Our research…
We are interested in emotional and physical health and how they impact each other.
In response to the Coronavirus pandemic, we have also turned our attention to COVID-19 diagnostics.
We are interested in emotional and physical health and how they impact each other.
Our current research into emotional health and behavioural endocrinology
We are studying the relationship between our hormones, moods, feelings and emotions – and how they affect our emotional health, as well as our behaviours.
Using biomedicine and psychological testing we can measure the effect of psychoeducation and other therapeutic practices to accurately predict what we can do to support our wellbeing.
Our research into Coronavirus and beyond
Human beings are complex organisms.
To get a full understanding of a body’s disease it can be necessary to do multiple tests.
This can very quickly become prohibitively expensive, which means that diseases can go undetected.
NISAD’s laboratory science arm – NISAD-MAP – is working to change this.
Through the use of MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry, our head of Biomedical Science, Professor Ray Iles, is leading the development of a new technology.
It will make it easier and cheaper to detect intractable human conditions (such as haemoglobinopathies) as well as world-wide pandemic threats from emerging viruses like COVID-19.
We are not going to settle for the status quo: we are pioneering the next advancement, not just in those places where resources are still relatively abundant – but for the benefit of everyone, everywhere.
Coronavirus testing
NISAD-MAP’s head of biomedical science is researching a much less expensive and much faster way of testing for the coronavirus using mass spectrometry.
This test will inform people whether they are infected with the virus and enable them to make informed decisions about their current physical health.
Testing for Coronavirus antibodies
We are researching the development of a diagnostic technology that rapidly and cheaply detects ALL future epidemic and pandemic virus outbreaks.
Our attention is on the current pandemic and also on the future beyond COVID-19.
To focus solely on COVID-19 would be like putting a sticking plaster over a wound then waiting for it to fester and explode. We must look further into the future and create the means through which we can properly heal the wound of this pandemic as well as manage and contain future outbreaks.
The availability of rapid testing would mean we can isolate a virus and prevent transmission in our globally-connected society, thereby safe-guarding lives as well as the entire economic stability of all our countries around the world.
Insight, Stories & News
Letting go of expectations as a new mother
Babies don’t come with instructions. Yet I felt like the instructions practically rained over me since the day I announced my pregnancy. I’ve...
What’s the difference between fear and anxiety?
Performance anxiety, fear of public-speaking or good, old stage fright? Fear of flying or being a nervous flyer? Social phobia or social anxiety?...
What would we tell our 15 year old selves?
Many people think of their teenage years as a tough time in their lives for various reasons. Being between childhood and adulthood is an awkward...