<![CDATA[Newsroom University of 91ɬ]]> /about/news/ en Wed, 10 Jun 2026 22:01:14 +0200 Wed, 10 Jun 2026 20:57:47 +0200 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of 91ɬ]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 Study warns unequal access to NHS social prescribing could reinforce inequalities /about/news/unequal-access-to-nhs-social-prescribing/ /about/news/unequal-access-to-nhs-social-prescribing/757378A major new study has found patients living in England’s most deprived communities are significantly less likely to be offered ‘social prescribing’, an NHS scheme designed to connect people with community support such as exercise groups, debt advice, arts activities and social clubs.

]]>
A major new study has found patients living in England’s most deprived communities are significantly less likely to be offered ‘social prescribing’, an NHS scheme designed to connect people with community support such as exercise groups, debt advice, arts activities and social clubs.

Researchers from The University of 91ɬ analysed primary care records from more than 12 million NHS patients, and found referrals to social prescribing services were disproportionately concentrated among people living in less deprived areas.

The researchers warn that the findings raise concerns that a programme intended to reduce health inequalities may instead risk reinforcing them unless access improves in poorer communities.

The study examined data collected between 2019 and 2024 following the national rollout of NHS social prescribing link workers across England.

Key findings

  • Just 4% of patients in the dataset were offered social prescribing between 2019 and 2024

  • Patients living in the least deprived areas were significantly more likely to be offered social prescribing than those in the most deprived communities

  • Women were substantially more likely than men to be offered social prescribing

  • Older patients and people with multiple long-term conditions were more likely to receive offers

  • More than three quarters (77.7%) of those offered social prescribing received a referral

  • Ethnic minority patients were generally as likely - or more likely - to accept referrals

What else did the study find?

The researchers analysed anonymised NHS primary care records from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), one of the largest healthcare datasets in England.

The study explored which groups of patients were offered social prescribing and which went on to receive referrals after offers were made.

Social prescribing schemes aim to support people whose health may be affected by wider social issues such as loneliness, poor housing, financial stress or isolation by linking them with non-medical community services through dedicated NHS link workers.

Clear inequalities

Patients in more affluent areas consistently had higher odds of being offered social prescribing than those in deprived areas, despite evidence that poorer communities often experience worse health outcomes and greater levels of long-term illness.

Women were also more likely to be offered referrals than men across almost every age group examined.

The study found strong links between long-term illness and social prescribing access, with patients suffering multiple health conditions far more likely to receive offers and referrals.

Why it matters

Researchers say the findings are significant because social prescribing has become a major part of NHS plans to reduce pressure on healthcare services and improve public health.

Since 2019, thousands of social prescribing link workers have been recruited across England through the NHS Additional Roles Reimbursement Scheme.

The researchers warn that unequal access to these services could risk widening existing health inequalities if patients in deprived communities are less likely to benefit. However, the study also found encouraging signs once offers had been made.

Patients from ethnic minority backgrounds were often more likely than white patients to accept referrals, while deprivation itself did not appear to reduce uptake after an offer was made.

Researchers say this suggests the key inequality may lie in access to offers rather than willingness to engage.

Men and older patients less likely to engage

The study also found important differences between being offered social prescribing and accepting referrals.

While older patients were more likely to be offered support, they were less likely to go on to receive referrals once offered. Male patients were consistently less likely than women to both receive offers and proceed to referral.

Researchers say more work is needed to understand why some groups may be underrepresented or less likely to engage with social prescribing services.

What the researchers say

“It is concerning that the patients most likely to benefit from social prescribing support appear to be among the least likely to be offered it,” said Research Fellow Anna Wilding. “People living in deprived communities are more likely to experience long-term illness, financial hardship, isolation and poor mental health - the very issues social prescribing is designed to help address.”

“Our findings suggest the biggest challenge is not whether people will engage with social prescribing once offered support, but ensuring disadvantaged communities are not left behind in the first place.”

Publication details

The study was published in journal PLOS One.

