Centre for Academic Primary Caremenu
Our users
Since launching the archive, we have shared our data with a wide range of researchers at different stages of their career including PhD students, GP trainees, clinicians coming into academia for short research projects, and established academics. The data has been used to address many different research questions, some of which are shown above, and can be seen in our Publications section.
Our users and their research
Dr Kathrina Connabeer, Loughborough University - Lifestyle Advice in Primary Care Consultations, PhD Studentship
Dr Peter Edwards, University of Bristol - Safety-netting in UK primary care consultations, Academic Foundation Programme / Elizabeth Blackwell Institute Clinical Primer. Also, Eliciting patients’ ideas, concerns, expectations, and effects on life: an observational study of routine general practice (GP-ICEE)
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New Delhi: Amity University, under the leadership of Founder President Dr. Ashok K Chauhan and Chancellor Dr. Atul Chauhan, touched another milestone by organizing 3rd International Conference in association with IEEE (UK & Ireland) in virtual mode on Intelligent Engineering & Management from April 28-30, 2021
Conference was inaugurated on 28th April 2021 by Lord Rami Ranger, House of Lords UK Parliament & Founder, Sun Mark Group UK; Prof. Mike Hinchey, Director, Lero – The Irish Software Engineering Research Centre & Past Chair IEEE (UK & IrelandSection); Prof. Mark E Smith, Vice Chancellor, University of Southampton, UK; Dr. Carmen Z. Lamagna, Vice-Chancellor, AIU-Bangladesh; Professor Nigel Wright, Deputy Vice-Chancellor – Research and Enterprise, Nottingham Trent University, UK; Ms. Harjeet Kaur Joshi, CMD The Shipping Corporation of India Ltd; Mr. Pravin Hungund -Chief Technologist & Global Head Technovation Centre, Wipro Ltd.; Mr. G.K. Mishra, Group Vice President
My friend Jamilur Reza Choudhury
Professor Jamilur Reza Choudhury and Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus. Photo: Collected
Dr Muhammad Yunus
Dr Muhammad Yunus
It was to be a busy day. Tomorrow is the meeting of our construction advisory committee. Many renowned architects and engineers of the country are members of this committee. We are fortunate to have them all together.
Among them was the well-respected Professor Jamilur Reza Choudhury. He was the chairman of the committee. He scrutinised all the documents of the meeting, a lifelong habit for him; there was no way to avoid the details.
Yesterday, he called Ashraf (Ashraful Hasan), who is the central figure in all our construction projects, to get some more explanations regarding the documents.
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Research has shed new light on the impact of humans on Earth’s biodiversity. The findings suggest that the rate of change in an ecosystem’s plant-life increases significantly during the years following human settlement, with the most dramatic changes occurring in locations settled in the last 1500 years.
An international research team studied fossilised pollen dating back 5000 years, extracted from sediments on 27 islands. By analysing the fossils they were able to build up an understanding of the composition of each island’s vegetation and how it changed from the oldest to the most recent pollen samples.
The study was led by Dr Sandra Nogué, Lecturer in Palaeoenvironmental Science at the University of Southampton, UK and Professor Manuel Steinbauer from the University of Bayreuth, Germany and University of Bergen, Norway. PhD student Dr Alvaro Castilla-Beltrán was also a member of the Southampton team.
PREMIUM
Raveena Singi Reddy left Scotland at the end of March to go back to India and has described what life is like there amid a second wave of Covid. AN INTERNATIONAL student, who arrived in India amid the devastating coronavirus crisis, says she has barricaded herself in her home out fear for her life in the virus-stricken country. Raveena Singi Reddy left Scotland on March 30 after living in the UK for 18 months on a student visa, but in a short few weeks after arriving back in her home country, it has been brought to its knees because of a spike in virus cases.