the University of Manchester.[3][4][5] Her research investigates racial inequalities in mental health, including the origins of the overdiagnosis of schizophrenia in British African-Caribbean people.[2][6][7]
Edge studied healthcare and welfare at the University of Salford, where she graduated with first-class honours in 1993.[8] She eventually trained in social sciences, completing a master's degree in social sciences also at the University of Salford.[3] She also holds qualifications in teaching psychotherapy and is a member of the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy.[9]
Edge eventually joined the University of Manchester as a graduate student, where she was supported by the NHS North West partnership. Edge earned her doctorate in medical sociology in 2003.[5][10] Her doctoral research investigated maternal mental health and how Black mothers accessed mental health services before and after giving birth.[5]