DOI:

]]>
Tue, 09 Jun 2026 12:05:11 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/227e4f04-73f4-49c8-9a13-3cffd26f17eb/500_gettyimages-2257772857.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/227e4f04-73f4-49c8-9a13-3cffd26f17eb/gettyimages-2257772857.jpg?10000
University of 91ɬ joins pioneering £50m drive to transform maternal health /about/news/university-of-manchester-joins-pioneering-50m-drive-to-transform-maternal-health/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-joins-pioneering-50m-drive-to-transform-maternal-health/757535The University of 91ɬ will be co-leading on a key theme within a new research drive to improve pregnancy, birth and early postnatal mental health.

]]>
The University of 91ɬ will be co-leading on a key theme within a new research drive to improve pregnancy, birth and early postnatal mental health.

The National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) has committed £50 million over five years to drive forward the vital research led by clinicians, researchers, and communities across the consortium marking the most significant step forward in maternal health research in a generation.

The launch comes at a pivotal moment for maternity care in the UK, with national attention increasingly focused on improving safety, equity and women's experiences of care.

The 91ɬ-led part of the research will involve improving and reducing inequalities in maternity care pathways. The focus will be on major contributors to maternal morbidity and mortality, particularly cardiometabolic complications (obesity, hypertension, gestational diabetes (GDM), perinatal mental health, and complications in early maternal recovery after birth.

Dr Debbie Smith, Co-Lead of the Perinatal mental health and wellbeing work, said: “I am really excited that 91ɬ are co-leading the perinatal mental health and wellbeing work as part of this consortium and look forward to co-producing equitable behavioural interventions with key stakeholders over the next few years”.

The Government's renewed Women's Health Strategy highlights the need to improve care before and between pregnancies for marginalised communities, against this backdrop, the consortium will generate the evidence, interventions and research capacity needed to help translate national ambition into practical, equitable improvements for women, babies and families.

“This funding represents a critical opportunity to make the step change we need to improve outcomes for women and their babies. Alongside the research, the Consortium will be investing in tomorrow's research leaders today to ensure we have the capacity to deliver on improving pregnancy outcomes, access to, and experience of, care”, says Professor Judith Rankin OBE, Consortium Co-lead for Research and Capacity Development, Newcastle University.

“National attention on maternity safety and equity has never been greater, but ambition must now be matched by evidence and implementation. Through this consortium, we will work across the UK to understand what works, for whom and in what contexts, and to ensure that research leads to practical changes in care for the women, babies and families who need them most,” says Professor Joht Singh Chandan, Consortium Co-lead for Research, University of Birmingham.

]]>
Tue, 09 Jun 2026 10:16:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/018eeeea-afc5-444b-96a7-2e1f08f7d966/500_adobestock-281449606.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/018eeeea-afc5-444b-96a7-2e1f08f7d966/adobestock-281449606.jpeg?10000
Spotlight On: Isaac Lynch /about/news/spotlight-on-isaac-lynch/ /about/news/spotlight-on-isaac-lynch/757294Isaac Lynch is a new arrival to SALC, fast settling in as Arts Administration Assistant and Receptionist, a key member of the Martin Harris Centre team. We caught up for a chat about his career, his job role, and his hobbies:
  • Tell us a bit about yourself and the roles you have had before joining the University

I have worked in Higher Education for the past five years at Leeds Conservatoire and BIMM University, so stepping into the University of 91ɬ as the Martin Harris Centre Receptionist has been fairly smooth. 

I enjoy working alongside creative people and I particularly love supporting students, because I felt like I didn’t connect with the staff of my university and I want them to have a better experience than I did. So far, it’s been very enjoyable working at MHC as part of a larger team than what I’ve been used to. Joining in September, at the busiest time of our year, was challenging!

My previous role was also very student-focused, I used to be on first name basis with most of the students I’d deal with day to day. It’s helped me become a great people person, which I’ve found benefits me greatly in my current work.

I have a degree in Music Technology, which gives me a very broad understanding of different aspects of music, musicology, and sound engineering, and all of this contributes to my understanding of creative courses at degree level. 

  • Aside from typical administrative work, what’s one aspect of your role that others may not be aware of?

One aspect of my job with the MHC is running the Box Office for several events that are held throughout the academic year, such as the MUMS Opera performance of Hansel and Gretel, the MUMS Chamber Orchestra Concert, and the Quatuor Danel Beat the Rush Hour concert. It’s a nice departure from being behind a screen and is a great chance to interact with MHC visitors and support creative events happening at the University.

