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22nd May 2026
Five ways we’re researching women’s health
Despite affecting half the population, women’s health has historically been and continues to be understudied. A recent report found that there are 67% less clinical trials that were female-only compared to male-only. It’s important that everyone, including women, are represented in research so that...
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15th May 2026
From precision medicine to networking; Reflections on the Festival of Genomics
I attended the Festival of Genomics and Biodata in London at ExCeL on 28th and 29th January 2026. Festival of Genomics brings together people from academia, research institutes, medicine, tech companies, and policy, together. As a PhD student, it was an amazing opportunity where...
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8th May 2026
Being part of the future through a career in research nursing
“I work in the NIHR Norfolk Clinical Research Facility hosted by the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, here in the Quadram Institute. NIHR stands for the National Institute for Health and Care Research and they are the health and social care research...
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1st May 2026
Why should we involve patients and the public in human studies?
Members of the public are the most important part of health research. Researchers may have the knowledge and experience to develop human studies on health-related questions, but researchers can’t, and shouldn’t, do this research alone. What is Patient and Public Involvement? Patient and Public...
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17th April 2026
Fostering fermented food science collaborations in Nepal
“We are both researchers in Dr. Fred’s Warren group studying how food affects the gut microbiome. Our collaboration with researchers in Nepal began when Prajwal Rajbhandari, Co-founder and President of the Research Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology (RIBB) in Kathmandu, visited the Quadram Institute...
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3rd April 2026
“Initially, I started making videos online during the pandemic in my second year of my bachelor’s degree. I was studying Biomedicine at the University of East Anglia and was trapped inside during the pandemic. Creating content online for me was a way to be...
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27th March 2026
The nutrition and health benefits of cabbage
Cabbage is a humble vegetable which has been eaten for thousands of years. This year, the leafy green has been growing in popularity with the fashion magazine Vogue declaring 2026 “The Year of the Cabbage”. Here at the Quadram Institute, we study the nutrition...
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27th February 2026
Is E. coli always bad for you? Meet the microbe with good and bad strains
The bad side of E. coli: urinary tract infections Escherichia coli, better known as E. coli, is a tube-shaped microbe that sometimes causes infection. E. coli is notoriously at the root of urinary tract infections (UTI) when it travels to the urinary tract. This...
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13th February 2026
Meet the Microbe Zookeepers from the Quadram Institute
This year at Norwich Science Festival there will be a “Microbe Zoo”. In the Microbe Zoo visitors will be transported into a world usually invisible to the naked eye, one inhabited by bacteria, fungi, viruses and algae. The activity has been developed by the...
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6th February 2026
Science beyond the lab: a Science Communication Internship at the Royal Institution
“As I entered the third year of my PhD, I was feeling comfortable in the academic and laboratory research environments and had made good progress with my project; investigating previously uncharacterised genes and their involvement in the regulation of biofilm formation, a process where...
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