Available
Project number:
2025_09
Start date:
October 2025
Project themes:
Main supervisor:
Senior Lecturer
Co-supervisor:
Professor Wei Liu
Additional Information:
Co-designing a virtual reality mindfulness application with people with diabetes to reduce diabetes distress and improve quality of life
Background: Diabetes (type 1 and type 2) is a chronic metabolic disease with long-term complications such as blindness, stroke, or renal failure. There were 422 million people with diabetes in 2014, with disease prevalence rising worldwide (WHO, 2024). Effective management requires daily self-care including a healthy diet, physical activity, blood glucose monitoring, and medication. The intensity of daily self-care tasks and fear of diabetic complications can cause psychological issues such as diabetic distress, prevalent in 36% of people with diabetes which is negatively associated with self-management and HbA1c level (Perrin et al., 2017).
Novelty & importance: Mindfulness, a third-wave cognitive therapy, emphasises awareness and non-judgmental acceptance of thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations. It is used as a non-pharmacological strategy to reduce diabetes distress and HbA1c levels (Ngan et al., 2021). However, face-to-face programmes are limited by cost, poor accessibility, lack of availability, and drop out. Digital mindfulness apps may address these issues, but a review found many apps are not mindfulness-related and few are high quality with limited visualisations and feedback (Mani et al., 2015). Virtual reality (VR) apps for mindfulness offer more immersive, audio-visual environments and show some improvement in anxiety, depression, and sleep but none are designed and tested with people with diabetes (Ma et al., 2022).
Aims & objectives. The project aims to co-design a virtual reality (VR) based mindfulness application with people with diabetes and to determine if this novel digital mental health tool can reduce diabetes distress and improve quality of life.
We are now accepting applications for 1 October 2025
How to apply
Candidates should possess or be expected to achieve a 1st or upper 2nd class degree in a relevant subject including the biosciences, computer science, mathematics, statistics, data science, chemistry, physics, and be enthusiastic about combining their expertise with other disciplines in the field of healthcare.
Important information for International Students:
It is the responsibility of the student to apply for their Student Visa. Please note that the EPSRC DRIVE-Health studentship does not cover the visa application fees or the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) required for access to the National Health Service. The IHS is mandatory for anyone entering the UK on a Student Visa and is currently £776 per year for each year of study. Further detail can be found under the International Students tab below.
Next Steps
- Applications submitted by the closing date of Thursday 6 February 2025 will be considered by the CDT. We will contact shortlisted applicants with information about this part of the recruitment process.
- Candidates will be invited to attend an interview. Interviews are projected to take place in April 2025.
- Project selection will be through a panel interview chaired by either Professor Richard Dobson and Professor Vasa Curcin (CDT Directors) followed by informal discussion with prospective supervisors.
- If you have any questions related to the specific project you are applying for, please contact the main supervisor of the project directly.
For any other questions about the recruitment process, please email us at