Drinking coffee or tea may be beneficial for physical function in ageing   

12 Oct 2018

Scientists reveal mystery of superbug evolution

Scientists have found a new way in which bacteria evolve, one they believe is at least 1,000 times more efficient than any currently known mechanism. The insights will help scientists to better understand how dangerous bacteria can rapidly evolve and become increasingly virulent and antibiotic resistant.

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14 Sep 2018

Students compete in search for innovative healthcare ideas

Over the past year, the students from the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine (NUS Medicine) and their counterparts from the Business, Computing, Engineering, Dentistry, and Science faculties have gone through interdisciplinary boot camps to develop and refine their proposed solutions and prototypes to a number of healthcare problems. The students, grouped into 14 teams, are taking part in the second edition of the Medical Grand Challenge, which was launched last year.

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06 Sep 2018

Neighbourhood Health Service to screen for all chronic illnesses

Singapore’s pioneering student-led health screening programme for residents of rental HDB apartments is going big this year, the 12th since the programme began in 2007. The NUS Medicine student planners of the Neighbourhood Health Service intend to screen residents in Kampong Glam and Queenstown (Leng Kee) for all chronic illnesses as well as oral, vision and hearing health.

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05 Sep 2018

Stronger chemotherapy for children with high-risk leukaemia boosts cure, reduces relapse rates

A team of doctors from Singapore and Malaysia has managed to raise cure rates for a group of child leukemia patients from 69.6 per cent to 91.6 per cent while also lowering relapses from 30 per cent to 13 per cent

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14 Aug 2018

Key to artery health lies in LYVE-1 Macrophage

A team of NUS Medicine researchers led by Associate Professor Veronique Angeli has identified a population of cells called macrophages that coat the outer walls of healthy arteries and express a protein called LYVE-1. The researchers found that when these cells were absent, arteries accumulate collagen and lose their elasticity, becoming stiff and inflexible.

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29 Jul 2018

Statement on the passing of Emeritus Professor K. Shanmugaratnam

We mourn the passing of Emeritus Professor K. Shanmugaratnam. He was a dedicated academic clinician who drove himself to excel and in so doing, set the benchmark for the teaching and practice of Pathology at the University and in Singapore.

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26 Jul 2018

Pathology teaching goes digital

Today, the learning of pathology has been enhanced and aided through technology, thanks to the efforts of Associate Professor Nga Min En and colleagues at the Department of Pathology. Painstakingly, one specimen at a time, the team has rendered more than 700 specimens in digital format and made more than 250 of these specimens available online for medical students.

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29 Jun 2018

New hope for lung cancer patients

Scientists at the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore (CSI), National University of Singapore (NUS) have discovered a new pathway in cells that could explain how lung cancers develop resistance to treatment.

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02 Jun 2018

Looking through the silver mirror

A group of NUS students produced a book titled 'Looking through the silver mirror', detailing 20 seniors' life stories and experiences navigating Singapore's healthcare system.

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31 May 2018

A whole new way of seeing the human body

The Centre for Healthcare Simulation (CHS) at NUS Medicine recently launched the Virtual Interactive Human Anatomy (VIHA) to enhance the teaching and learning of human anatomy.

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