Campus News

Happy New Year!

January 31st, 2012

Lakeside Arts Centre has a packed day of events to mark Chinese New Year on Sunday 29 January.
There is Dragon Boat training on Highfields Lake, with the chance to meet the Notts Anaconda Dragon Boat team,  followed by a festival of celebrations to mark the Year of the Dragon.
The event starts at 4.30pm, with music and dance displays before a fantastic firework finale over Highfields Lake at 6pm.
For full details of events across the county, please visit: http://tiny.cc/UoNDragon.

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A new year… and a new HealthyU

January 31st, 2012

After a seemingly endless diet of mince pies, chocolate, cheese and general overindulgence January seems to be the logical time to kick-start a new healthy lifestyle.
But finding the time to keep active and stay healthy while juggling work and a social life can sometimes be tough. HealthyU is here to advise on leading a healthy lifestyle, both in mind and body.
Just before the Christmas break, the University’s HealthyU campaign launched with exercise classes and two health fairs, motivating students and staff to maintain a healthy lifestyle.
The HealthyU fairs provided information on a range of health issues including diet, keeping active, mental health and stress, relationships and sex, alcohol, drugs and smoking, and domestic violence. The University has many services available to student and staff, and local and national organisations also manned stalls at the fairs.
Taster exercise classes were held at University Park and Sutton Bonington sports centres, ranging from aerobics and dodgeball to samba and zumba. The free (or very low-cost) classes were well-attended by students across the University, and demonstrated that exercise can be something that anyone can take part in, for fun — it doesn’t always have to be competitive.
Denise Eaves, health promotion adviser, said: “HealthyU is an ongoing University initiative aimed at improving and safeguarding the health and wellbeing of students.
“The success of this year’s HealthyU Week was down to the joint effort and contribution from University staff and external support agencies. By working together, students were able to access a wider range of health and wellbeing information, advice and activities.”
The HealthyU campaign will continue to run throughout 2012, with roadshows and workshops travelling across campuses throughout the year. Visit: http://tiny.cc/HealthyU to find out more.

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Life-saving test

January 31st, 2012

Hundreds of lives could be saved each year, thanks to an online calculator that could help GPs identify women at risk of having ovarian cancer at a much earlier stage.
Academics from the University and ClinRisk Ltd have developed a QCancer algorithm (www.qcancer.org/ovary) using the UK QResearch database. The algorithm assesses patients’ symptoms and risk factors.
A study into the algorithm’s effectiveness, published online at BMJ.com, found that it was successful in predicting almost two-thirds of ovarian cancers in the 10% of women who were most at risk of having the disease over a two-year period.
Ovarian cancer is the seventh most common cancer in women worldwide and affects around 6,700 women in the UK every year, one of the highest rates in Europe.
GPs face the challenge of making a correct diagnosis as early as possible for a disease which has few established risk factors and a range of non-specific symptoms which could also point to a number of less serious and more common conditions. The disease is often not diagnosed until it is advanced, meaning that many patients’ chances of surviving for five years after diagnosis can be as low as six per cent.
Less than one-third of women are diagnosed in the first stages of the disease; 90% of those will survive to five years, showing that earlier diagnosis and treatment can have a dramatic impact on chances of survival.
Academics used anonymous data from 564 GPs using the QResearch® database system — a not-for-profit partnership between the University and leading GPs systems supplier EMIS. They included data for 30 to 84-year-olds who hadn’t been diagnosed with ovarian cancer and hadn’t had a ‘red flag’ symptom in the previous year. Risk factors included age, family history, previous diagnosis of a cancer, loss of appetite, weight loss, abdominal distension, rectal bleeding, postmenopausal bleeding and anaemia to predict which patients were most at risk of having ovarian cancer and combined these in the risk prediction algorithm.
The tool predicted 63% of ovarian cancers over the following two years which were in the top 10% of women found to be most at risk.
Similar scores using QResearch® have previously been effective in identifying patients at most risk of developing other cancers, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, fractures, kidney disease and blood clots.
The tool is in line with current Government policy and the National Awareness and Early Diagnosis Initiative (NAEDI), a public/third sector partnership between the Department of Health, National Cancer Action Team and Cancer Research UK.
Research lead Professor Julia Hippisley-Cox said : “We are very grateful for the continuing support of the EMIS GP practices that contribute their high quality data to QResearch. Without them, our research would not be possible.”

