To celebrate Rare Disease Day we invited patients and their families to try out 13 different hands-on and interactive fun and educational science and research activities for children and adults.
A new pioneering approach, developed by researchers at UCL and Great Ormond Street Hospital means human development can be observed in late pregnancy for the first time
A vibrant image helping researchers' study gastrointestinal diseases and their potential treatments has been crowned the winner of the 3rd annual National Institute for Health and Care Research Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR
Today on Wednesday 14 February, GOSH is celebrating its 172nd birthday. With 2024 being a leap year, we wanted to look back at some of the leaps that we have made in medical science over the past 172 years
Last December, the Norrie Disease conference took place at University College London, Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, organised by the Norrie Disease Foundation and Professor Jane Sowden’s research group.
GOSH is one of six leading European children’s hospitals that make up the PHEMS project, which will revolutionise how children’s health data is managed and used across Europe and advance research and innovation in healthcare for children.
A new landmark study led from GOSH has found that reducing oxygen levels for critically ill children on mechanical ventilators in intensive care could save lives
GOSH will support the new Child and Young People’s HealthTech Research Centre (HRC), led by Sheffield Children’s Hospital, as leads for AI and Machine Learning.
Researchers who are searching for better treatments for an incredibly rare type of brain tumour have published successful results from the latest rounds of clinical trials.
GOSH has been granted a Manufacturer's Authorisation Licence for the manufacture of viral vectors, which will accelerate Cell and gene therapies (CGT) clinical trials worldwide and expand the novel treatments that we can offer to our patients.
The Research and Innovation Communications team at GOSH and the NIHR GOSH Biomedical Research invite you to enter our Research and Innovation Showcase: A Moment of Discovery.
The Data Research, Innovation and Virtual Environments (DRIVE) unit at GOSH was launched five years ago. Our new report explains how this first-of-its-kind unit has led to improvements in research and innovation, and care for children and young people.
Eight-year-old Aditi is the first child in the UK and on the NHS to be taken off immunosuppressants just one-month after kidney transplant at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH).
An international team led by researchers at GOSH, UCL and the NIHR GOSH BRC have developed in mice a gene therapy that significantly reduces the hearing loss associated with Norrie disease.
An international research collaboration, including GOSH and our research partner UCL Institute of Child Health, has shown that a technique known as rapid genome sequencing can provide a diagnosis for 43 per cent of children with unexplained epilepsy.
Researchers from across GOSH, UCL GOS ICH and the Wellcome Sanger Institute have published new insights that explain why some children have a longer remission than others after having cutting-edge CAR T-cell therapy for leukaemia.
On 19 May we enjoyed welcoming patients, their families and GOSH staff, including GOSH nursery to the Lagoon to celebrate International Clinical Trials Day as well as the NIHR “Be Part of Research" campaign.