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disease

Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Changing ecologies of disease

A lecture given by Stanley Ulijaszek (Professor of Human Ecology, Oxford) on 16 October 2019
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
Captioned

Why we need a fourth revolution in healthcare

William bird discusses how healthcare focused on communities and acitve lifestyles can lead to greater wellbeing.
Talking Sense

Episode 4: 'The Senses and Disease: A Renaissance Perfume Burner and a Victorian Poisonous Bookcase' – PART 2

In this episode, Amélie Bonney (DPhil Student, History of Science) examines a toxic Victorian bookcase to discover the sensory world of disease. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 3: 'The Senses and Disease: A Renaissance Perfume Burner and a Victorian Poisonous Bookcase – PART 1

In this episode, Christy Callaway-Gale (DPhil Student, Medieval and Modern Languages) examines a Renaissance Italian perfume burner to discover the sensory world of disease. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

Can you cure HIV?

HIV isn’t a death sentence anymore. People can live long lives with the virus in their body, as long as they have the right combination of drugs. But some researchers want to take the fight against HIV and AIDS even further...
Anthropology

Ebola: A biosocial journey

The inaugural Geoffrey Harrison Prize Lecture delivered in Oxford on 3 November 2017 by Melissa Parker, Professor of Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
The Secrets of Mathematics

Maths v Disease - Julia Gog

Can mathematics really help us in our fight against infectious disease? Join Julia Gog as we explore exciting current research areas where mathematics is being used to study pandemics, viruses and everything in between.
Anthropology

Ebola Emergence is Predictable

This talk was given by Dr Peter Walsh (University of Cambridge) at the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine on 3 November 2016/
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

Is my bacon sandwich really going to kill me?

Statistician Dr Jennifer Rogers discusses the numbers linked to processed meat and bowel cancer.
The English People at War in the Age of Henry VIII

Killing and dying

This lecture asks what weapons people owned in Henry VIII's England and whether they knew how to use them, some of its evidence drawn from coroners' inquests into accidents with bows, guns and swords.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Land, Sea and Air' Part 3 - What happens when we fly

Oxygen levels are slightly lower when you fly on commercial airlines, so what effects does this have on people? Can it cause any problems?
Anthropology

Maternal capital and offspring development

Jonathan Wells (UCL Institute of Child Health) presents an intergenerational perspective on the development origins of health and disease. A medical anthropology seminar given on 29 February 2016.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Malaria laboratory at MORU

Dr Kesinee Chotivanich's laboratory provides facilities and resources to researchers, students, and collaborators who are interested in tropical diseases, with the aim to improve patients’ care.
Global Health

Malaria laboratory at MORU

Dr Kesinee Chotivanich's laboratory provides facilities and resources to researchers, students, and collaborators who are interested in tropical diseases, with the aim to improve patients’ care.
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma

How computers have changed the way we do physics - Structure in complex systems

The power of available computers has now grown exponentially for many decades. The ability to discover numerically the implications of equations and models has opened our eyes to previously hidden aspects of physics.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

The Evolution of the Genome

Computational and stastistical methods help us understand evolution as well as genetic disease.
Genetics

The Evolution of the Genome

Computational and stastistical methods help us understand evolution as well as genetic disease.
Vaccines - From Concept to Clinic with Oxford Sparks

Medical science needs you! Human clinical trials

Clinical trials for vaccines: how they work and what's involved for volunteers.
Vaccines - From Concept to Clinic with Oxford Sparks

How clean is a clean room? Human vaccine manufacture

The stringent processes that ensure new vaccines are clinic-ready
Vaccines - From Concept to Clinic with Oxford Sparks

Maladies and mice. Pre-clinical vaccine development

Approaches used to target particularly tricky diseases to treat, such as malaria, HIV, Flu and TB.

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