Biography
Natalie Zaremba is a mixed-methods researcher in diabetes and psychology at Kings College London.
Her research focuses on using lived experiences to address unmet psychological needs in diabetes care. Currently Natalie is a researcher for STEADY, a project to develop and test a novel cognitive-behavioural therapy based intervention for people with type 1 diabetes and disordered eating using Experience-Based Co-Design, and Health Outcomes Observatories (“H2O”), a multinational project to standardise collection and reporting of patient outcomes in healthcare settings.
Previously, Natalie worked as a researcher and trial manager for the Hypo-METRICS study, a multinational observational study evaluating the psychological, physical, and economic impact of hypoglycaemia for people with diabetes using ecological momentary assessment, and has collaborated with other teams and researchers on studies focusing on psychological aspects of diabetes. Natalie received her BSc in Neuroscience and English from Dalhousie University in 2015, and her MSc in Health Psychology from the University of Surrey in 2016. She is currently completing her PhD in Medical Psychology remotely at Radboud University Medical Center.
Research
Type 1 Diabetes Research Group
We are experimental medicine researchers and clinical academics performing mechanistic and clinical studies, using qualitative, quantitative and neuroimaging techniques, and clinical trials to investigate aspects of diabetes, including mechanisms and treatment of hypoglycaemia, eating disorders and appetite control.
Research
Type 1 Diabetes Research Group
We are experimental medicine researchers and clinical academics performing mechanistic and clinical studies, using qualitative, quantitative and neuroimaging techniques, and clinical trials to investigate aspects of diabetes, including mechanisms and treatment of hypoglycaemia, eating disorders and appetite control.