Programme keeps teenage girls active in lockdown
A programme to keep teenage girls active during lockdown has found it significantly boosted their strength, fitness, motivation and body image.
A programme to keep teenage girls active during lockdown has found it significantly boosted their strength, fitness, motivation and body image.
On December 14, Liverpool Screen School welcomed over 200 guests from industry and academia and over 30 speakers, including demonstrations, to discuss how immersive technology was impacting on storytelling.
Four Premier League professional match officials are receiving strength and conditioning training and physiotherapy sessions with LJMU sport scientists, under a new partnership.
Exercising at a regular time of day may help to ward off mental health conditions by protecting the body's natural circadian rhythms, research suggests.
A ground-breaking'Nature4Health' programme delivering healthy activities in local green spaces has changed people’s lives for the better.
LJMU and the Digital-Trust have launched the UK’s most comprehensive study into domestic abuse, investigating physical violence, coercive control and digital abuse within relationships.
LJMU’s Copperas Hill development has won an award for the Best New Build Project at the Merseyside Civic Design Awards.
Public health experts at Liverpool John Moores University are looking into how lockdown has affected the physical and mental health of people in the North West.
Results of LJMU GOALS programme.
The year 9 pupils from Liverpool's Holly Lodge Girls College spent two days working alongside world-class scientists in physiology, biomechanics and sport and exercise psychology, as well as current LJMU students, to gain expert insight into sport science research methodology.