Scientists across Manchester join forces to fight Coronavirus
Scientists and clinicians across Greater Manchester have formed a rapid response research group to find ways to beat Covid-19 and save lives.
The group will harness the power of hundreds of researchers from The University of Manchester as well as clinical colleagues at Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust (MFT) and the Northern Care Alliance NHS Group.
The work is backed by Health Innovation Manchester (HInM), which accelerates research and innovation to improve the health and wellbeing of Greater Manchester’s 2.8m citizens.
Further support is also being provided by the NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) and NIHR Manchester Clinical Research Facility (CRF).
Led by Professor Ian Bruce, Director of the BRC, Academic Director of HInM and a Professor of Rheumatology at MFT’s Kellgren Centre, the group’s work is focussing on:
- new treatments including antivirals, anti-inflammatory agents and others
- understanding disease mechanisms using the expertise of Manchester’s world-leading virology and inflammation/immunology teams to find out which patients acquire the virus and why some patients have a particularly aggressive illness course
- using data science, mathematics and computer modelling to identify and track patients with symptoms to focus on those who are deteriorating and who need more intensive interventions at an earlier stage
- public health and applied health researchers are working on developing and evaluating ways to reduce the impact of the virus on public health. This will relieve pressure on the NHS and social care systems because so many people are affected, especially in social care
- impact on patients with existing health conditions. Manchester researchers are leading on global efforts to track these patients
- speeding up diagnosis and testing. Researchers are working to develop and deploy rapid diagnosis testing platforms to scale-up for mass, widespread testing
- prevention/vaccination: The Greater Manchester partnership has experience of deploying clinical trials at large scale within the community.
Professor Graham Lord, Vice-President and Dean of the Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health at The University of Manchester said: “The Research Rapid Response Group brings together the research and innovation strengths of our partnerships in an unprecedented way to focus on this public health crisis.