  • So, what do you get up to outside of work? 

Aside from using my degree in my day job, I also have perform and release music regularly under  the name Isaac Malibu. I am also currently singing at the Luminiscence Light Show”at 91ɬ Cathedral, running until June, and I have bookings at House of Social and Matt and Phreds in the next few months. As well as the live performances, I am in the studio writing and recording music for my own projects and also creating tracks for other singers. II also organise events, curating lineups and showcasing s talent across the north.  

]]>
Mon, 08 Jun 2026 15:32:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d5fde13-ca7c-4995-ae33-52822bff555a/500_hr-hydeparkbookclub-15.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d5fde13-ca7c-4995-ae33-52822bff555a/hr-hydeparkbookclub-15.jpg?10000
Experts issue climate warning ahead of expanded FIFA World Cup /about/news/experts-issue-climate-warning/ /about/news/experts-issue-climate-warning/757256The 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup could become the ‘most polluting ever’, according to a new report examining football’s relationship with climate change.

]]>
The 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup could become the ‘most polluting ever’, according to a new report examining football’s relationship with climate change.

The study, released ahead of this summer’s tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico, claims football’s governing bodies are prioritising commercial expansion over environmental concerns, saying the sport has become deeply tied to fossil fuel interests and unsustainable growth.

Delivered by The University of 91ɬ, Loughborough University and the University of Bristol, the report states football’s carbon footprint is not simply caused by fan travel or stadiums, but is politically produced through decades of commercial growth, globalisation, ties to fossil fuel companies and Petrostates.

A Petrostate is a nation whose economy and political power are largely dependent on the extraction and export of oil or natural gas.

Key findings

  • Elite football increasingly relies on investment from fossil fuel-rich states and companies, including sponsorships and ownership models linked to Gulf nations and energy firms.
  • FIFA’s partnership with Saudi oil giant Aramco is singled out by the authors, who claim football has become central to a wider strategy of sportswashing by fossil fuel interests.
  • The expanded 48-team format for the 2026 Men’s World Cup will significantly increase emissions due to the greater number of matches and the vast travel distances across North America.
  • The tournament will feature 104 matches across 16 host cities spanning the entire continent. The last Men’s World Cup in 2022, Qatar, saw 64 matches played across the 32-team tournament.
  • FIFA’s environmental policies are scrutinised, with the research team accusing the organisation of promoting sustainability rhetoric while simultaneously expanding competitions and strengthening ties with fossil fuel sponsors.

The study highlights concerns over future tournaments, noting that Saudi Arabia is set to host the 2034 World Cup while the United States withdrew from the Paris climate agreement under President Donald Trump.

Why this matters

The researchers say the expanded 48-team format for the 2026 Men’s World Cup will significantly increase emissions due to the greater number of matches and the vast travel distances across North America.

The tournament will feature 104 matches across 16 host cities spanning the entire continent. The last Men’s World Cup in 2022, Qatar, saw 64 matches played across the 32-team tournament.

FIFA’s environmental policies are also scrutinised, with the research team accusing the organisation of promoting sustainability rhetoric while simultaneously expanding competitions and strengthening ties with fossil fuel sponsors.

The study also highlights concerns over future tournaments, noting that Saudi Arabia is set to host the 2034 World Cup while the United States withdrew from the Paris climate agreement under President Donald Trump.

What the researchers say

Lead researcher, Dr Mark Doidge, Reader in Sociology of Sport at Loughborough University, said: “Football is the world’s most popular sport, and probably the most popular activity. It is for this reason that football authorities, like FIFA, continue to exploit it for commercial profit."

“Football is also a cultural powerhouse with millions of fans, volunteers, and players trying to make the sport better. Football can, and should, use its influence to mitigate against climate change.”

Dr James Jackson, Lecturer at The University of 91ɬ, said: “Despite the last World Cup offering a preview of what football would be like in a significantly warmer world, FIFA has remained indifferent to better regulation. Rather than being proactive and ensuring football helps mitigate against the worst impacts of climate change, they are - at best - pursuing meagre adaptation measures for things which affect fans and players."

Dr Oscar Berglund, Senior Lecturer in International Public and Social Policy at the University of Bristol, said: “FIFA has made elite men’s football the primary target of Petrostate sportswashing. This World Cup, with the ridiculous Trump Peace Prize and having Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest polluter, as its main sponsor, reaches new levels.

