Vision / Healthy lives

Healthy lives

Child in awe with a special helmet on Child in awe with a special helmet on

We’ve saved the NHS £2bn in recent years. At the birthplace of MRI, we are delivering new revolutions in healthcare, from better monitoring of unborn babies and easing the suffering of young burns victims, to advancing breakthrough drugs and unlocking the secrets of the brain.

Black and white image of a brain

University’s largest ever funding award for UK’s most powerful MRI scanner

£29 million national scanning facility will help the UK lead the world in ultra-high field imaging to transform understanding of the brain and treatment of disease

Shaarna Shanmugavadivel

Saving young lives with a clearer view of cancer

Researchers at the University of Nottingham have transformed awareness of childhood brain tumours

Illustration of a heart monitor graph

A new beat generation

A world-leading breakthrough in wireless foetal heart-monitoring will help save lives in delivery suites across the globe

Steve Morgan

Transforming outcomes for young burns victims

Meet Steve Morgan the driven innovator using technology to assess injuries in seconds

Professor Wei Shen Lim

How high-quality research saves many lives and millions of pounds

Professor Wei Shen Lim’s contribution to studies on pneumonia vaccination and treatment for Covid-19 have a profound influence

A child wearing the MEG scanner

A quantum leap for brain imaging

Meet Matt Brookes the driven innovator behind the world’s first “wearable” scanner

Pharmacist wiping an elderly women's arm ready for a vaccine

How community pharmacists are protecting millions across the globe

Research carried out at the University of Nottingham has played a key role in the decision to give vaccines in community pharmacies, helping people across the world access vaccinations more easily and saving thousands of lives.

Image of pill packets

Leading the way for the NHS

A research project tracking hospital doctors at work is helping to improve patient care

A chicken

Fighting infection without antibiotics

A new way to treat one of the world’s most common bacterial infections without the use of antibiotics.

Image of bacteria

Medical devices that bacteria can’t grip

Clinical trials are now testing a breakthrough: catheters with a ‘non-stick’ coating that prevents bacteria forming infectious, and even lethal, biofilm

Surgeons performing brain surgery

Reducing neurosurgical infections worldwide

By impregnating devices used in brain operations and procedures with antibiotics, Roger Bayston has helped save lives and improve outcomes for countless patients

Gary Mirams

The mathematician who is transforming global drug testing

Meet Gary Mirams the analytical thinker transforming global drug-testing

Person using a tablet to fill out a medical record form

Transforming lives by predicting and preventing disease

Professor Carol Coupland is developing risk prediction algorithms to help identify individuals at high risk from heart disease, diabetes and other diseases

Close up of a baby's face with skin condition

Improving the lives of countless people suffering from skin disease

Clinical trials led by University of Nottingham researchers have transformed treatment and care of patients, says Professor Kim Thomas

Illustration of pills

Prescription errors: keeping millions safer

An online tool is helping GPs and pharmacists reduce the risk of prescription errors for millions of patients

Person having a Fibroscan

Rethinking how we detect liver disease

Prevention is better than cure. How an innovative new pathway is transforming lives

a woman entering an MRI machine

MRI: new insights into our bodies

The birthplace of magnetic resonance imaging is transforming healthcare through innovative studies of disease processes and responses to therapies.

Nurse supporting an elderly man holding a walking frame

Preventing and managing falls to improve quality of life

Professor Pip Logan’s research is helping care homes significantly reduce the number of times residents fall

Professor John Robertson

Early cancer detection and new treatments offer hope to millions

Professor John Robertson’s work on an early blood test for lung cancer and new drugs for breast cancer is impacting patients across the world.

DNA palm held sequencer

DNA sequencing

Dr Matt Loose is delivering world-leading insights into DNA using a palm-held sequencer with a power that belies its size.

view from mountain top landing zone Kauai

Why rare beauties lure me to Hawaii

Luckily for evolutionary geneticist Dr Angus Davison, some of the snails he studies are only found in the remote mountains of a Pacific paradise...

Satellite weather image

Mathematicians are at frontline in the fight against Covid

Dr Dante Kalise talks about how supercomputers are transforming the ability of policy-makers to predict complex challenges and make agile responses

Professor Matthew Loose, standing on the QMC tram link bridge, Queen's Medical Centre (QMC)

The Covid detectives helping to track the spread of the virus

Genetic scientists play a vital role in tracking new virus variants such as Omicron. Professor Matt Loose explains

Image of biofilms

Biofilms

The challenge clinging to every aspect of our lives

Gold DNA helix

Gold label

The ability to attach electron-dense labels such as gold to antibodies is opening new vistas in scientific research.

