Mind the Gap: Addressing the critical shortage of organs for transplantation
Inaugural Lecture
Anthony Warrens, Professor of Renal and Transplantation Medicine
There is a worldwide shortage of organs for transplantation. Anthony Warrens’ research has addressed a number of different approaches to tackling this problem. Will it be possible to use organs from animals in man? Can we better understand rejection to make the transplanted organ less susceptible? Which aspects of immunological sensitisation are important in increasing rejection? Why is it that members of some communities are less prepared to consent to organ donation than others? Professor Warrens discusses how his work has approached these questions and how he has become increasingly interested in medical education at the same time.
Professor Warrens's biography
Anthony Warrens undertook his undergraduate training at Glasgow and Oxford, his PhD at the Royal Postgraduate Medical School, London, and a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard, Boston, USA.
In 1996 he was appointed Senior Lecturer and Consultant in Renal Medicine and Immunology, subsequently being awarded a personal chair at Imperial College as Professor of Renal and Transplantation Medicine.
He is on the executive of the British Transplantation Society and serves on various national and international bodies in the field of transplantation.
He was the founding head of the Imperial College Graduate-Entry MB BS Programme before coming to Barts and the London, Queen Mary University of London, as Dean for Education.
Times and location
This lecture took place on 11 April 2011 in the Perrin Lecture Theatre; Whitechapel Campus
Podcast
Length: approx 47 minutes
- Watch full Echo360 presentation of 'Mind the Gap' (video of lecture and slides) [requires Flash player]
Other media
- Listen to 'Mind the Gap' (audio only) [MP3] (requires QuickTime media player or similar)
- Watch video of 'Mind the Gap' (includes slides used in presentation) [M4V] (requires QuickTime media player)
More lectures in the series
This lecture is part of a series of Primary Care and Public Health at Barts and the London lectures.