“It has been a key strategy of Petrostates to use football’s unrivalled cultural influence globally. They don’t need to convince us that fossil fuels are good, just that they are inevitable. So, as we watch and love our beautiful game, we come to accept the necessary evil of fossil capital.”

Club sustainability and commercial pressure

As part of the study, researchers interviewed sustainability managers working in football clubs across Europe, many of whom described tensions between environmental targets and the commercial demands of the modern game.

According to the report, sustainability initiatives are often only approved if they do not disrupt football’s core product, including the scheduling and broadcasting of matches.

Some interviewees said clubs remained more focused on increasing revenues than reducing environmental costs, despite the growing financial risks posed by flooding, heatwaves and fixture disruption.

Recommendations

The investigation proposes a series of recommendations aimed at reducing football’s environmental impact.

  • FIFA should stop awarding tournaments to Petrostates.
  • Restrictions should be placed on fossil fuel ownership of clubs.
  • Fossil fuel advertising and sponsorship should be banned in football.
  • Football authorities should halt the expansion of competitions.
  • Sustainability managers should be embedded into all levels of club decision-making rather than operating in isolated compliance roles.

FIFA response

FIFA has previously defended its sustainability strategies and said major tournaments can drive investment, infrastructure and development in host nations. The organisation has also said that expanding competitions increases global participation and opportunities for smaller footballing nations.

Publication details

To read the full report, . The findings will form part of Football and Climate Change: The Unsustainability of the Beautiful Game, due to be published in 2027.

]]>
Mon, 08 Jun 2026 12:44:25 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ca8f5f8d-9b2f-43c0-b74c-9932b49b9d8f/500_wc2026.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ca8f5f8d-9b2f-43c0-b74c-9932b49b9d8f/wc2026.jpg?10000
University of 91ɬ have signed an MoU with Tokyo University of the Arts and National Center for Art Research, Japan /about/news/university-of-manchester-colleagues-visit-japan-to-sign-mou-with-tokyo-university-of-the-arts-and-national-center-for-art-research-japan/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-colleagues-visit-japan-to-sign-mou-with-tokyo-university-of-the-arts-and-national-center-for-art-research-japan/757257

We’re delighted to announce that we’ve signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Tokyo University of the Arts and The National Center for Art Research, Japan.

On Saturday, 23 May 2026 at The National Art Center, Tokyo (NACT), Japan, Prof John McAuliffe, Associate Vice President (Cultural Portfolio), signed a Memorandum of Understanding on behalf of Creative 91ɬ, at The University of 91ɬ. 

This landmark agreement commits the University to collaborate in a three-way partnership with the “Arts-Based Communication Platform for Co-creation to Build a Convivial Society" at Tokyo University of the Arts (TUA) — commonly known as the ART-based Platform for Co-creation — and the National Center for Art Research (NCAR), part of the National Museum of Art, Japan.

As part of this MoU, the three partners (UoM, the ART-based Platform for Co-creation, and NCAR), will work collaboratively with the Greater 91ɬ Combined Authority (GMCA) GM Place Partnership, to strengthen international research collaborations

The formal signing ceremony took place following the 

Prof John McAuliffe, Associate Vice President (Cultural Portfolio), Prof Sook-Kyung Lee, Director of The Whitworth, Dr Hannah Waterson, Research Associate – Knowledge Mobilisation and Julie McCarthy, Strategic Lead for Creative Health at the GMCA presented as part of the event exploring Creative Health initiatives from 91ɬ.

The event drew 150 guests to The National Art Center, Tokyo, and  over 700 registered for the online event. The afternoon focused on knowledge exchange around Creative Health and Social Prescribing, along with discussion around future collaboration and shared research opportunities.  

Colleagues were also invited to speak at the Kyoto University International Social Prescribing Conference (ISPC 2026), alongside academics from TUA and NCAR. The conference brought together people from across the world interested in social prescribing and non-medical approaches to health and wellbeing. The University of 91ɬ and GMCA, joined Tokyo University of the Arts and NCAR for a joint session at the conference, exploring differences and similarities in the UK and Japan. They discussed supporting community-based groups to deliver the work and the role of museums and galleries. 

