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Norovirus - Visiting restrictions

Please help us to protect our patients.

- Visiting times on all adult wards are currently restricted to 15.00 - 17.00 and 19.00 - 20.00.

- Two adult visitors per patient only.

- Children should not visit the hospital.


TV presenter and broadcaster, Gabby Logan opens Cambridge IVF

Gabby Logan, TV presenter and broadcaster made the official opening of Cambridge IVF a very special occasion for staff on Monday 14 May.


Dying Matters awareness week 14-21 May

Dying Matters is a 16,000-member coalition set up by the National Council of Palliative Care to support changing knowledge, attitudes and behaviour towards death, dying and bereavement. It aims to make living and dying well the norm.


Young diabetics needed to take part in region-wide Games

Young people with diabetes are being encouraged to take part in the first-ever Paediatric Diabetes East of England Games to be held on 29 August 2012 in Cambridge.


Additional wheelchairs for visitors have arrived!

New wheelchairs for use by visitors are now in place. ACT has awarded a grant of £40,000 to buy 66 coin-operated wheelchairs for the hospitals. These wheelchairs are said to be 'simple to use, easy to find, hard to steal and built to last'

 

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Cambridge launches new Pancreatic Cancer Centre

30 March 2011

28 March 2011 saw the launch of the new Cambridge Pancreatic Cancer Centre, a multi-disciplinary centre of excellence which aims to bring cutting-edge pancreatic research from the laboratory to the bedside.

 

The Centre will focus on conducting world-class human clinical trials of therapies and diagnostics which have shown scientific potential.

"Our goal is to use laboratory discoveries to rapidly develop effective new treatments and monitoring methods for pancreatic cancer patients," said Professor David Tuveson, Director of the new centre.

 

The Centre aims to:

  • Provide treatment and diagnostic options to local and international pancreatic cancer patients seeking novel treatments
  • Design and implement ways to increase patient participation in pancreatic cancer trials locally, nationally, and internationally
  • Establish a multi-disciplinary research community within the University of Cambridge that coordinates and sponsors research projects to develop new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for pancreatic cancer
  • Contribute to publications in pancreatic cancer medicine for broad dissemination to government, academia, and industry
  • Translate research findings in pancreatic cancer to clinics
  • Pursue private and public sector funding to ensure success of objectives

 

Each year, pancreatic cancer strikes more than 7500 people in the United Kingdom and over 43,000 in the United States. Because cancer of the pancreas is often not diagnosed until after it has spread, it has one of the lowest survival rates: the one-year survival rate is approximately 20%, and the five-year survival rate is only 4%.

 

Professor Tuveson continued: "With the Centre, we hope to change the perception that there aren't treatment options for people diagnosed with pancreatic cancer."

 

Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, said: "This is a tremendously exciting initiative which will take advantage of Cambridge's numerous strengths as a centre for cancer research to develop new, practical applications for the benefit of pancreatic cancer patients. Pancreatic cancer is a devastating disease that not only affects thousands of people in the United Kingdom every year but is also the sixth leading cause of cancer deaths in the European Union. This Centre will help progress the development of more effective treatments, which are badly needed."

 

Dr Gareth Goodier, chief executive of Cambridge University Hospitals, said:

"This is a perfect example of why we are developing the Cambridge Biomedical Campus as an international centre for patient care, biomedical research and healthcare education.

 

"Bringing these three elements together enables us to create centres of excellence like this one. Through this collaboration scientists and doctors are working together to find the best possible clinical care for our patients … helping to reduce the impact of this desperate disease."

 

Harpal Kumar, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, said: "This new Centre in Cambridge will give patients access to trials of exciting new treatments where they otherwise may not have many options. The involvement of Cancer Research UK's leading scientists will ensure that discoveries made in the lab reach these patients as fast as possible. This Centre is focussing on a critically important field of research and we look forward to seeing the impact of its work in the future."

 

 

 

Contact the PR and Communications team:

 

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,

Box 53, Hills Road,

Cambridge CB2 0QQ

 

Tel: 01223 245 151

 

press@addenbrookes.nhs.uk

 

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