1 |
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Coronavirus and ‘Disease X’ |
Professor Peter Millican interviews the Oxford scientists working at the forefront of research into Disease X |
Peter Millican, Sarah Gilbert, Peter Horby, Jimmy Whitworth |
14 Jan 2021 |
2 |
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Ebola |
Professor Peter Millican begins the final episode of this series in 2014, at the onset of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. |
Peter Millican, Kevin Decock, Katie Ewer, Brian Angus |
14 Jan 2021 |
3 |
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HIV/AIDS |
In the ninth episode of our History of Pandemics season, Professor Peter Millican leaves the perils of influenza behind, only to discover an entirely new virus: HIV. |
Peter Millican, Harold Jaffe, John Frater, Kevin Decock |
14 Jan 2021 |
4 |
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The 'Spanish' Flu |
Professor Peter Millican arrives in the twentieth century, during the last years of the Great War, to a pandemic which you may have read a lot about during the early coverage of our current COVID outbreak. |
Peter Millican, John Oxford, Brian Angus, Claas Kirchhelle |
14 Jan 2021 |
5 |
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'Russian' Flu: the pandemic that wasn't? |
In this episode, Professor Peter Millican discusses a controversial outbreak... |
Peter Millican, Julia Mannherz, Claas Kirchhelle, Brian Angus |
14 Jan 2021 |
6 |
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Cholera |
Professor Peter Millican makes it to the nineteenth century to discuss the achievements of John Snow |
Peter Millican, Claas Kirchhelle, Brian Angus, Blanche Oguti |
14 Jan 2021 |
7 |
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Siamon Gordon |
Georgina Ferry interviews Siamon Gordon. Siamon Gordon FRS is Professor Emeritus of Cellular Pathology in the Dunn School. |
Siamon Gordon |
04 Jun 2018 |
8 |
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Can you cure HIV? |
HIV isn’t a death sentence anymore. People can live long lives with the virus in their body, as long as they have the right combination of drugs. But some researchers want to take the fight against HIV and AIDS even further... |
John Frater |
02 May 2018 |
9 |
Creative Commons |
Tracing the origins of the HIV/AIDS pandemic |
Nuno Fario (Oxford) investigates the development of HIV since the discovery of its first, and diverse, genomes in 1959 and 1960. A medical anthropology seminar given on 7 March 2016. |
Nuno Faria |
08 Jun 2016 |
10 |
Creative Commons |
Ten Types of Arabic Calligraphy; Sexually Transmitted Diseases and the History of HIV; Panel 1: Migrant Communities and Networks, and Social Exclusion in the UK and Europe (The Silent University) |
Two presentations and the first panel discussion of the Silent University event which took place at the Oxford Department of International Development on 20 May 2014. |
Behnam al-Agzeer, Mulugeta Fikadu, Bridget Anderson, Carlos Cruz |
11 Aug 2014 |
11 |
Creative Commons |
Ethics and infectious disease - navigating the moral maze of pandemic control |
With Professor Paul Klenerman Principal Investigator, Institute for Emerging Infections. |
Paul Klenerman, Bennertt Foddy |
22 May 2013 |
12 |
Creative Commons |
HIV and AIDS - Special lecture for Oxford AIDS Research Day 2012 |
Mark Heywood reflects on the impact of HIV and AIDS for the 4th Annual HIV / AIDS Student Research day. |
Mark Heywood |
27 Nov 2012 |
13 |
Creative Commons |
Sarah Rowland-Jones on HIV/AIDS |
Conrad Keating interviews Sarah Rowland-Jones, Professor of Immunology and Consultant Physician. The theme of her work is anti-viral immunity with a particular focus on how immune responses modify the outcome of HIV and other viral infections. |
Sarah Rowland-Jones, Conrad Keating |
16 Aug 2010 |
14 |
Creative Commons |
HIV: Will there ever be a vaccine? |
A talk about the University's work in China and Africa and its attempts to identify the key determinants of protective immunology against HIV infection that should guide future vaccine design. |
Sarah Rowland-Jones |
10 Nov 2009 |
15 |
Creative Commons |
HIV: Will there ever be a vaccine? |
This talk looks at the University's work in China and Africa and its attempts to identify the key determinants of protective immunology against HIV infection that should guide future vaccine design. |
Sarah Rowland-Jones |
28 Oct 2009 |
16 |
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Chris Patten on Politics and Public Health |
Lord Patten, Chancellor of the University of Oxford, discusses his political perceptions of epidemiology in the UK, and in developing and emerging countries. |
Chris Patten |
23 Apr 2009 |