Dr. Meg Ryan

Dr. Meg Ryan

Assistant Professor, Public Health & Primary Care

Assistant Professor


Biography

Dr. Meg Ryan is an Assistant Professor in Global Health, and Director of the MSc in Global Mental Health. Her research interests are broadly focused on reproductive justice, gender based-violence, global mental health, and LGBTQIA+ healthcare, with a particular focus on qualitative methodologies. Meg is TCD PI for a research partnership with International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) and the Moroccan Family Planning Association (AMPF). This project is funded by the Sexual Violence Research Initiative (SVRI), and explores the experience of reproductive violence among Moroccan women and refugee women accessing health care in Morocco. Meg is also PI for an IRC New Foundations funded project in collaboration with the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre. This project seeks to develop stakeholder informed understandings of the intersections of reproductive coercion and intimate partner violence in an Irish context. Meg received a BA (Hons) in Psychology from TCD, where she also completed the Professional Doctorate in Counselling Psychology. Her doctoral research was conducted under the supervision of Dr. Frédérique Vallieres, and explored the experience of providing crisis pregnancy counselling in Ireland during a period of legislative changes regarding abortion provision. Meg is a practicing Chartered Counselling Psychologist and works from a feminist psychotherapy perspective incorporating both humanistic and psychodynamic principles. Meg is a founding member of the PSI Special Interest Group for Human Rights and Psychology and Chair of the Research Advisory Committee for Mental Health Reform. Meg is a member of the Trans* Research Association of Ireland.

Publications and Further Research Outputs

  • Ryan, M., Nolan, A., & Vallières, F., Lifting the cloak of secrecy: Experiences of providing crisis pregnancy counselling in a changing legislative context in Ireland, Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 22, (1), 2021, p22 - 31Journal Article, 2021, DOI
  • Ryan, M., Abujaber, N., Travers, Á., McBride K.A., Tingsted Blum, P., Engels, M., Alshibi, A., Greene, H., Githaiga, S., Didenko, A., & Vallières, F., The acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility of implementing supportive supervision within humanitarian contexts: A qualitative study, SSM - Mental Health, 2023Journal Article, 2023
  • Vallières, F., Ward, M. E., Shields, D., Geary, U., Gardner, C., King, D., McCarthy, G., Conolly, J., Brown, J., Wiedemann, N., Staunton, P., Halpin, R., McGinty, T., Brazil, V., Ali, A., Buckley, A., Dowds, J., Lambert, S., McGarry, S., McLoughlin, P., Murphy, M., Murphy, R., O"Carrol, A., Ryan., M., Slattery, S., Sweeney, E., Swords, M., Zihindula, G. & NíCheallaigh, C. , Co-developing, piloting, and evaluating a translational simulation (TS) delivery model for the promotion of psychological trauma-informed care (TIC) to improve service delivery within acute hospital settings: A Research Protocol, HRB Open Research,, 6, (27), 2023, phttps://doi.org/10.12688/hrbopJournal Article, 2023
  • Elizabeth O"Sullivan; Nadeen Abujaber ; Meg Ryan; Kelly A. McBride; Pia Tingsted Blum; Frédérique Vallières, Gender considerations for supportive supervision in humanitarian contexts: A qualitative study, Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health, 2023Journal Article, 2023
  • Abujaber, N., Ryan,M., McBride K.A., Tingsted Blum, P., Engels, M., Didenko, A ., Greene, H., Peres de Matos, C.S., Whitton, S., & Vallières, F., Implementing Supportive Supervision in Acute Humanitarian Emergencies: Lessons Learned from Afghanistan and Ukraine, PLOS Global Public Health, 4, (4), 2024Journal Article, 2024
  • Ryan, M., Said, N., Maamri., A., Sexual and reproductive health of refugees from West Asia in Morocco, Center for Reproductive Rights Symposium Report, Center for Reproductive Rights Symposium on Reproductive and Sexual Autonomy in Asia, Nepal, October 2023Conference Paper

