Liverpool partnership delivers improved access and support for student mental health services
Students in Liverpool are benefitting from improved mental health support, thanks to a partnership between universities and NHS services across the city.
Students in Liverpool are benefitting from improved mental health support, thanks to a partnership between universities and NHS services across the city.
LJMU staff members proudly supported sessions at the Liverpool Against Racism Conference this week, a day of conversation around systematic racism in society and a debate on what meaningful change really looks like.
From Liverpool One to Sefton Park, our current students, staff and alumni share their favourite spots across the city.
We look at how and why Liverpool was a catalyst for change when it came to public health and how it continues to make a difference in health care today.
Research undertaken by LJMU academic, Dr Simone Krüger Bridge, has investigated how Liverpool Cathedrals music outreach programme, one of the vastest in the UK, helped people through the Covid-19 pandemic.
LJMUs School of NAH has been shortlisted for nine awards at the Student Nursing Times Awards 2022 as well as a £2,000 Nursing and Midwifery Coordinator Social Prescribing Studentship awarded to Adult Nursing Student, John Wells.
Scientists have witnessed for the first time exactly what happens to the most massive stars at the end of their lives.
Students, Staff and Alumni are invited to join LJMU at Liverpool Pride 2023 on Saturday 29 July.
LJMU, WWF and HUTAN came together to examine better ways of detecting the great apes in the Bornean forest canopy, by using drones fitted with thermal-imaging cameras.
At a time when COVID 19 has made people fearful, isolated or alone, Jeff Youngs new book, Ghost Town, offers not only a fascinating read but also a reflection on all those things that are important to us, our families, friends and communities. Its a deeply felt and beautifully written journey through Jeffs Liverpool childhood, the adult writer stalking Liverpool alone or with friends, searching for a past lost, regained, remembered so viscerally that the reader feels intimately connected to the child Jeff longing to leave the hospital where hes had his tonsils removed or to the older man out walking with writer friend, Horatio Clare, in search of de Quincey in Everton.