We caught up with three King’s medics, Dr Fanny Belais, Dr Adam Townson and Dr Chris Williams, to hear about their experiences over the past 12 months.
Bodley’s Court restoration wins national roofing awards
11 Mar 2021
The project to restore the roof of Bodley’s Court has been selected as the winner of the Heritage Roofing category and overall Roof of the Year in the 2020 UK Roofing Awards.
A discussion with alumnus Saul Walker, Deputy Director of COVID-19 Vaccines, Therapeutics and Diagnostics at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), about some of the successes and challenges of the past year, his aspirations for
New internship programme for King’s undergraduates announced
18 Feb 2021
The Gatsby Summer Internship Programme is aimed at inspiring science students from socially and economically disadvantaged backgrounds to think about going on to further research.
King’s student helping to develop AI tools to measure vital signs
22 Jan 2021
Fourth-year chemical engineer Mikka Alon has been working with health start-up perfexia to explore ways of using smartphone technology to monitor vital signs such as heart rate and respiratory rate.
Archaeological dig reveals Anglo-Saxon cemetery on King's accommodation site
20 Jan 2021
An archaeological dig at the site of the new graduate accommodation at Croft Gardens has revealed an extensive early medieval burial ground, shedding light on life and death in Cambridge from the end of the Roman period.
Pioneering art historian John Bernard Bury (born 1917) passed away on 18th January 2017, at Wimbledon, aged 99. John studied at Balliol College, Oxford, where he read modern history (1935-38).
Chapel Lates are back with a performance of Richard Causton’s Nocturne for 21 Pianos, performed by students from Cambridge University with young pianists from St. Bede's School and the Centre for Young Musicians
We congratulate two of our current Fellows, Dr Jude Browne and Dr Ingo Gildenhard, who have both won Pilkington Prizes this year for their substantial contributions to teaching.
It's not all in my head! - The complex relationship between rare diseases and mental health problems
6 Mar 2017
This article argues that the common experiences of rare disease patients have impacts upon the way in which their psychiatric care should be offered and managed, and that sensitivity and understanding surrounding these issues should be considered