Topic description and stories

Cambridge researchers have played a vital role in the fight back against COVID-19, from the use of genomics to track its spread and mathematic modelling to understand infection rates through to innovative screening programmes to keep its students and staff safe.

Underactive immune response may explain obesity link to COVID-19 severity

20 March 2023

Individuals who are obese may be more susceptible to severe COVID-19 because of a poorer inflammatory immune response, say Cambridge scientists.

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Coronavirus

Single dose of Pfizer BioNTech vaccine reduces asymptomatic infections and potential for SARS-CoV-2 transmission

26 Feb 2021

New data from Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge suggests that a single dose of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine can reduce by 75% the number of...

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Testing kit

Cambridge institute publishes ethical framework for asymptomatic COVID-19 student testing in HE institutions

25 Feb 2021

The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute has today published an ethical framework for higher education institutions considering running...

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Professor Sharon Peacock

Q&A with Sharon Peacock, coronavirus variant hunter

22 Feb 2021

The UK is a world leader in sequencing SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Of all the coronavirus genomes that have been sequenced in the...

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Diagram showing connections between people

New national modelling group to provide faster, more rigorous COVID-19 predictions

18 Feb 2021

A new national consortium, co-led by the University of Cambridge, will bring together mathematical modellers to produce faster, more rigorous...

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Central Leeds during the first UK lockdown

First COVID-19 lockdown cost UK hospitality and high street £45 billion in turnover, researchers estimate

18 Feb 2021

However, UK supermarkets and online retailers made an additional £4 billion each thanks to the coronavirus lockdown that began in March last year...

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Robot dog

Robotic dogs and laughter therapy: 10 ways to combat loneliness and isolation while social distancing

17 Feb 2021

Robotic dogs, laughter therapy and mindfulness are some of the ways that might help people – particularly the elderly – cope with loneliness and...

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Graphene could one day be used to make quick, reliable tests for viruses like SARS-CoV-2

16 Feb 2021

Dr Luigi Occhipinti from the Department of Engineering dicusses the role of graphene in future medical technologies for The Conversation.

How the pandemic may damage children’s social intelligence

12 Feb 2021

Prof Barbara Sahakian and her Cambridge colleague Dr Christelle Langley look at how lockdowns might lead to lost social skills in children, and how...

Doctor wearing face mask

Proper fit of face masks is more important than material, study suggests

11 Feb 2021

A team of researchers studying the effectiveness of different types of face masks has found that in order to provide the best protection against...

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Digital support

10 Feb 2021

Research published today shows how digital providers are coming together to support the mental health needs of millions of users unable to access...

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Vaccine rollouts, school testing and contact tracing could all be improved

05 Feb 2021

Director of the MRC Biostatistics Unit at Cambridge, Prof Sylvia Richardson, looks at the smart evaluations we should add to our pandemic control...

3D print of Spike protein

Study highlights risk of new SARS-CoV-2 mutations emerging during chronic infection

05 Feb 2021

SARS-CoV-2 mutations similar to those in the B1.1.7 UK variant could arise in cases of chronic infection, where treatment over an extended period can...

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