A young person walking in a winter coat and hat, wearing a mask

Child and adolescent mental health in a post-lockdown world: a ticking time bomb?

Child and adolescent mental health in a post-lockdown world: a ticking time bomb?

A drone flying over a crop field

Tackling Malawi's Hidden Hunger

Researchers are visiting 2,000 farms in Malawi, collecting soil and crop samples to helpfight a challenge to the health of millions across sub-Saharan Africa.

Nettle

Grasping the nettle

New research suggests medieval medicine may have been more effective than previously thought – and could even help save lives today

Xray of the breast

The applied mathematician will see you now

Weang Kee Ho has no white coat and doesn’t own a stethoscope. But she does hold a doctorate in statistics and a passionate desire to fight breast cancer

Dr David Turner

I feel grateful I’ve been able to contribute

Microbiologist Dr David Turner began the year treating Covid-19 patients before playing a key role in the delivery of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine

Abstract image of a person

A pocket-sized MRI scanner?

‘Sodium MRI sensing’ is an advanced scanning technology with the potential to greatly improve diagnosis.

Ru Jia

Hair samples capture Covid’s stressful toll

Meet Ru Jia the analytical thinker who helped reveal the physical impact of stress during the pandemic

IV drip in hospital

An answer to anaemia

New ways to tackle anaemia in bowel cancer sufferers.

Denise McLean

Making research happen

Senior technician Denise McLean finds time to inspire young people, raise the profile of women in science and celebrate the Caribbean community.

Sketch of pill bottles

Right place, right time

Ground-breaking research to ensure drugs reach the sites of disease in the right dose at the right time

Lab on a chip immunosensor

Lab on a chip

At the George Green Institute for Electromagnetics Research spectroscopy is being used to find new ways of detecting illness at an early stage

Heart rate

Pacemakers of the future

Envisioning a future where bulky pacemakers could be replaced with LED technology.

Group of young people smiling looking at iPads

Creating spaces for young people’s voices in mental health research

Dr Aislinn Bergin and Dr Joanna Lockwood talk about how the University of Nottingham are working with partners to create spaces for children and young people's voices in mental health research

Abstract image of two person

The art of dementia care

Every year in the UK 200,000 people receive a diagnosis of dementia. Professor Justine Schneider is finding new ways to help them live well – through the arts.

Barbara Morera Maiquez researcher at the University of Nottingham

Setting Tourette’s sufferers free

By sending tiny electric pulses to the wrist, a watch-like device is giving new hope to children and people around the world who live with the agony of unwanted and uncontrollable tics

Durian fruit

Smelly sulfur’s surprising secrets

How hydrogen sulfide plays a key role in protecting blood vessel function

An abstract image of connected dots and lines

Prescribe yourself a story

Can sharing personal accounts of recovery from mental health problems help others?

Florence Nightingale Periodic wallpaper

Periodic wallpaper

Casting new light on Florence Nightingale’s life in the Midlands, Paul Crawford explores her pioneering approaches to wellbeing

Health worker doing a Covid test wearing PPE

Covid transmission: what a study of Nottingham NHS staff taught us

Health workers and their families have given researchers invaluable insights into protecting against the spread of the virus, says Professor Ana M Valdes

Salt

Reducing salt in our food

How the SmartSalt project seeks to reduce salt levels in food

An illustration of Covid-19 virus

Time to do things differently

We can be a competitive bunch, but as rapid advances against #Covid19 show, scientists are pulling together - and using Twitter to share the results

smallest periodic table in the world

Small is beautiful

Periodic table with a difference: marking 150 years and the only living person with an element named after him

Images of the 15 blog authors

From idea to demonstration of a materials macroscope: our seven-year journey

How 15 University of Nottingham research paper authors came together to deliver an interdisciplinary study of biomaterials

Mosquito

Conquering a Killer

Dengue fever is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children in some Asian and Latin American countries

Image of pills

Laser-guided drug delivery

Cell Culture Technician Kerry Setchfield on using iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles to transport drugs to individual stem cells with pinpoint accuracy

A closed sign due to Covid-19

Furlough and the wellbeing of the workforce

7.5 million UK employees have been furloughed, raising important questions about the impact on workers and their relationships with work

Spider

Web wonders

Geneticist Dr Sara Goodacre explains why the residents of the University of Nottingham’s SpiderLab are so intriguing

Pharmacy sign

Chemists to the nation, pharmacy to the world

An international history of Boots the Chemists promises to shed new light on a Nottingham company that has grown to be a global player