Institute for Health Research projects
Our research projects at the Institute of Health Research address real-world health challenges through innovative, collaborative, and interdisciplinary approaches.
Our research projects at the Institute of Health Research address real-world health challenges through innovative, collaborative, and interdisciplinary approaches.
This project focuses on the role olfactory and oral perception plays in shaping our consummatory experiences, preferences, and food seeking behaviours. Research into this area is important to health research, shaping understanding of individual differences in food selection, consumption, and other dietary behaviours.
Explore opportunities with employers who recruit disabled candidates through inclusive schemes or specialist partnerships.
Research suggests that autistic people are at a higher risk of suicide than non-autistic people. Figures show that up to 66% of autistic adults had thought about suicide during their lifetime (compared to 20% of non-autistic adults), and up to 35% had planned or attempted suicide.
Self-employment can offer flexibility for disabled or neurodivergent students and graduates who prefer alternatives to traditional work environments.
Find out the background and context of the Being Lean and Seen project - a project which aims to help advance project management knowledge.
The Projects, Operations and Workplace Management Research Group develops solutions for the ever-growing challenges in projects, operations and workplace management and suggests alternative ways to improve organisational performance. Our aim is to really make a difference to how organisations are managed in the future.
The Public Health Institute is involved in some important research. Read our case studies to gain a good summary of the type of projects we're engaged in.
The Production Unit for Liverpool Screen School (PULSS) organises work opportunities for students from LJMU’s Liverpool School of Art and Creative Industries. The work opportunities PULSS organise take many forms, from placements and live commercial projects through to extracurricular activities.
The Centre for Public Health publishes useful resources which you can download.