#PartneringAgainstCOVID-19 is a unique virtual partnering event backed by EIT Health and a consortium of biotech clusters and trade associations in the life sciences industry in Europe and across the world.
We asked Anna Jete Gauja, Chair of the Rīga Stradiņš University (RSU) Student Union (pictured), about what advice she has about the challenges and opportunities that we are unexpectedly facing in these times of anxiety, uncertainty and change.
The International Business and Start-up Entrepreneurship programme at Rīga Stradiņš University (RSU) provides a great opportunity for anyone aspiring to establish their own business and achieve their ambitions. Sergejs Jakimovs is the founder of several international companies and a visiting lecturer at RSU. He explains how to achieve one’s goals, and how the new study programme can help.
Toms Pulmanis, Vice-Dean and Assistant Professor at the Rīga Stradiņš University (RSU) Faculty of Public Health and Social Welfare, admits that the pace with which the in-person study process had to be replaced by remote learning posed a challenge. There are, however, other challenges that students, lecturers and RSU employees have had to face during these times of changes and anxiety too.
Comprehensive construction has been carried out on the RSU Anatomical Theatre complex for over a year – the historical stables are being reconstructed into a museum. Despite the state of emergency caused by COVID-19, construction is still proceeding as planned with strict adherence to all epidemiological precautions, of course. The plan is for the reconstructed building of the RSU Anatomy Museum to open to visitors this autumn.
In this time of anxiety, uncertainty, and hope where many of our daily tasks have been cancelled, postponed, or rescheduled we ask Agrita Kiopa, Vice-Rector for Science of Rīga Stradiņš University (RSU), how RSU researchers are doing and how the global pandemic has affected scientists' work.
Dear students!
On Saturday 18 April we were notified that a quarantine is being implemented at a student hostel at Tartu University due to a few confirmed cases of COVID-19. The infection spread when students held joint birthday party. This situation at a university in a country so close to us reminds us that we need to continue to be very cautious.
Researchers at Rīga Stradiņš University (RSU) have begun researching the coronavirus disease. The aim of the study is to find out how the body fights COVID-19 caused by the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2).
Researchers want to detect which factors in the human body have the potential to impact the symptoms of the virus, how long the virus live in the human body, how the virus sheds and how the immune system responds when someone catches the virus. The research will help to get to know the nature of the virus and why the virus affects people differently.
We invite you to invest some of your time and take part in a survey about remote studies and the organisation of online examinations.
We ask all students to take some time to fill out a questionnaire about remote studies at RSU! The results will provide information on:
- how study courses are currently being organised remotely;
- what is still needed to improve cooperation.