Research Expertise

My research interests include global mental health, LGBTQIA+ health and mental health, reproductive justice, and gender-based violence (GBV). My research focuses on applying consultative, participatory approaches for the development of end-user informed guidelines, frameworks, and resources that will improve access to health, including mental health, care for society's most vulnerable populations. Through my research, my aim is to represent diverse lived experiences across gendered and cultural divides to address issues of inequality and discrimination of marginalised groups, with the goal of empowering individuals and communities to create social change. I am committed to integrating social justice and human rights principles into my research, and I believe that engaged research practices which build collaborative relationships between researchers and communities can enable communities to address local concerns, resulting in research that is applicable, culturally relevant, and that bridges the gaps between research, practice, and community needs. In line with feminist approaches, my research strives to include a `reciprocally educative focus', underpinned by values of intersectionality, positionality, and reflexivity.

  • Title
    An exploratory study using mixed methods to understand Moroccan and refugee women's experiences of reproductive violence
    Summary
    This project is a partnership between Association Marocaine de Planification Familiale (AMPF), International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) and the Centre for Global Health, Trinity College Dublin (CGH, TCD). The study aims to elucidate the contexts in which Reproductive Violence is experienced by women and girls when they attempt to practice their Sexual Reproductive Health (SRH) rights and choices in Morocco, and to understand the contributing factors. Overall, this project aims to generate increased knowledge which can be integrated into Gender-Based Violence programming and SRH services to enhance capacity to provide more sustainable services to those impacted and to advocate for national policy changes.
    Funding Agency
    Sexual Violence Research Initiative
    Date From
    01-03-2023
    Date To
    31-08-2024
  • Title
    The Missing Link
    Summary
    The Missing Link is a global initiative conducted in collaboration with the International Federation of the Red Cross to develop supervision guidelines for use within mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) programming within humanitarian emergencies. This project uses action research approaches and involves collaboration with multiple NGOs and stakeholders in the MHPSS community.
    Funding Agency
    Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA)
  • Title
    Understanding the relationship between reproductive coercion and intimate partner violence in an Irish context; a stakeholder informed qualitative analysis
    Summary
    Reproductive coercion (RC) is defined as deliberate attempts to influence or control the reproductive autonomy of another person. This is a form of intimate partner violence (IPV) thought to be linked to poorer sexual reproductive health (SRH) outcomes. However, the links between IPV and RC are poorly understood, impacting the development of effective interventions. The current project proposes to address this gap by developing a partnership with the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre to conduct research exploring the current state of knowledge regarding IPV and RC in an Irish context through a rapid review and exploratory qualitative study with relevant stakeholders.
    Funding Agency
    Irish Research Council
    Date From
    8/12/23
    Date To
    7/12/24

Medical, Health and Life Sciences & Technologies, Population Health, Public & Environment Health, Social Justice, Health Care & Health Services (including Health Technology and Health Information Systems), Mental Health (including Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology), Psychology and Behavioural Sciences,

Recognition

  • Ray Fuller Prize in Psychology 2016
  • Chartered member of the Psychological Society of Ireland
  • Member of the Trans* Research Association of Ireland
  • Member of the All Ireland Network on Sexual Violence Research (AINSVR)
  • Chair of the Research Advisory Committee for the Mental Health Reform (MHR) 2022
  • Founding member of the PSI Special Interest Group in Human Rights & Psychology
  • Invited to sit on the Steering Committee for the HSE Sexual Health and Crisis Pregnancy Programme (SHCPP) review of HSE SHCPP-funded crisis pregnancy counselling (CPC) services and the My Options abortion information telephone service. 2022
  • Communications officer for PSI SIG in Human Rights & Psychology (2021- Ongoing)
  • Founding member of the PSI Special Interest Group in Human Rights & Psychology
  • Chair of the Research Advisory Committee for Mental Health Reform (2022-Ongoing)