Dr Emily Henderson outside Number 10 Downing Street
Dr Emily Henderson, a University of Bristol Honorary Consultant Senior Lecturer, and Consultant at the Royal United Hospitals in Bath, met the Prime Minister Theresa May at a Parkinson's UK charity reception at Downing Street yesterday [Monday 30 October] in recognition of her research into Parkinson's, and to mark the 200-year anniversary since James Parkinson first described the condition.
Dr Emily Henderson with the Prime Minister, Theresa May.
Parkinson's affects 127,000 people in the UK and approximately seven million worldwide. Sixtyy per cent of people with Parkinson's will fall at least once a year, with over a third experiencing falls repeatedly, resulting in fractures, broken bones and hospital admissions.
Research by Dr Henderson and her team, published in The Lancet Neurology last year, found that a commonly prescribed dementia drug could hold the key to helping prevent debilitating falls for people with Parkinson’s. This was one of the University's top 6 discoveries in 2016.
The team studied 130 people with Parkinson's who had fallen in the past year. Half the group were given rivastigmine capsules and the other half a placebo for an eight-month period.
The findings showed people with Parkinson's who were given the oral drug rivastigmine were 45 per cent less likely to fall and were considerably steadier when walking, compared to those on the placebo.
Dr Emily Henderson, who works in Population Health Sciences at the Bristol Medical School, said: "Meeting the Prime Minister Theresa May and to have our work recognised this way is an enormous privilege and honour. Ultimately, our long-term aim is to find better treatments and improve the quality of life for people living with Parkinson's."
http://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2017/october/downing-street.html
No comments:
Post a Comment