Image Credit: Yumi Saito
]]>
This partnership reflects our strong commitment to building meaningful international partnerships which advance interdisciplinary research and societal impact.  Our work with GM colleagues on creative health provides a powerful foundation for this partnership with TUA and NCAR. Following the official signing in Tokyo, we look forward now to advancing our creative health research, to learning from our Japanese colleagues' work, and to deepening knowledge exchange across our different communities]]> Mon, 08 Jun 2026 12:33:50 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4275dbdf-0964-44df-907d-045d0f47ddeb/500_image2-imagecredit-yumisaito.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4275dbdf-0964-44df-907d-045d0f47ddeb/image2-imagecredit-yumisaito.jpg?10000
Multinex: An ultra lightweight AI model advancing low light image enhancement /about/news/multinex-an-ultra-lightweight-ai-model-advancing-low-light-image-enhancement/ /about/news/multinex-an-ultra-lightweight-ai-model-advancing-low-light-image-enhancement/757239Full title: Multinex: Lightweight Low-light Image Enhancement via Multi-prior Retinex

Presented at the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2026

DOI: arXiv:2604.10359

URL:

]]>
A University of 91ɬ student has developed a powerful new ultra‑lightweight tool that can turn dark, noisy footage into clear, detailed and usable images.

]]>
A University of 91ɬ student has developed a powerful new ultra‑lightweight tool that can turn dark, noisy footage into clear, detailed and usable images.

, a new model for low‑light image enhancement (LLIE), was created by Computer Science undergraduate Alexandru Brateanu during his third-year project, working with academic supervisors.

The model outperforms comparable compact systems, recovering detail and clarity from images that would previously have been considered unusable.

The advancement has significant implications for photography, security, and a wide range of computational imaging tasks.

Low‑light image enhancement seeks to restore natural visibility, colour fidelity, and structural detail in scenes captured under poor illumination. While recent LLIE models have achieved impressive results, many rely on heavy architectures with large parameter counts, resulting in high computational cost and limited real‑time applicability. Efficiency has therefore become a central research challenge: how to enhance images more effectively while dramatically reducing model size.

In the work presented at the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2026, the team proposes a structured solution grounded in classical colour vision theory and implemented using modern neural components within the Retinex framework. Retinex, a foundational approach in image enhancement, decomposes an image into illumination (light) and reflectance (colour) components to better handle low‑light scenes.

The design motivation behind Multinex is to extract as much useful information as possible from low‑light images using a highly compact architecture. By prioritising enhancement over reconstruction and leveraging lightweight neural operations, Multinex achieves strong illumination correction, detail recovery, and colour fidelity while using only a fraction of the parameters required by existing approaches.

The model is released in both a lightweight version (45K parameters) and an extremely compact nano version (0.7K parameters), each offering substantial reductions in computational load. Comparison to corresponding lightweight models such as PairLIE (330K parameters) and ZeroDCE (80K parameters) Multinex shows a significant performance improvement.

Like other LLIE techniques, Multinex still faces challenges in scenes with severe spectral distortions, lens flares, or mixed artificial and natural lighting. The team aims to extend the framework to these complex cases, exploring alternative formulations such as tone‑mapping or multiplicative residuals, and applying Multinex principles to related domains including intrinsic image decomposition, colour constancy, underwater enhancement, and haze removal.

The researchers demonstrate that Multinex delivers state‑of‑the‑art performance at real‑time cost, highlighting the power of combining analytic priors with modern lightweight design.

]]>
Mon, 08 Jun 2026 10:51:46 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c3713dde-b4e3-47d7-8be4-ad1f3f8c0cb2/500_examplediagram.credittingtingmutheuniversityofmanchester.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c3713dde-b4e3-47d7-8be4-ad1f3f8c0cb2/examplediagram.credittingtingmutheuniversityofmanchester.png?10000
Scientists uncover magma heating effect that influences how volcanoes erupt /about/news/scientists-uncover-magma-heating-effect-that-influences-how-volcanoes-erupt/ /about/news/scientists-uncover-magma-heating-effect-that-influences-how-volcanoes-erupt/757221Journal: Nature Communications

Full title: Superheating in mafic magmas controls clinopyroxene nucleation delay and magma ascent dynamics

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-73352-1

URL:

]]>
Scientists have shed light on a thermal process in magma that may help explain why similar volcanic systems can produce very different eruptive behaviours.

