List of news
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Category: Research news
Published on: 07 May 2021
UCLH is to lead an initiative to improve care for myeloma patients alongside Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (OUH) and University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (UHS).
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Category: Research news
Published on: 07 May 2021
Researchers at UCLH have begun a study which could set the foundations for how booster COVID-19 vaccinations are delivered in the future.
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Category: UCLH news
Published on: 04 May 2021
Dozens of babies with spina bifida have been spared paralysis and other life-limiting conditions after a cutting-edge procedure first carried out in the UK by a team of clinicians from UCLH, University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust (GOSH) was made available on the NHS.
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Category: Research news
Published on: 30 April 2021
A single dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine may boost protection against Covid-19 variants for those who have previously had the virus, according to a new study supported by the NIHR UCLH Biomedical Research Centre and UCLH Charity.
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Category: UCLH news
Published on: 27 April 2021
This week sees the launch of Camden’s very own vaccine bus – bringing a hyper-local Covid-19 vaccine service to the borough.
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Category: Research news
Published on: 26 April 2021
Volunteers are being asked to sign up to the latest Covid-19 vaccine study to begin across the UK including at UCLH.
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Category: Charity news
Published on: 22 April 2021
Support the Bring the Colour appeal and brighten up the children’s emergency department at University College Hospital.
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Category: Research news
Published on: 16 April 2021
UCLH-led research paper outlines mechanism behind rare cases of blood clots and low platelets after vaccination
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Category: UCLH news
Published on: 14 April 2021
UCLH consultant oral physician and facial pain specialist, Professor Joanna Zakrzewska, has edited a book with visual artist Deborah Padfield
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Category: Research news
Published on: 14 April 2021
A study of patients at UCLH and North Middlesex University Hospital published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases suggests that the B.1.17. variant of Covid-19 is not associated with more severe illness and death, but appears to lead to higher virus load.