Are you a UoM researcher who uses the @ukbiobank.bsky.social?
Did you know that we have a user group at the University?
@robertmaidstone.bsky.social is one of the group leads - find out more about his plans for the group over the next few months.
Posts by Robert Maidstone
Prof Nick Wareham delivering the Pemberton Lecture
Prof Nick Wareham from @mrcepid.bsky.social & @phiuk.bsky.social delivering his invited Pemberton lecture on Translating epidemiology into public health action
#SSM2025
"In heart failure, circadian rhythms are dampened but remain intact, suggesting the potential for incorporating timing in diagnostics and therapies."
academic.oup.com/eurheartj/ad...
Big news! Manchester, together with colleagues in Oxford, have been awarded an MRC CoRE in Exposome Immunology!! Exciting times ahead to uncover how pollution and other environmental factors worsen inflammatory diseases!!
New comment piece by me & colleagues in @bmj.com on the using health data for research in UK
Processes are so complex and so slow now that less research is happening and we are wasting the enormous potential of the NHS to drive innovation
www.bmj.com/content/390/...
Was really great to attend the "Women’s Health in Greater Manchester: A Showcase of Policy, Research, Voice & Action" yesterday. Was great to hear from researchers, clinicians, and policy leads across GM who are working on and dealing with these issues.
🚨 After a brief hiatus, the UK Public Health Science conference returns in 2026 in collaboration with @socsocmed.bsky.social!
📅 Join us in Newcastle on 21 April, with dinner + ECR event on 20 April
📣 Call for abstracts coming soon
🏠 ukpublichealthscience.org
🤝 socsocmed.org.uk
Does where you live really impact your health in later life?
A new report from @thenhsa.bsky.social, partly based on @officialuom.bsky.social research, has exposed alarming disadvantages faced by older people in the North.
www.manchester.ac.uk/about/news/o...
New report on stakes of menstrual tracking: www.mctd.ac.uk/wp-content/u...
Highlighted in a piece by @andrewgregory.com: www.theguardian.com/society/2025...
For more scholarship on FemTech, see our (still growing) special issue in @contraceptionjl.bsky.social: www.sciencedirect.com/special-issu...
Report in @miamiherald.com on asthma study: www.miamiherald.com/news/busines... @robertmaidstone.bsky.social @uniofmanchester.bsky.social @hdurrington.bsky.social
Thanks to my co-authors, @hdurrington.bsky.social, Martin Rutter, James Liu, Jack Bowden and David Ray, @asthmaandlung.org.uk for funding the study and @ukbiobank.bsky.social team and participants.
The ability to reduce the risk of women developing asthma through modification of work schedules could have significant health-economic benefits, although more research in other cohorts and clinical studies is needed.
This is the first study to evaluate sex differences in the relationship between shift work frequency and asthma; an important topic from a public health perspective. This study is in the UK biobank cohort, a large cohort of over 500,000 people with linked health and employment data.
We showed that postmenopausal and premenopausal permanent night shift-workers had higher odds of moderate-severe asthma when compared to corresponding day workers, but only premenopausal females had a significant interaction between sex and shift work frequency.
Compared to women day workers, women permanent night shift workers had a higher likelihood of moderate-severe asthma (OR: 1.50 (95% CI 1.18 – 1.91)) but there was no corresponding relationship seen in men (OR 0.95 (95% CI 0.72 – 1.26)).
Our new paper has graduated from medRxiv to being published in ERJ Open!! "Increased risk of asthma in female night shift workers." doi.org/10.1183/2312...
Excellent opportunity for new or established researchers in biological rhythms and circadian biology for lecturer/ senior lecturer (assistant/ associate professor equivalent) positions at the University of Manchester.
www.jobs.manchester.ac.uk/Job/JobDetai...
Really enjoyed San Francisco this week for ICAN 2025 and a bit of touristing, but the time difference has been a right pain. #inbedat7
Was great to present my work at the ICAN 2025 meeting yesterday. Looking forward to another fun day today
A researcher is in the lab finding treatments for lung conditions.
You can play your part in helping to drive life-changing research to help people with lung conditions this summer.
We can't help to fund new treatments without your amazing help.
Find out how you can donate here: www.asthmaandlung.org.uk/life-changin...
The UK Biobank is set to arrive next to the University in 2026 so this is the ideal time to strengthen ties between the two institutions. Dr. Niels Muhlert from @fbmh-uom.bsky.social co-leads the UoM UK Biobank Users community which is doing just that.
Really nice visualisation of a lagged health outcome over decades (in contrast to the delays over days/weeks we typically see for acute infectious diseases like COVID)
NEW: A study led by @hdurrington.bsky.social from @fbmh-uom.bsky.social found that taking an inhaler mid-afternoon may be the best way to keep asthma symptoms under control.
🩺 Take a closer look at the facts:
thorax.bmj.com/content/earl...
📖 Step into the full story:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Happy Rob running down a hill after a bitter slog of a fell run
Had a "great" time running the Herod Farm Fell Race in Charlesworth last night on a chilly April evening
Latest from our CfBT!
The impact of dosage timing for inhaled corticosteroids in asthma: a randomised three-way crossover trial thorax.bmj.com/content/earl...
Great to see Dr Ran Wang's research on chronotherapy for asthma being picked up by news outlets today. Was a great study to be a part of
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
The problem with most machine-based random number generators is that they’re not TRULY random, so if you need genuine randomness it is sometimes necessary to link your code to an external random process like a physical noise source or the current rate of US tariffs on a given country.
💬 @ukbiobank.bsky.social Deputy Chief Scientist Professor Martin Rutter on yesterday's data release 🔽