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Professor’s work earns royal recognition

January 31st, 2012

Marion Walker

A Nottingham professor who has dedicated her professional life to helping to rehabilitate people affected by stroke has received royal recognition for her work.
Professor Marion Walker, Professor in Stroke Rehabilitation at The University of Nottingham’s Division of Rehabilitation and Ageing, has been awarded the MBE in the Queen’s New Year Honours.
Prof Walker, who also studied for two higher degrees at The University of Nottingham, is joined on this year’s Honours list by other Nottingham alumni, including Chief Executive of GSK Andrew Witty who received a knighthood for services to the economy and UK pharmaceutical industry.
She said: “I am absolutely thrilled to receive this honour. It is just fantastic that the work of stroke rehabilitation research at The University of Nottingham has been recognised in this way. Improving the quality of life of stroke survivors is central to all our efforts.”
Prof Walker started her professional life as an occupational therapist, qualifying in 1980 at the Glasgow College of Occupational Therapy and going on to become one of the first occupational therapists in the UK to be awarded a PhD. She received a College of Occupational Therapy Fellowship for pioneering a research culture within the profession. Her work was later recognised by her own peers when she was cited as one of the top 10 occupational therapists in the UK in the Independent on Sunday in 2002.
She came to Nottingham in 1983 to help establish one of the first stroke units in England, moving on to research in 1986 and working on a number of short-term research grants until securing her first University of Nottingham post in 1997 as Lecturer in Stroke Rehabilitation, a post funded by the Stroke Association. She became Professor of Stroke Rehabilitation in 2007.
Prof Walker has played a key role in influencing clinical guidelines on stroke care and rehabilitation and her current role at Nottingham sees her heading up a £4m programme of work in stroke rehabilitation implementing the research findings from four studies. She is also working on research projects worth £10m in stroke rehabilitation grants.
During her time at Nottingham, she has also played a key role in establishing The Nottingham Stroke Consumer Group, a unique partnership between academics and stroke survivors. Launched in partnership with Notts businessman Ossie Newell, who himself suffered a stroke in 1999, the group provides an innovative way for researchers to receive feedback with the aim of improving and developing stroke treatment by focusing research more closely on the needs of stroke patients.
Prof Walker is recognised for her expertise in stroke rehabilitation both nationally and internationally, demonstrated by her appointment as Associate Director for Rehabilitation for the UK Stroke Research Network (SRN) and her time serving as Chairman of the UK Stroke Forum from 2007 to 2009, a role which saw her leading a forum of UK stroke medics, nurses, therapists and other healthcare professionals with an interest in stroke and play a key role in launching the National Stroke Strategy with the Minister for Health. She is a trustee of the Stroke Association.
Prof Walker’s leadership in research was recognised by the invitation to give the Royal Stroke Lecture in 2009 at Kensington Palace and the Princess Margaret Memorial Lecture in 2010. She was also the first non-medic to be invited to give the opening plenary lecture of the Australasian Stroke Society and the only UK rehabilitation representative on the writing committee of the European Stroke Guidelines.
Prof Walker took on a visiting professorship at the University of Sydney from February 2011 to April 2011.
Nottingham’s Vice-Chancellor Professor David Greenaway said: “I have already contacted Professor Walker to pass on my warmest congratulations on this well-deserved honour, but I know other colleagues from around the University will also be delighted to hear this news. Professor Walker has made a tremendous contribution to research into stroke rehabilitation, much of which has placed the most important people — stroke patients themselves — at the heart of studies and the recommendations into improvements for their care.
“The University has recently recognised the importance of stroke rehabilitation by including it in our £150m Impact Campaign as one of our strategically important research priorities.”
Other Nottingham alumni who received New Year Honours were:
Prof Madeleine Atkins (PhD Education 1982), Vice-Chancellor of Coventry University, a CBE for services to Higher Education; Prof Ruth Chambers (Medicine 1973; Medicine 1975; DM Medicine 1995), Clinical Director of Practice Development and Performance for NHS Stoke-on-Trent Clinical Commissioning Group, an OBE for services to Primary Care; Dr Andrew Kidd (Agricultural Sciences 1982), Deputy Head, Kabul Office, Department for International Development, received an OBE; Dr Frank Newton (MSc Sports Medicine 1993) former Chairman, ISAF Medical Commission (1990-2000), an OBE for services to sailing; Lynn Slinger (MEd Education 1989), headteacher of Forest Way Special School, an OBE for services to education; John Huddleston (Chemistry/Physics 1974), lately Knowledge Leader and Project Director, AEA Technology, an MBE for services to the environment; and businessman Rodney Hughes (MPhil Civil Engineering 1974) an MBE for services to business in Newark, Notts.
Find out more about the University’s Impact Campaign and how you can support stroke rehabilitation research at: http://tiny.cc/UonImpactstroke.

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Seance on a Sunday Afternoon

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Friday 14 October to Saturday
29 October; matinees Saturday 22 and Wednesday 26 October
Time: 8pm; matinees 2pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre,
Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £12, £9 concessions,
£6 restricted view; matinees £10,
£7 concessions, £5 restricted view

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Draw Me a Bird

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Sunday 9 October
Time: 1pm & 3.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre,
Lakeside Arts Centre
Admission: £6

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Roll Out The Beryl…

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Friday 7 October
Time: 8pm
Venue: Djanogly Theatre, Lakeside
Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £12, £9 concessions,
£6 restricted view

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Andreas Haefliger

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Thursday 3 November
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Recital Hall, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions

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London Handel Players

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Saturday 29 October
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Djanogly Recital Hall, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: £15, £12 concessions

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University Philharmonia

January 3rd, 2012

Date: Sunday 23 October
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Great Hall, Trent Building,
University Park
Admission: £10, £8 concessions,
£5 UoN students

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