1,064 search results for “health and vascular disease” in the Staff website
- LUSTRUM 2025: Celebrating 15 Years of LUC
- BioREPS online seminar series
-
LCN2 seminar January 2024
Lecture
-
SAILS Lunch Time Seminar
Lecture, Seminar
-
Living Texts
Lecture, Studium Generale
-
The World of Smallpox Picture Books: The Red Books for Smallpox in the Edo Period
Lecture
-
Back at the office? ‘Don’t expect to be productive right away’
For some it will sound like music to their ears, but for others is may sound less appealing: now the advice on working from home has changed, we can once again go to the office. After a period of working from home, which for some lasted almost two years (with maybe a short break), it can be a big transition.…
-
In pictures: animal mummies in a scanner
The story of Tutankhamun, the Egyptian pharaoh, is world famous. But did you know that the Ancient Egyptians mummified not only people but animals too? The National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden recently put a bunch of animal mummies through a CT scanner. This was in collaboration with Canon Netherlands…
-
What makes our university strong and distinctive? Let your voice be heard!
What sets Leiden University apart from other universities? And what research themes would you like us to showcase to the outside world? Share your ideas in our online consultation over the next two weeks.
-
‘Cancer treatment should be a six-week life event’
When internist Christian Blank made his very first discovery, his field of immunotherapy was the underdog of cancer research. Now, over 20 years later, Blank has been appointed Professor By Special Appointment of Internal Medicine for his clinical research into immunotherapy and will give his inaugural…
-
Leiden University celebrates curiosity at 449th Dies Natalis
How has evolution shaped our curiosity? And how does that curiosity ensure that we now have the technological ability to discover whether we are alone in the universe? This was all covered during the celebration of Leiden University’s 449th Dies Natalis.
-
The Erasmus+ grant opens doors
What is it like to participate in the Erasmus+ grant programme as a Master's student from Ukraine? Yevhenii Radchenko did an eight-month internship at Leiden University in 2018. Soon after, he returned as a PhD candidate. 'You have little to lose, but a lot to gain.'
-
How Oncode-PACT is bringing new cancer medicines closer with 325 million in Growth Fund money
How can you ensure that more experimental drugs reach the finish line? At the moment, only one in twenty cancer drugs that are tested on humans makes it to the market. This is an enormous loss for patients and society. With a grant from the National Growth Fund, Oncode-PACT aims to efficiently select…
-
Maureen Rutten - van Mölken: 'Investeren in innovaties die de meeste gezondheidswinst opleveren'
Digitale medische technologie kan een belangrijke bijdrage leveren aan betaalbare zorg en het oplossen van het tekort aan zorgpersoneel. Maar hoe weet je of een innovatie daadwerkelijk waarde toevoegt aan het zorgsysteem?
-
AI-enabled ultrasound: LUC alumna empowers women in rural Africa
AI ultrasounds: LUC alumna empowers women in rural Africa
-
‘It’s a great motivator if your research can be life-changing in the real world’
Our university labs are bursting with cutting-edge research, but how do you commercialise these inventions and discoveries or translate them into outcomes that benefit society? Professor of biological chemistry Nathaniel Martin started a spin-off company with his team. ‘When it comes to valorisation…
-
Managing chronic pain? ‘With a data driven approach you can tailor treatment to the individual’
Exercising less, skipping parties and struggling at work: the expectation of chronic pain and itching can lead to avoidance behaviour. But this is by no means the case for everyone with chronic pain, as PhD candidate Gita Nadinda discovered. What does this mean for healthcare?
-
Teaching Machines to Learn
Lecture, Tuesday Talks: Science Insights
-
What Works in Suicide Prevention? Lessons from the 113 Helpline
Lecture
-
Food for Thought: Unhealthy Finance -Shifting Responsibilities in Society”
Lecture, Food for Thought
-
The Second Trump Administration, the US Intelligence Community, and Transatlantic Security Relations
Panel discussion
-
Psychology Connected: Gender Differences
Conference
-
Balancing the climate, economy, and justice: Can the EU have it all?
Lecture, European Union Seminar
-
Extinction, Extraction, Emergence: Plantation Necrobiopolitics on the West Papuan Oil Palm Frontier
Lecture
-
Citizen Labor: correcting data and creating value in an Indian land records database
Lecture, Research Seminar
-
The Processes of Dying of the Greeks from the Hellenistic Period to the Early Empire
Lecture, Ancient History Research Seminar
-
LUC Student Wins Nobel Peace Prize Essay Competition
Natalia Sobrino-Saeb, third-year student at Leiden University College The Hague, won the challenge by the Ignitor Fellowship Program held by the Nobel Peace Center for her essay on the threats to journalism in Mexico. On December 10th Natalia met the Committee of the Ignitor Fellowship in Oslo and attended…
-
New professor Elise Dusseldorp: ‘The longer you’re in research, the more humble you become’
Elise Dusseldorp has been appointed Professor in the Methodology and Statistics of Psychological Research. In the same way that she spends her spare time rambling through the forest, as a professor she sifts through colleagues’ research data. ‘I often come across information that doesn’t appear in the…
-
Leiden University College writing project brings students together: ‘I am a kitchen in Gaza, and now it is dark’
Leiden University College students collaborate with peers in Gaza and Myanmar to explore the social determinants of health through storytelling, reflection, and shared lived experience.
-
Opening of the Academic Year: ‘Stop the cuts to education’
Scrap the radical cuts to research and teaching. This was researchers and students’ message to government at the opening of the new academic year. Various speakers in Leiden’s Pieterskerk highlighted the importance of science for society.
-
Interdisciplinary collaboration in Leiden: discover the interdisciplinary research programmes
Event for all Leiden researchers
-
Regulation of autophagy-related mechanisms during bacterial infection
PhD defence
-
Novel analytical approaches for the characterization of cell-based medicinal products and their formulation
PhD defence
-
New Year's Reception
Conference
-
Prioritizing Global Responsibilities: The Ethics of Global Priority-setting
Lecture
-
Statistical Learning and Prediction
-
The history of Medicine and Asia
Conference, Global Histories of Knowledge Seminar
-
Finding the right fit
PhD defence
-
Introductie webinar cyber security
Study information
-
Getting personal: Advancing personalized oncology through computational analysis of membrane proteins
PhD defence
-
Navigating the Unpredictable: Climate Chaos and the Future of Water
Lecture, Studium Generale
-
Imagining the Unimaginable: Finding the Islamic in Muslim Futures
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Workshop: Making up Migrants / Disabilities
Workshop
-
Partnering Heritage? Developing Academic Agendas for Una Europa from Southern Africa
Network event
-
Career Talk with Wim Klop
Debate, Career Talk
-
Psychology End of Year Celebration
Festival, Viering
-
Willie Peijnenburg
Faculty of Science
peijnenburg@cml.leidenuniv.nl | 071 5272727
-
Staff symposium on student well-being – A shared path to well-being: students and staff
Conference
-
Leiden University celebrates Dies Natalis: ‘Ahead of the times for 450 years’
An extra-long cortège, three honorary doctorates, a quiz about 450 years of university history, a Dies Natalis rap and a call to defend academic freedom: these all featured in Leiden University’s 450th Dies Natalis celebration and the official start of its jubilee year.
-
Back to the scanner: brain science in times of corona
For their research many neuropsychologists use the brain scanners at the LUMC. At the start of the pandemic, the rules for visiting the hospital became stricter and a large amount of psychology research looked as though it would fall through. Thanks to good protocols the researchers can now pick up…