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hiv

To Immunity and Beyond

Apoptosis-mediated ADAM10 activation removes a mucin barrier promoting T cell efferocytosis

Professor Quentin Sattentau discusses research published in 'Nature Communications' on the role of enzyme ADAM10 in mediating clearance of apoptotic T cells by macrophages.
The Oxford Colloquy: Trusting the Science

Doctor Anthony Fauci, former Chief Scientific Advisor to the President of the United States

Professor Sir Andrew Pollard, Director of the Oxford Vaccine Group at the University of Oxford and one of the country’s foremost immunologists, chats with Doctor Anthony Fauci, Chief Scientific Advisor to seven US presidents.
The Oxford Colloquy

The Pandemic People: Prof. Eddie Holmes

Professor Eddie Holmes, who co-authored the publication of the genome sequence of SARS-CoV-2 through work with colleagues in Wuhan, China speaks to Professor Andrew Pollard about his scientific career and this pivotal pandemic work.
The Oxford Colloquy

The Pandemic People: Shabir Madhi

Shabir Madhi Professor of Vaccinology at the University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg, South Africa discusses the effect of the global pandemic on Africa and his work on COVID-19 vaccines.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Voluntary medical male circumcision for HIV prevention in Kenya: Anthropology and ethics in the pursuit of public health

This UBVO seminar was presented by Adam Gilbertson (University of North Carolina) on 12 November 2020
Futuremakers
Captioned

Coronavirus and ‘Disease X’

Professor Peter Millican interviews the Oxford scientists working at the forefront of research into Disease X
Futuremakers
Captioned

Ebola

Professor Peter Millican begins the final episode of this series in 2014, at the onset of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.
Futuremakers
Captioned

HIV/AIDS

In the ninth episode of our History of Pandemics season, Professor Peter Millican leaves the perils of influenza behind, only to discover an entirely new virus: HIV.
Futuremakers
Captioned

The 'Spanish' Flu

Professor Peter Millican arrives in the twentieth century, during the last years of the Great War, to a pandemic which you may have read a lot about during the early coverage of our current COVID outbreak.
Futuremakers
Captioned

'Russian' Flu: the pandemic that wasn't?

In this episode, Professor Peter Millican discusses a controversial outbreak...
Futuremakers
Captioned

Cholera

Professor Peter Millican makes it to the nineteenth century to discuss the achievements of John Snow
Global Health

Central nervous system and HIV infections in Vietnam

Professor Jeremy Day from our OUCRU unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, tells us about his research on central nervous system and HIV infections in Vietnam.
African Studies Centre
Captioned

Public health and gender: Assumptions, disjunctures in practice, and implications for HIV prevention within marriages in Kenya

ASC seminar by Roseanne Njiru
Anthropology

How war is shaping the Ukrainian HIV epidemic: A phylogeographic analysis

An Evolutionary Medicine and Public Health seminar presented by Tetyana Vasylyeva (Department of Zoology, University of Oxford) on 24 October 2018
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...
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

HIV positive to positive transplantation: changing practices around the world

Dr Elmi Muller talks about HIV positive donors for HIV positive recipients and changing transplant practices around the world.
Anthropology

Tracing the origins of the HIV/AIDS pandemic

Nuno Fario (Oxford) investigates the development of HIV since the discovery of its first, and diverse, genomes in 1959 and 1960. A medical anthropology seminar given on 7 March 2016.
NDM Public Engagement

Variation across the human genome: a tricky balancing act in human health and disease

Genetic variation can have opposing effects on human disease, where the benefits of a protective variant against one disease can increase the risk of another.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Reducing HIV

Men who have sex with men (MSM) are a stigmatised group in Africa, but a predominant actor in the transmission of HIV.
HIV

Reducing HIV

Men who have sex with men (MSM) are a stigmatised group in Africa, but a predominant actor in the transmission of HIV.

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