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We are building a positive research culture at St George's where researchers feel empowered to do their best work and develop their career.
We're putting £5.8 million of Office for Students funding towards improving facilities and equipment for our students.
Deep brain stimulation has revealed that a specific type of brain wave activity is associated with levels of anxiety in people living with Parkinson’s disease.
Your gift to St George’s will inspire our students, our research, and our community, and ultimately impact the patients who will benefit from the care and expertise of our graduates around the world.
Enjoy stories of impact and support from generous donations.
This image shows a type of bone tumour from 1878. At this time it was not unusual for a limb to be amputated to increase the chances of survival for the patient.
This image shows the devastating effect of tuberculosis before antibiotics became available. It this case the tuberculosis bacteria has destroyed the bones of the skull.
This image shows a kidney stone. It is commonly known as a staghorn calculus due to the shape it forms inside the kidney.
This image of a fractured elbow is from a man who was injured in a gunpowder mill explosion. Amputation was a common treatment for badly broken bones in the 19th century.
This image of shows the knee bone of a man who was admitted to St George's in 1843 with an extensive wound of the knee. He had damaged the knee following an accident with a scythe and did not recover.
This image shows the fractured ribs of a man who was reported to have fallen "into the hold of a barge astride an iron pipe". The fractured ribs punctured his lungs and he did not recover from his injuries.
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