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genomics

Centre for Personalised Medicine

Series 3 Episode 4: Evolving health system boundaries

The CPM team discuss how interactions with healthcare systems are changing as health-relevant information becomes more accessible outside traditional clinical domains.
To Immunity and Beyond

Elevated genetic risk for multiple sclerosis emerged in steppe pastoralist populations

Professor Astrid Iversen discusses research published in Nature, using historic genome data to investigate the emergence of genetic risk for multiple sclerosis in Northern Europe.
Collecting COVID: Oral Histories

Dr Alex Mentzer

Georgina Ferry interviews Alex Mentzer, NIHR Academic Clinical Lecturer, 25 January 2023.
Centre for Personalised Medicine

Series 2 Episode 7 - Why research regulation falls short in genomic medicine

As a society, we tend to focus a lot on risk and try to control it through regulation - but how well does that work for ensuring ethical practice in genomics? We talk to Dr Kate Lyle about her research on this topic.
Centre for Personalised Medicine
Captioned

Series 2 Episode 6 - Diversifying genomics

What are the ethical challenges with diversifying genomic data? We talk to Faranak Hardcastle about her work exploring this.
Centre for Personalised Medicine

Series 2 Episode 4 - Newborn genome screening

What sort of findings might we get from newborn genome screening? What might this mean for the NHS? Rachel Horton talks to Gabby Samuel and Lisa Ballard.
Centre for Personalised Medicine

Series 2 Episode 3 - Sharing genetic results within families

Who does a genetic result belong to? What might help people to share genetic information with their relatives? We talk to Lisa Ballard and Anneke Lucassen.
Centre for Personalised Medicine

Series 2 Episode 2 - Why context matters in genetic testing

How can the same genetic finding can mean different things in different people? What does this mean for 'personalising' genetic results? Anneke Lucassen talks to us about this issue.
Gut Instinct: GI research update

Gut Instinct Ep. 4 - C. difficile therapeutics, liver spatial genomics, and paediatric hepatitis

What a week! We discuss some cracking papers, including a new microbiome therapeutic for C. diff, spatial transcriptomics in the liver, and the recent epidemic of paediatric hepatitis.
Malaria

Genomics and global health

Professor Olivo Miotto from our MORU programme in Bangkok, Thailand, tells us how genomics can help us improve global health
Beyond boundaries: research worth sharing

You know nothing about dogs, pigs or chickens!

In Professor Greger Larson's short talk he unearths some new truths about the domestication of some familiar animal friends.
Beyond boundaries: research worth sharing

Sociogenomics – when nature meets nurture

In this short talk, Professor Melinda Mills introduces her work on the role of gene and gene-environment interaction on reproductive health
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Genomic revolution and its impact on prostate cancer care

Professor Ash Tewari talks about the genomics of prostate cancer and the implications for managing high risk disease.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Explosions' part 3 - Health and Big Data

Professor Gil McVean explains what Big Data is and how it can be used to better understand and treat complex conditions, such as heart disease and dementia.
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society

Patent Policy in Genomics and Human Genetics: Epistemic Communities, Courts and the Democratic Shaping of Patent Law

Professor Dr Ingrid Schneider gives a talk for the FLJS seminar series.
Chemistry Spotlight Lectures

Oxford at Said: A human genome in minutes and what it will mean to you

Oxford Nanopore is a British company, spun out of the University of Oxford in 2005 and founded on the science of Prof Hagan Bayley. It is developing new technology that has the potential to improve greatly the speed and cost of DNA sequencing.
Entrepreneurship

Oxford at Said: A human genome in minutes and what it will mean to you

Oxford Nanopore is a British company, spun out of the University of Oxford in 2005 and founded on the science of Prof Hagan Bayley. It is developing new technology that has the potential to improve greatly the speed and cost of DNA sequencing.
Diabetes and Obesity

Diabetes and Genomics

Professor Mark McCarthy tells us how genomics helps us understand diabetes.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Diabetes and Genomics

Professor Mark McCarthy tells us how genomics helps us understand diabetes.
Issues in Bioethics - Oxford Bioethics Network

Procardis Study; Genome wide associations with Disease

Paula Boddington gives a talk on the Procardis study as part of the Oxford Bioethics Network series on Issues in Research Ethics.

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