Cambridge researchers elected to Academy of Medical Sciences Fellowship 2023
18 May 2023Seven Cambridge ̽»¨Ö±²¥ researchers are among the 59 biomedical and health researchers elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences Fellowship.
Seven Cambridge ̽»¨Ö±²¥ researchers are among the 59 biomedical and health researchers elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences Fellowship.
Increasing the proportion of non-alcoholic drinks on sale in online supermarkets could reduce the amount of alcohol people purchase, suggests a study published today led by researchers at the ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge.
Trans and non-binary adults are more likely than the general population to experience long-term health conditions, including mental health problems, dementia and learning disabilities, and to be autistic, according to new research.
As the climate emergency and cost-of-living crisis focus our minds on how to reduce energy, a group of scientists have highlighted the hidden environmental cost behind some of our major breakthroughs.
Cambridge scientists have created a comprehensive tool for predicting an individual’s risk of developing prostate cancer, which they say could help ensure that those men at greatest risk will receive the appropriate testing while reducing unnecessary – and potentially invasive – testing for those at very low risk.
An experiment carried out across ten workplace cafeterias found no significant change in the overall number of calories purchased when food and drink labels showed the amount of physical activity required to burn off their calories.
Experts are calling on the Government to continue focusing on ‘levelling-up’ health, arguing that reducing the health gap is too important an agenda to abandon.
Women who experience racial discrimination on the basis of their ethnicity, race or nationality are at increased risk of giving birth prematurely, according to a team led by researchers at the ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge.
As the climate crisis leads to more intense and more frequent extreme weather and climate-related events, this in turn risks increasing the amount of gender-based violence experienced by women, girls, and sexual and gender minorities, say researchers.
̽»¨Ö±²¥nine Cambridge researchers were all selected for their exceptional contributions to science.