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  1. Want to find out how you can join us at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH)? You’ve come to the right place. Find out about our current jobs, how to apply and how to organise a work experience placement. Just so you know, we don’t target individuals unprompted and offer them employment, without a full interview process taking place.

  2. The Children's Hospital School - GOSH Great Ormond Street Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, WC1N 3JH Tel: 020 7813 8269 The Children's Hospital School - UCLH T12 Schoolroom, 235 Euston Road, London, NW1 2BU Tel: 020 3447 1292

  3. About the Bereavement services department. The Bereavement services department operates across the Trust, offering advice and support to staff and parents in dealing with end of life issues and related difficult situations. It comprises of three elements: Bereavement support. End of Life Care group. Child Death Helpline (CDH)

  4. Its full name is Actikerall® 5mg/g + 100mg/g cutaneous solution. In adults, Actikerall® is used to treat a skin condition called actinic keratosis. At Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), we use Actikerall® to treat very stubborn warts – a common kind of skin growth – which have failed to respond to more conventional treatments.

  5. Gene therapy (2000) - In 2000, Great Ormond Street Hospital launched the world’s first gene therapy trials for children born without functioning immune systems. By 2011, gene therapy had cured 14 children with previously fatal forms of severe combined immunodeficiency.

  6. Eczema. Eczema is a very common skin condition affecting at least one in every five children. Eczema makes the skin very itchy, red, dry and cracked. This page from Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) explains the causes, symptoms and treatment of eczema and indicates where to get help.

  7. Ulnar polydactyly or having an additional little finger on one or both hands is very common, especially in certain ethnic groups.This information sheet from Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) explains about additional little fingers and how they can be corrected. Usually an additional little finger is inherited, with a 50 per cent or one in ...