Our first speaker is… Professor Jag Dhanda 👏
Consultant Maxillofacial Head & Neck Surgeon, Professor of Surgery, and Extended Reality in Medicine & Surgery - Prof. Dhanda is leading the charge in redefining how we teach and experience anatomy. Don’t miss our VR workshop too!
We are pleased to announce Registration is now open for the 13th Alcock Anatomical Society Congress, “Anatomy Through Time”, taking place on Wednesday 18th March 2026 at The Gordon Museum, Guy’s Campus, King’s College London. Full Programme to follow!
Link in replies!
📢 Call for Abstracts — Now Open!
The 13th Alcock Anatomical Society Annual Congress: Anatomy Through Time is now welcoming abstract submissions! Share your work exploring anatomy across history, art, technology, VR, and surgery!
🗓 Abstract submissions close 28th Feb!
We’re excited to welcome you to the 13th Alcock Anatomical Society Annual Congress – Anatomy Through Time
📍 Gordon Museum, Guy’s Campus, Kings College London (SE1 1UL)
📅 18 March 2026
📝 Registration: 26 Jan – 19 Feb 2026
📢 Call for abstracts: 1 – 28 Feb 2026
We are excited to announce The 12th Alcock Society Congress!
The theme this year is Beyond the Surface: Unravelling the Mysteries of Human Anatomy! Join us for a day filled with engaging talks, interactive workshops, and networking opportunities.
Full programme to follow!
The Alcock Society Winter Scientific Meeting 2022 is now officially open. On the floor, Prof Logan, from the Randall Centre Cell and Molecular Biophysics is giving us a talk on radial dysplasia.
We are excited to announce the Alcock society national winter meeting on 30th Nov. Please submit your abstract to [email protected] (250 words, deadline 16/11/22 at 5pm). More details can be found on https://t.co/itmxjvN0MV
@Salma_Khatun100@PPJSucharitkul Thank you for furthering this discussion Salma, and thank you for your contributions to our transparency in costings talk on Saturday! Our committee is definitely looking to take the topic further, so I will signpost this to our relevant committee members
@MStott88 We 100% agree that anatomy should be central to both med school and post-grad training! It’s core knowledge at all levels, not just for those following a surgical path. Additionally, it might even be better studied at later stages of training - not just in pre-clinical years.
Also, congratulations to our oral presentation winner:
‘Novel Methods of Flexor Digitorum Profundus Tendon Segment Length Estimation via Measurement of Adjacent Landmarks in the Secondary Repair of Jersey Finger’ presented by Savan Shah #TASconference