Laurence J. Dobbie has been an Academic Clinical Fellow in General Practice at King's College London since August 2023. He used to work as an Academic Foundation Programme Trainee at the University of Liverpool (August 2020 to August 2022) and a Senior Clinical Research Fellow in Obesity Medicine at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust (August 2022 to August 2023). He earned, from the University of Glasgow, a B.Sc. (2018) and MB ChB. (2020).
Sarah J. Nevitt is a Senior Research Fellow in Evidence Synthesis and Health Technology Assessment at the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York. She obtained a B.Sc. at the University of Liverpool in 2010, earned an M.Sc. in Medical Statistics at the University of Leicester in 2011 and completed her Ph.D. in Biostatistics at the University of Liverpool in 2017. Dr. Nevitt is a statistician with research interests in methods for evidence synthesis and applications to clinical decision-making and clinical guidelines. Her previous work has included conducting large-network meta-analyses and individual participant data meta-analyses of epilepsy clinical trials. Dr. Nevitt has extensive experience in conducting and evaluating methodologically complex evidence syntheses as a statistical editor for Cochrane and delivering technology assessment reports for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)’s TAR program.
Theresa J. Hydes is an NIHR Clinical Lecturer in Hepatology working at the University of Liverpool and a Gastroenterology trainee at Liverpool University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. She graduated from Imperial University in 2007 and then moved to Wessex to undertake a foundation year and core medical training. She started her specialty training in Gastroenterology. In 2013, Theresa undertook a PhD in liver immunology, focusing on the innate immune system, which was funded by an MRC clinical fellowship award. She then completed an advanced training number in hepatology at Southampton and Cambridge NHS Trusts. Theresa is an abstract reviewer for EASL. She is also a member of the British Liver Trust Clinical Advisory Group and BASL Significant Interest Group for MASLD. She sits on the Athena Swan SAT committee. Theresa's current research interests are metabolic-associated steatotic liver disease, including patient pathways, early disease detection and multimorbidity.
Dr. Uazman Alam is a Senior Clinical Lecturer at the
Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, Institute of Life Course
and Medical Sciences, University of Liverpool, UK. He obtained his B.Sc. in
Medical Science from the University of St. Andrews and subsequently went on to
the University of Manchester to study Medicine (MBChB), from which he graduated in
2005. Partway through the MBChB, he completed his M.Sc. in Population Health
(MPHe). Before entering higher specialist training in Endocrinology and
Diabetes, he pursued a Ph.D. in Diabetic Neuropathy and Vitamin D at the
University of Manchester, from which he graduated in 2014. His clinical and
research expertise lies in the pathogenesis, assessment and treatment of
diabetic neuropathy. He was a member of the Royal College of Physicians,
Diabetes UK, and was a council member for the Lipids, Metabolism and Vascular
Risk section of the Royal Society of Medicine.
Daniel J. Cuthbertson is a Professor of Medicine and Honorary Consultant Physician at the Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, Institute of Life Course and Medical Sciences, University of Liverpool, UK. Prof. Cuthbertson also holds editorships in the American Journal of Physiology and the British Medical Journal and a membership in the British Medical Association. Prof. Cuthbertson's research interests include insulin resistance, obesity, insulin signaling, AMPK, skeletal muscle, NASH, PCOS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy and MEN.