Student Recruitment Privacy Notice
Student Recruitment Privacy Notice
Student Recruitment Privacy Notice
Discover more information about working during your studies.
Aimed at students who are health professionals this Continuing Professional Development (CPD) programme covers a range of topics relevant to contemporary practice involving the use of medicines use in children and neonates.
LJMU takes your privacy very seriously. This privacy notice explains how we use your personal information and your rights regarding that information. We are committed to being transparent about how we collect and use your data and to meeting our data protection obligations.
Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) needs to obtain and process a range of information about its students in order to exercise its responsibilities and fulfils its education, training and support obligations to you and to carry out other essential university activities.
Help to Grow: Management is a practical, 12-week leadership development programme designed specifically for senior leaders of small and medium-sized businesses.
For those undertaking the MSc Nursing programme you will provide evidence of prior experiential learning and undertake 1530 hours on the 2 year programme. For Trainee Nursing Associates from September 2024 you will evidence 2300 number of hours.
Liverpool John Moores University is committed to being an engaged civic University. In the Faculty of Health, we recognise the importance of promoting health through community engagement and consider this vital in preparing future healthcare professional for the role they will play after graduation.
We are an award-winning research group that provides informatics solutions for safer and cheaper new molecules by linking chemical structure and physico-chemical properties to biological activity and effects. Find out more about research, collaborations, REF highlights and people working within this group.
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.