| Philippa Howden-Chapman | |
|---|---|
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Howden-Chapman in 2007.
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| Born | Auckland |
| Nationality | New Zealander |
| Alma mater | University of Auckland |
| Known for | Research into housing insulation and heating in New Zealand |
| Spouse(s) | Ralph Chapman |
| Children | 3 |
| Awards | Public Health Champion 2006 Joan Metge medal Liley medal Prime Minister's Science Prize |
| Website |
Staff page Alternative staff page Google Scholar page |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Public health, housing, social housing, health inequality, fuel poverty |
| Institutions | University of Otago, Wellington |
Philippa Lynne Howden-Chapman QSO is Professor of Public Health at the University of Otago, and director of the New Zealand Centre for Sustainable Cities.
Howden-Chapman started her career in secondary-school teaching, before moving to clinical psychology, and ending up in public health.
She has conducted a number of high-profile randomized control trials into various aspects of housing and health, in the process helping to build the evidence base for the later New Zealand-wide insulation programme. Howden-Chapman's Healthy Housing group conducted an analysis of the Warm Up New Zealand: Heat Smart programme which showed that overall it "will have a net benefit of $951 million dollars, and a highly favourable benefit cost ratio of 3.9:1."
Howden-Chapman was a member of the 2012 Expert Advisory Group on Solutions to Child Poverty, which outlined a number of policy recommendations to tackle child poverty in New Zealand.
In November 2013, Howden-Chapman was made a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand.
In December 2014, Howden-Chapman and her research programme were awarded the $500,000 Prime Minister's Science Prize. She was the first woman and the first social scientist to win the prize.