2021.11.04 | Grants and awards
Sâmia Joca will be investigating the effect of canabidiol on depression
2021.11.04 | Event
Join the Christmas Parade and welcome Santa Claus who will be lighting the Christmas lights at Aarhus' main shopping street 'Strøget'. There will be Christmas music, Christmas stands and lots of Christmas-'hygge'.
2021.11.04 | Meeting
The personalized network welcome you the first annual meeting. The meeting will take place in The AIAS Auditorium on 25th November 2021, at 9:00-16:30. Registration deadline is 12th November 2021. Click here to read more.
2021.11.04 | Research
Associate Professor and Consultant Cardiac Surgeon Ivy Susanne Modrau from our department contributed to the FAME 3 trial, where the results from the multicenter study recently was published in New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM): Fractional Flow Reserve–Guided PCI as Compared with Coronary Bypass Surgery.
2021.11.04 | Policy and strategy
Who could fail to notice that internationalisation is one of the faculty's strategic focus areas? On the other hand, how the goal of increased internationalisation should be implemented in practice is not set in stone. At the Department of Public Health, a recent panel debate is an example of how the university can invite the outside world to come…
2021.11.04 | Education
The Department of Dentistry and Oral Health have been given the green light to offer the new professional Bachelor's degree programme in clinical dental technology from September 2022. However, the department has decided to postpone the commencement of studies for a year to ensure the degree programme’s quality.
2021.11.04 | Grants and awards
Can the drug cannabidiol have a positive effect on depression? This is what Sâmia Joca, who is associate professor at Aarhus University, is investigating. The Lundbeck Foundation is supporting the project with just over DKK five million.
2021.11.03 | People news
Patients with a transplanted heart risk suffering from a disease in the heart's blood vessels. New Doctor of Medical Science at Aarhus University, Tor Skibsted Clemmensen, carries out research into a new method that can detect the disease at an earlier stage than currently possible.
2021.11.03 | People news
Children born with a small hole between the atrial chambers of the heart are not offered the option of having the hole closed. New Doctor of Medical Science Sebastian Udholm from Aarhus University instead recommends lifelong follow-up in order to avoid the defect leading to health challenges for the children later in life.