Can supermarket trolleys help cut risk of stroke? - trials underway
Shopping trolleys will be used to help save people from suffering a stroke by identifying irregular heartbeats, as part of a new medical trial.
Shopping trolleys will be used to help save people from suffering a stroke by identifying irregular heartbeats, as part of a new medical trial.
Academics and postgraduate students from across LJMU are set to share their research as part of the Pint of Science festival.
Australian scheme helps young people deal with mental health that leads to drug use
Exhibition at LJMU's Aldham Robarts Library compared mental health advice then and now
On World Menopause Day, LJMU's Mel Jones, a researcher development adviser and menopausal woman, talks about her experience ...
Psychologist Valentina Cazzato collaborates with Edge Hill in AHRC-funded project to understand the neuroscience of dance as therapy
Liverpool John Moores University is set to train more people in diagnosing cancer thanks to a partnership with global optics firm Olympus.
A pioneering new study is set to help surgeons repair hearts without damaging precious tissue.
LJMU Connectors provide peer-to-peer mental wellbeing support to colleagues, at a local level, across the university.
Liverpool John Moores University is working with the Skcin cancer charity and the Clare Daly Foundation to roll out the Sun Safe Schools accreditation across primary schools in the Liverpool region, which will benefit up to 10,000 children.