News

Child asthma deaths linked to air pollution, new report finds

Of the 54 children who died of asthma between 2019 and 2023, more than 90 per cent were exposed to air pollution levels above World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines, according to a new report published today [12 December] by the University of Bristol’s National Child Mortality Database (NCMD) team. The report uses the NCMD’s unique data on all child deaths in England to examine deaths due to asthma or anaphylaxis between April 2019 and March 2023.

Reduce Blood Borne Virus (BBV) stigma: keep your organisation’s health and safety routines up to date

People living with Blood Borne Viruses (BBVs) such as HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C frequently experience stigma at work and in the community (Aghaizu et al. 2023). Most people remain unaware that there have been extraordinary advances in treatments that make it possible to cure Hepatitis C completely, and make it impossible for people on HIV treatment to pass it on (Britain Thinks, 2021). This is reflected in continued fears of BBV exposure, despite very low to zero risk of transmission in most day-to-day interactions.

Bristol researchers contribute to House of Lords report on obesity and diet

"The Government needs a plan to fix our broken food system and turn the tide on the obesity public health emergency, says Lords committee.". This is the key conclusion reached by the House of Lords Food, Diet and Obesity Committee in a report published today. The report, ‘Recipe for health: a plan to fix our broken food system’, finds that obesity and diet-related disease are a public health emergency that costs society billions each year in healthcare costs and lost productivity.

New study identifies two proteins that may contribute to stroke recurrence

People who experience an arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) or transient ischemic stroke (TIA) are at an increased risk of suffering a second stroke or other major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE), making it critically important to identify risk factors and treatments to prevent these subsequent occurrences. The new study, led by Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) and University of Bristol researchers, has identified new genetic and molecular risk factors that may reveal new pathways for treating patients after they experience their first stroke.