An international team, led by The University of 91ɬ, studied magma from the 2021 Tajogaite eruption on La Palma, Spain, and found that “superheating” — a state in which magma is heated above the temperature at which crystals are stable —  can strongly delay the formation of crystals as magma rises towards the Earth's surface.

Published in , the study shows that high temperatures can dissolve tiny pre-existing crystal "seeds" that normally help new crystals begin to form. Superheating also changes the internal structure of the magma, making it more uniform, and less able to support the formation of new crystals. This influences how quickly magma rises and how easily volcanic gases can escape, both of which play an important role in determining how explosive the eruption will be.

The findings help address a long-standing scientific debate about how a magma’s thermal history influences crystallisation processes before and during eruptions.

The researchers recreated volcanic conditions in the laboratory using magma from the Tajogaite eruption, which may have experienced some degree of superheating prior to eruption and during ascent.

Using synchrotron X-ray microtomography at Diamond Light Source, where crystallisation could be observed in real time, alongside complementary ex-situ experiments in Prague that allowed longer observation times, the team were able to track crystallisation processes under controlled conditions of high temperature and pressure.

They found that magma that had not been superheated began crystallising within around 20 minutes. In contrast, magma exposed to strong superheating, delayed crystal formation for more than eight hours.

The researchers then incorporated the experimentally measured nucleation delays into numerical models of magma ascent — simulations that predict how magma moves and evolves as it rises through the Earth’s crust.

The models showed that long crystallisation delays can allow magma to rise rapidly while remaining relatively fluid, potentially promoting dramatic lava fountaining behaviour. In contrast, magma that crystallises earlier becomes more viscous and ascends more slowly, allowing more time for gases to escape and favouring more gentle effusive behaviour.

The researchers say the findings could improve how scientists interpret volcanic monitoring signals and forecast eruption behaviour.

]]>
Mon, 08 Jun 2026 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3dd76383-faad-4ca3-9075-c997a6f89417/500_lavafountainduringthe2021tajogaiteeruptionlapalmacanaryislands.imagecourtesyofjorgeromero..png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3dd76383-faad-4ca3-9075-c997a6f89417/lavafountainduringthe2021tajogaiteeruptionlapalmacanaryislands.imagecourtesyofjorgeromero..png?10000
Breakthrough steroid tweak cuts early deaths in Indian children with leukaemia /about/news/breakthrough-steroid-tweak-cuts-early-deaths-in-indian-children-with-leukaemia/ /about/news/breakthrough-steroid-tweak-cuts-early-deaths-in-indian-children-with-leukaemia/756787A landmark Indian clinical trial has found that giving steroids in short bursts instead of continuously can halve early treatment‑related deaths in children with leukaemia without reducing their chances of being cured.

]]>
A landmark Indian clinical trial has found that giving steroids in short bursts instead of continuously can halve early treatment‑related deaths in children with leukaemia without reducing their chances of being cured.

The study led by the Indian Childhood Collaborative Leukaemia (ICiCle) group, which includes University of 91ɬ researchers, treated over 3000 children with acute B‑cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) at six major centres across India.

ALL is a fast‑growing blood cancer that starts from very early B‑cells in the bone marrow. It is the most common form of ALL, especially in children.

Publishing in the Lancet Regional Health – Southeast Asia, the researchers compared the standard four‑week continuous steroid course with a pulsed schedule given in weeks one, two and four.

Children on the pulsed schedule had far fewer early deaths, with rates falling from 3.5% to 1.3%.

Most leukaemia related early  deaths are currently caused by severe infections linked to continuous steroid use - a major challenge in low‑ and middle‑income countries.

Crucially, the shorter steroid exposure did not affect how well treatment worked, with remission rates of around 98% in both groups.

Survival outcomes were also similar, showing that the safer approach does not compromise cure.

The trial also found that using a powerful and highly effective class of chemotherapy drugs called anthracyclines early in treatment increased the risk of treatment‑related deaths.

The findings come from the ICiCle‑ALL‑14 trial, the first multicentre randomised paediatric oncology trial conducted in India.

Childhood leukaemia now has survival rates above 90% in many wealthy countries.

