
Dr Peter Tammes
MsC, PhD
Current positions
Senior Research Associate
Bristol Medical School (PHS)
Contact
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Research interests
Peter Tammes is a quantitative researcher with a background in Sociology, whose research interests lie in the field of social cohesion and inequality. He applies epidemiological and quantitative methodological techniques using longitudinal data to a wide range of research questions. His key questions relate to (i) the organisation of healthcare to improve the sustainability of the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK, to meet the needs of different patient groups, (ii) Jewish survival chances during the Holocaust, contributing to our knowledge of this very sensitive and dark period in human history and (iii) assimilation trajectories of minority groups in Western Europe, in order to better understand assimilation and integration.
At Bristol Medical School: Population Health Sciences, Centre for Academic Primary Care (CAPC), his research on the organization of healthcare focuses mainly on continuity of primary care and medicines prescribing and the impact on patients’ health and healthcare service use. In this work he uses routine/administrative and survey data, including electronic patients’ records and GP-patient survey. His work is published in a wide range of medical journals such as Annals of Family Medicine, BJGP, BMC Health Services Research, BMJ, BMJ Open, Emergency Medicine Journal and The Lancet.
He has been involved in teaching and supervision of undergraduate students in History, Sociology and Medical departments at different universities in the Netherlands and the UK. At Bristol Medical School, he has been a tutor on the Social and Behavioural Science in Medicine course and the Evidence Based Medicine course for first-year medical students for several years.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
COVID Longitudinal Linkage Collaboration (LLC)
Role
Researcher
Managing organisational unit
Dates
01/11/2020 to 31/03/2021
8356 (closed) NIHR SPCR Investigating the relationship between continuity care and patients’ medication use; Grant Reference Number: 466
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (PHS)Dates
01/06/2020 to 31/03/2021
Spread of COVID-19 in England and regional population density
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Dates
01/04/2020 to 01/07/2020
Trends in continuity of primary care
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Dates
01/10/2019 to 04/12/2020
Inappropriate polypharmacy
Role
Researcher
Managing organisational unit
Dates
01/01/2018 to 31/12/2021
Publications
Selected publications
27/05/2021Is continuity of primary care declining in England?
British Journal of General Practice
Social distancing, population density and spread of COVID-19 in England
British Journal of General Practice Open
The impact of a named GP scheme on continuity of care and emergency hospital admission
BMJ Open
Recent publications
01/11/2023Novel methods to define invasive procedures at the end of life were developed to improve quality of end of life care research
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
Association between continuity of primary care and both prescribing and adherence of common cardiovascular medications
BMJ Open
Suicide under the Nazi-regime
Archives of Suicide Research
Should we be concerned about declining continuity of primary care?
Is continuity of primary care declining in England?
British Journal of General Practice