Study opens up possibility of bespoke prostate cancer treatment
The knowledge could reduce the risk of severe bowel complications from radiotherapy, heralding a more personalized approach to prostate cancer treatment
The knowledge could reduce the risk of severe bowel complications from radiotherapy, heralding a more personalized approach to prostate cancer treatment
The study was commissioned and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), and its leading partners were The University of Manchester, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust and Warwick Medical School’s Clinical Trials Unit, who specialize in research in emergency and critical care
Study aims to improve detection of women at risk of pregnancy complication
Discovery of new family of ligase enzymes could revolutionize the production of treatments for cancer
Researchers at the University of Manchester are to trial a system where people with rheumatoid arthritis can send their daily symptoms securely to their health record
A new method to detect Parkinson’s disease has been determined by analysing sebum with mass spectrometry
A substantial increase in deaths in care homes in the first three months of the pandemic is likely to have contributed to the figure
Researchers at Manchester and York universities have highlighted the disparity in the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
University of Manchester researchers have developed an approach that could revolutionize the production of pharmaceuticals and other valuable chemicals
Therapeutic relationships can help improve outcomes for mental health patients
University of Manchester researchers share findings from a study into the use of locum GPs in England
Study shows people with severe mental illnesses experience significantly poorer outcomes resulting from COVID-19 which are only partly explained by pre-existing physical health conditions
Testing positive on a COVID-19 PCR test has been shown to have a positive correlation to mental illness and sleep problems
Expert scientists at the University of Manchester are studying ways to reduce risks of serious problems in pregnancy
The rates of self-harm could be rising more quickly in children and adolescents from ethnic minority groups than in those from white groups, according to a study led by University of Manchester researchers
These findings are the first evidence that a pre-emptive intervention during infancy could lead to a child falling below the threshold for a clinical diagnosis of autism