THE national friendly society Oddfellows donated £29,000 to the University of Bradford's Plastic Surgery and Burns Research Unit.

The donation marked the final stage of a major three-year funding partnership which began in 2015 and has totalled £88,000.

The money has been used to directly support the unit’s delivery of a potentially life-changing project into hard-to-heal wounds and burns.

Titled ‘Exploiting the Hair Follicle as the Preferential Source of Wound Healing Cells in the Human Skin’, the project has seen the research team, grow fibroblast cells found in human hair follicles and through new technologies investigate their importance in the wound healing process, specifically under diabetic conditions where the healing process is compromised.

The unit was founded following the Bradford City Fire in 1985.

Dr Stephen Sikkink, Experimental Officer of the University of Bradford’s Centre for Skin Sciences (CSS), said: “With diabetes diagnoses rapidly increasing and an ever-ageing population, our continued research into the cellular changes that result in impaired would healing is incredibly important.

“We’d like to thank the Oddfellows for their support in funding our research project.

"We’re at the stage where we can now utilise new technologies, which could help us provide valuable insight into why the wound healing process in diabetic patients is impaired. Understanding this will help us develop new clinical targets for treatments and therapeutic interventions. These have the potential to ultimately provide life-changing benefits.”

The unit is the most recent Oddfellows HA Andrew Memorial Fund benefactor.

Established in 1971, the fund provides financial support over a three-year period to a project or organisation involved in, or conducting medical research in the UK.

So far £1,029,000 has been donated, with previous recipients being Parkinson’s UK, the Alzheimer’s Society and the Stroke Association.

The project was successfully nominated for funding in 2015 after members from the Oddfellows’ Huddersfield and Bradford Branches brought the unit’s work to its attention.

Jane Nelson, Chief Executive of the Oddfellows, added: “Giving back is at the heart of our society.

"Our members are bonded by the shared desire to help others, so we’re delighted that our donation has supported the great work of the unit, including the continuation of research that could positively impact so many lives.”