Why publish your work?
Find out how not only does having your work published help other nurses, but its influence also spreads amongst other health care professionals.
Find out how not only does having your work published help other nurses, but its influence also spreads amongst other health care professionals.
LJMU offers a range of self-help information, tools and workshops to help you manage your wellbeing and deal with issues such as anxiety, depression, homesickness and other issues you may be going through. Find out more self-help information and how to access our online tools.
Find out how The Football Exchange Women's Network aims to connect women working in football by offering opportunities for curriculum placements.
By interrogating data from coroner, primary care and A&E records, health psychologist Dr Pooja Saini identified a recurring theme; a lack of support and services for people in suicidal crisis, particularly within community settings.
There is no straightforward recipe for getting your work published, read our guidance and tips on how to get started.
Explore the Liverpool City Region case studies and the people behind them.
The author guidelines give you the steps you need to follow to submit your work to the journal, the review process, and additional information you need to be successful.
Watch Professor of English Joe Moran speak about shyness as a condition “ignored” in the current wave of attention on mental health and wellbeing.
Find out more about The National Schools Observatory: Fascination with Space fires young scientific careers - Professor Andy Newsam.
Maureen is a member of staff with the Faculty of Business and Law, and part of the first cohort of employees with the Positive Action Programme. Described by her son as ‘half human, half cyborg’, she says that technology has changed her life since she lost her hearing after contracting malaria in 2010.