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Medicine

Anthropology

Inflammaging and its role in ageing and age-related diseases

Cristina Giuliani (Bologna) places inflammaging, and genetics, within an evolutionary perspective. A medical anthropology seminar given on 1 February 2016.
Anthropology

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

Charlotte K. Russell (Parent-Infant Sleep Lab, Durham) looks at how evolutionary anthropology and cross-cultural perspectives can have a huge impact on specific healthcare issues such as SIDS (22 February 2016)
Anthropology

The dawn of Darwinian critical care medicine

James G. Morgan (Dept of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care, Leeds General Infirmary) discusses how an evolutionary approach can help one understand medicine, such as adaptive defence mechanisms in the body (8 February 2016)
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.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Learning' part 2 - Stimulating learning

Can a little electrical stimulation help people learn quicker? And how would technology that does this be used? And why would you want to use this over medicines?
Oxford Sparks: bringing science to life

What Makes You Tick?

How do you know when it's time to wake up or go to sleep? More powerful than any alarm are your circadian rhythms.
The Oxford Healthcare Values Partnership

Personalised Medicine - Joshua Hordern

Dr Joshua Hordern discusses personalised medicine
Anthropology

Medical and psychological issues in the treatment of recurrent miscarriage

In this Fertility and Reproduction Seminar, Raj Rai (Imperial College and St Mary's Hospital) discusses the role of clinical trials and ways of addressing the potential exploitation of vulnerable couples, 26 October 2015
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Intravenous anaesthesia on Turner's High Street

Dr Alessia Pannese explores a painted documentation of a relatively little known event in Oxford local history: the first intravenous anaesthesia during this TORCH Bite-Size talk at the Ashmolean Museum LiveFriday
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Killers' part 1 - Mosquito genomes and malaria control

Can studying Mosquito population genomes help to stop the spread of Malaria?
Alumni Voices

Writer, doctor and champion of evidence-based medicine, Dr Ben Goldacre (Magdalen, 1992)

Dr Ben Goldacre – author of the bestsellers Bad Science and Bad Pharma – dissects what is wrong with modern medicine and argues for better evidence-based medicine in this podcast.
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.
Vaccines - From Concept to Clinic with Oxford Sparks

Why vaccinate? The history and science of vaccination

Vaccine origins, science behind how vaccines work and how outbreaks of diseases can occur if vaccination levels drop too low.
Evidence-Based Health Care
Captioned

Theorising with narrative: How careful analysis of stories can help us rise above the ontological desert of ‘behaviour change’ research

Professor Trish Greenhalgh gives a talk for the Centre for Evidence Based Medicine.
Teaching to Transgress

Battles for Benefits: Marginalizing Women Veterans in the Medicalization of PTSD

Kiley Hunkler presents her Master's work on ‘Battles for Benefits’: Marginalizing Women Veterans in the Medicalization of PTSD'.
Green Templeton College

Archie Cochrane Lecture 2015: Malaria control - past, present and future

Professor Nicholas John White, Professor of Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford and Mahidol University, Physician, John Radcliffe Hospital gives the Archie Cochrane 2015 lecture.
Global Health

Enteric fever

Dr Christiane Dolecek speaks about the research on enteric fever she conducted in Vietman and Nepal
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Enteric fever

Dr Christiane Dolecek speaks about the research on enteric fever she conducted in Vietman and Nepal.

Pagination

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