LJMU leads global pilot scheme to create active cities improving health and well-being in urban areas
Find out how Liverpool John Moores University are helping to lead the way in a global scheme to make city slickers more active.
Find out how Liverpool John Moores University are helping to lead the way in a global scheme to make city slickers more active.
More than one-third of people with severe mental health problems (SMI) have a co-existing alcohol/drug condition: but the evidence base on which to build effective service models and responses is limited.
LJMU has been awarded funding to help raise awareness and understanding of the climate, the environment and nature among schoolchildren in the Liverpool City Region.
LJMU Chancellor, Nisha Katona MBE, dropped in for a visit to the Faculty of Health and was moved by the “extraordinary students” that she spoke with and learnt new skills from.
A number of Health and Safety policies have been amended and approved by the Health and Safety Committee.
The ‘After the End’ project aims to improve the way in which we end global health emergencies by critically examining how endings are determined and what happens after the end is declared.
The Executive Leadership Team has approved updates to seven existing university policies.
Each year we run this survey, it only takes 10 minutes to complete and asks you a range of questions from how much sleep you get, to if you get anxious and how often you feel stressed.
Scientists from the School of Biological and Environmental Sciences will play a role in helping to improve understanding of the rainforest ecosystem
Archaeologists have discovered evidence of the first wealthy Iron Age community in the North West of England.