Glasgow shortlisted for University of the Year award

Published: 7 September 2015

The University of Glasgow has been nominated for four prestigious Times Higher Education Awards, including the University of the Year award for the second year running.

The University of Glasgow has been shortlisted as University of the Year in the Times Higher Education Awards. This is the second consecutive year that the University has received this accolade.University tower

The University has also been nominated in three other categories in the prestigious national awards.

Professor David Clark’s End of Life Studies is shortlisted for the Research Project of the Year, University spinout MODE Diagnostics is in the running for the Outstanding Contribution to Innovation and Technology prize.

The University is also nominated in the Outstanding Support for Early Career Researchers category, alongside the Universities of Aberdeen, Edinburgh, and Strathclyde.

Professor Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Glasgow, said: “We’re pleased and proud to be nominated for the second year running as University of the Year, in addition to being shortlisted for the other prestigious awards.

“Our success in the shortlisting is a testament to the tremendous efforts of our first-class researchers, which, in tandem with our excellent teaching across four Colleges, makes us a world-leading institution.

“With work underway to expand and improve our learning and teaching facilities in coming years, we’ll be even better-placed to continue the world-changing, inspiring work we’ve been doing since 1451.”

University of the Year nomination

A study from Professor David Clark’s End of Life Studies Group has been nominated for the Research Project of the Year,  for a paper published in the journal Palliative Medicine in March 2014.

The research explored, for the first time anywhere in the world the number of hospital inpatients in an entire country who on a given day are within the last year of life. The paper showed that among 10,743 inpatients in  25 Scottish teaching and general hospitals on 31 March 2010,  3,098 (28.8%) patients died during the one-year follow-up period. Perhaps most striking of all was the finding that in Scottish hospitals on any given day, almost one in ten patients (9.3%) will die before they leave.

The study was a massive call to action for hospitals to give greater priority to identifying inpatients who might benefit from palliative care. It also attracted attention from Scottish Government officials and from researchers in Denmark and New Zealand (where the study is now being replicated). Professor Clark was subsequently  invited to take the role of Consulting Editor on the Scottish Government’s Strategic Framework for Action on Palliative and End of Life Care, due to be published December 2015 and is currently advising the Scottish Parliament on its Inquiry into palliative care.

MODE Diagnostics, a University spinout which develops new health screening products for physicians and consumers, is shortlisted for the Outstanding Contribution to Innovation and Technology award.  

This year, MODE launched its first over-the-counter project, a digital device which allows people to test themselves for early signs of bowel cancer. Bowel cancer, which affects 41,000 people a year in the UK, can be detected in its initial stages by low-level bleeding. While it is one of the easiest cancers to cure, early detection is vital. Only half of those diagnosed with bowel cancer survive for five years, but early surgery improves survival rates to 80%. The digital display produces a green tick if the result is clear and an amber alert if further medical advice is required.

The winners of the Times Higher Education Awards will be announced at an event in London on Thursday 26 November. More than 1000 guests are expected to attend, including politicians, senior sector figures, and academic and university staff from all corners of the UK.


 

First published: 7 September 2015