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Headline (this appears on both the home page, news page and in the article page):New multimillion India-UK research centres
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In a landmark collaboration, the Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Government of India Department for Biotechnology (DBT) have joined forces to fund three major global research centres.
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In a landmark collaboration, the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Government of India Department for Biotechnology (DBT), have joined forces to fund three major global research centres. Using high quality research teams based in the UK and India, two of the centres will focus on research into antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and the other on cancer biology. Nearly £3.5million will be invested by the UK, through the MRC and the Newton Fund, with matched funding provided by DBT.
The centres will take a global perspective in tackling some of the largest global health problems of today and foster the next generation of researchers with specialist skills.
- The Cambridge-Chennai Centre Partnership on Antimicrobial Resistant Tuberculosis
A team of international researchers, from across a number of disciplines, will look to develop new diagnostic tools and new treatments to address the sharp rise in cases of multidrug resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB). The partnership between the University of Cambridge and the National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis (NIRT) in Chennai, India, will generate a rich and lasting clinical and genomic dataset.
- UK-India Centre for Advanced Technology for Minimising the indiscriminate use of Antibiotics (UKICAT-MA)
This centre will focus on finding solutions to the excessive and inappropriate use of antibiotics. In partnership with the University of Sheffield, University of Bradford and L V Prasad Eye Institute in India, the new centre will establish smart materials for the detection and targeted delivery of antibiotics for eye infections, and promote the use of these new technologies in other infective diseases.
- MRC-DBT Joint Centre for Cancer Biology & Therapeutics
Cancer is among the leading causes of disease and death worldwide. The World Health Organization estimates that the number of new cases will rise by about 70% over the next two decades. This centre will link the MRC Cancer Unit at the University of Cambridge with the National Centre for Biological Sciences in India to foster research on cancer biology and therapy in India through collaborative research programmes, translational research and capacity building.
Prof K. VijayRaghavan, Secretary, Department of Biotechnology stated:
“The Department of Biotechnology, Government of India is delighted to partner with the MRC in creating research centres which will address vexing challenges in medicine through quality science and collaboration. India is committed to working with the best in the world, for India and for the world. We are acutely aware that the fruits of our partnership can mean better lives for the most- needy everywhere and are committed to make the collaboration succeed.”
Dr Mark Palmer MRC Director of International Strategy, said:
“With a 100-year history of strategic international collaboration, MRC scientists today collaborate with researchers in more than 100 countries. We know diseases don’t recognise international borders and that addressing health problems around the world demands a global response. These exciting partnerships between excellent scientists in India and the UK is a key part of our international effort to pool expertise and resources and deliver research that will make a real difference to global health.”
The Newton Fund is a new initiative which will enable the UK to use its strength in research and innovation to promote the economic development and social welfare of 15 partner countries. The Fund will help countries that are rapidly improving their own scientific capability and will help to unlock further opportunitiesfor science and innovation collaboration.
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Tips on health categories coding
If you have a Gateway to Research reference (‘G’ number), you can get the health categories coding from there. In the absence of a G number, please use the following guidance to apply health categories to the content.
General points
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- It’s fine to use more than one health category eg post-natal depression: mental health, and reproductive health and childbirth.
Categories
Blood
Haematological diseases, anaemia, clotting and normal development and function of platelets and erythrocytes.
Cancer
All types of cancers (includes leukaemia). Cancers should not be tagged to the body location eg lung cancer is not respiratory.
Cardiovascular
Coronary heart disease, diseases of the vasculature and circulation including the lymphatic system, and normal development and function of the cardiovascular system.
Congenital disorders
Physical abnormalities and syndromes that are not associated with a single type of disease or condition, including Down's syndrome and cystic fibrosis. Use for physical abnormalities/congenital syndromes that are associated with multiple conditions, not for all inherited disorderseg congenital heart defects should be coded cardiovascular.
Ear
Deafness and normal ear development and function.
Eye
Diseases of the eye and normal eye development and function.
Infection
Diseases caused by pathogens, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, sexually transmitted infections, and studies of infection and infectious agents. Not vCJD (neurological). Do not code by site eg respiratory tract infections are infection, not respiratory
Inflammatory and immune system
Rheumatoid arthritis, connective tissue diseases, autoimmune diseases, allergies, and normal development and function of the immune system.Not asthma (respiratory).
Injuries and accidents
Fractures, poisoning and burns.
Mental health
Depression, schizophrenia, psychosis and personality disorders, addiction, suicide, anxiety, eating disorders, learning disabilities, autistic spectrum disorders, and studies of normal psychology, cognitive function and behaviour.Not dementias (neurological).
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Neurological
Dementias, transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, Parkinson's disease, neurodegenerative diseases, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and studies of the normal brain and nervous system.
Oral and gastrointestinal
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Renal and urogenital
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Fertility, contraception, abortion,in vitrofertilisation, pregnancy, mammary gland development, menstruation and menopause, breast feeding, antenatal care, childbirth and complications of newborns.
Respiratory
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Skin
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Stroke
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Research applicable to all diseases and conditions or to general health and well-being of individuals. Public health research, epidemiology and health services research that is not focused on specific conditions. Underpinning/fundamental/basic biological, psychosocial, economic or methodological studies that are not specific to individual diseases or conditions.
Other
Conditions of unknown or disputed cause (such as chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis), or research that is not of generic health relevance and not applicable to specific health categories listed above. Should be used infrequently – this is not a dumping ground.
Topics spanning multiple categories
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Tobacco/smoking / Diet/obesity / Physical activity / AlcoholCancer / Cancer / Cancer / Cancer
Cardiovascular / Cardiovascular / Cardiovascular / Cardiovascular
Respiratory / Metabolic & endocrine / Metabolic & endocrine / Oral & gastrointestinal
Stroke / Oral & gastrointestinal / Oral & gastrointestinal / Stroke
Stroke