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Eszter Vamos

Faculty of Medicine, Clinical Senior Lecturer at Imperial College London

Eszter Vamos is a Senior Clinical Lecturer in Public Health Medicine at Imperial College London and an Honorary Clinical Consultant at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.

Eszter studied Medicine at Semmelweis University. She was awarded the Pro Scientia Golden Award by the Hungarian National Scientific Student Council for outstanding performance in undergraduate scientific work, and obtained Distinctions at her final Medical Degree Examinations. Eszter completed her PhD at Semmelweis University in Clinical Nephrology. She was awarded two Marie Curie Fellowships by the European Commission, an Academic Clinical Fellowship by the NIHR, the Michael O’Brien Prize by the UK Faculty of Public Health for achieving the top mark in the Part A Membership Examination, and an Imperial College Clinical Lectureship by the Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support fund and Imperial College London.

Eszter is the Deputy Director of the Public Health Policy Evaluation Unit. Her main research interests are the epidemiology of chronic diseases particularly diabetes and cardiovascular disease, prevention of diabetes and its complications, and management of patients with established disease including risk factor control. Her areas of interest include the evaluation of health policy to prevent and manage long-term conditions.

Eszter’s work is also linked to the NIHR School for Public Health Research (SPHR). The NIHR SPHR collaboration, comprising nine top research institutions, aims to build the evidence base for effective public health practice, generate knowledge that meets the needs of policy makers, practitioners and the public, and reduce health inequalities.     


Visit website: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/e.vamos

 Eszti_Vamos

See also: Academia Imperial College London (ICL) - Public research university with an international reputation for excellence in teaching and research

Details last updated 02-Feb-2023

Eszter Vamos News

Ultra-processed foods effect overall health, may increase risk for cancer

Ultra-processed foods effect overall health, may increase risk for cancer

Independent - 01-Feb-2023

Studies also link UPFs with heart disease, obesity, type 2 diabetes besides cancer