Helen Higham
Director of the OxSTaR Centre
- Associate Professor
- Consultant Anaesthetist
- Associate Dean for Simulation and Patient Safety
Helen is an Associate Professor in the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences and a Consultant Anaesthetist in the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. She has always had a keen interest in medical education and has been the Director of Undergraduate Teaching in the Nuffield Division of Anaesthetics since she took up her post in 2001.
Simulation based education has become an increasingly important tool for training healthcare professionals and Helen became the Medical Director of OxSTaR when it opened in 2008, was a founding executive member and a Past President of the Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare, and was appointed Associate Dean for Simulation and Patient Safety in Thames Valley in 2021. She is also Director of the Patient Safety Academy, a collaboration with the Nuffield Department of Surgery, providing training and support to healthcare professionals and students in the application of human factors to improve quality and safety in healthcare.
Her research interests include human factors applied to healthcare, simulation-based education and technology enhanced learning.
Recent publications
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Reducing inequalities through greater diversity in clinical trials – As important for medical devices as for drugs and therapeutics
Journal article
Roope LSJ. et al, (2025), Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, 45
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Designing better systems to navigate the sepsis-antimicrobial stewardship tension.
Journal article
Lounsbury O. et al, (2025), Lancet Infect Dis
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Systems analysis of clinical incidents: development of a new edition of the London Protocol.
Journal article
Vincent C. et al, (2025), BMJ Qual Saf
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Communication Between Anaesthesia Providers for Clinical and Professional Purposes: A Scoping Review
Journal article
Edgcombe H. et al, (2025), Anesthesiology Research and Practice, 2025
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Patient safety incidents in anaesthesia: a qualitative study of trainee experience from a single UK healthcare region.
Journal article
Robinson A. et al, (2024), Anaesthesia