Research groups
Colleges
Robert Hatch
Clinical Research Fellow
Rob is a Specialist Registrar in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine in the Oxford Deanery. In addition to being a clinician, his research interests include long-term outcomes and rehabilitation after critical illness, and the use of health care data to improve the quality of patient care.
He has been heavily involved in the Intensive Care Outcomes Network (ICON) (www.iconstudy.org) and Intensive Care After Care Network (I-Canuk) studies, creating the largest UK resource of Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) and post critical illness psychopathology (anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder) to date. He was involved with the Enhanced Recovery After Critical Illness Programme (ERACIP) group and is the creator of several apps designed to improve the time efficiency and quality of the junior doctor handover process.
Rob completed an NIHR Academic Clinical Fellowship in Intensive Care Medicine and is currently funded by an NIHR Doctoral Research Fellowship. He is the chief investigator of the C3 Study (www.c3study.org) a retrospective study of cardiovascular outcomes after critical illness. In 2019 he was appointed as a retained lecturer in medicine at Pembroke College Oxford, teaching physiology and pharmacology to undergraduate medics.
Websites
Recent publications
Development and external validation of a clinical prediction model for new-onset atrial fibrillation in intensive care: a multicentre, retrospective cohort study
Journal article
Bedford JP. et al, (2025), The Lancet Digital Health, 7, 100896 - 100896
Regional citrate anticoagulation versus systemic heparin anticoagulation for continuous kidney replacement therapy in intensive care
Journal article
Doidge JC. et al, (2023), Journal of Critical Care, 74, 154218 - 154218
Preexisting Neuropsychiatric Conditions and Associated Risk of Severe COVID-19 Infection and Other Acute Respiratory Infections
Journal article
Ranger TA. et al, (2023), JAMA Psychiatry, 80, 57 - 57
Preexisting Neuropsychiatric Conditions and Associated Risk of Severe COVID-19 Infection and Other Acute Respiratory Infections.
Journal article
Ranger TA. et al, (2023), JAMA psychiatry, 80, 57 - 65