But children in low‑ and middle‑income countries still face far higher risks of dying during treatment, often because infections strike early on.

Since 2013, the ICiCle group team has been working to bring a consistent, modern treatment approach to children with leukaemia across India, rolled out to centres across India.

Professor Vaskar Saha from The University of 91ɬ and Tata Medical Center, is lead author and founder of the ICiCle group.

He said: “We show for the first time that a simple change in how we give steroids can save lives. By reducing continuous exposure, we appear to lessen the risk of severe infections without compromising the effectiveness of treatment. This is a practical, low‑cost intervention that could be adopted widely, particularly in settings where treatment‑related mortality remains high.”

Professor Venkatraman Radhakrishnan of the Cancer Institute (WIA) said: “The study provides robust randomised evidence that steroid scheduling itself is a modifiable determinant of induction mortality. The lack of any detriment in MRD response or survival makes this a particularly compelling practice change.”

The study was funded by the National Cancer Grid, Indian Council of Medical Research, DBT-Wellcome India Alliance and Tata Consultancy Services.

The participating centres were:

  • BR Ambedkar Rotary Cancer Hospital — All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
  • Department of Pediatrics, PGIMER Chandigarh — Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research
  • Department of Pediatrics, AIIMS New Delhi — All India Institute of Medical Sciences
  • Department of Pediatric Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital Mumbai — National cancer centre
  • Department of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology, Tata Medical Center Kolkata — Tertiary paediatric cancer service
  • Department of Medical Oncology, Cancer Institute (WIA) Chennai — One of India’s oldest cancer institutes
]]>
Mon, 08 Jun 2026 08:30:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg?10000
A new banner for Rochdale – Unity Is Strength /about/news/a-new-banner-for-rochdale--unity-is-strength/ /about/news/a-new-banner-for-rochdale--unity-is-strength/757147Ruth Flanagan, who is an artist, Cartwheel Arts You Live and You Learn Coordinator and Community Innovation Practitioner through Creative 91ɬ, has developed Unity Is Strength.Unity Is Strength was delivered by the Creative 91ɬ partner organisation,  and demonstrates how a community arts project can place the participants as ‘owners’ and build a space for reflection and conversation. A series of workshops brought together women from the town’s diverse communities, including women who have experienced forced migration, to create an embroidered banner.

Unity Is Strength is a programme with themes of home, diversity, cooperation, strength and unity.  Unity Is Strength was a vehicle for a diverse group of women to communicate to the arts and culture sector the types of engaged practice that best meet community needs and creative aspirations.

During 2025-2026, Ruth Flanagan has been a Community Innovation Practitioner (CIP), working alongside TheUniversity of 91ɬ researchers through Creative 91ɬ and the School of Arts Languages and Cultures to introduce a research framework to her work finding connections in diverse communities through craft traditions.

The , are part of the  and funded by the UKRI Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). 

The Unity Is Strength banner consciously echoed the historic banners of progressive organisations, including the Co-operative Women's Guild. The project was grounded in Rochdale's identity as a progressive town, the birthplace of the co-operative movement and as a home for diverse communities. 

The banner's imagery was visualised and created by participants: motifs drawn from Rochdale's 19th century Town Hall sit alongside the Red Rose of Lancashire, Afghan pomegranates, Romany Vardo roses, and symbols representing Jamaica and Barbados as a visual representation of the group's collective identities. The project culminated in an April launch event at the town hall, featuring a Citizens' Jury in which participants reflected on the project's themes and how the shared practice of embroidery had crossed cultural boundaries.  

Zulfar, originally from Afghanistan and now settled in Rochdale, spoke at the unveiling:

"I dedicate this banner to Rochdale. This project has been grounding and energising for me. We shared love and friendship, and patience while learning new skills. I chose to embroider a pomegranate, which in my culture symbolises abundance and happiness. For me, the banner also reflects a wish for peace for people all over the world."

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 16:57:34 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8dad20a7-d228-434a-a702-b5b2b287d2a9/500_group-with-banner-2-1024x682.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8dad20a7-d228-434a-a702-b5b2b287d2a9/group-with-banner-2-1024x682.png?10000
Beyond Disclosure Day: The Real-World Protocols /about/news/beyond-disclosure-day-the-real-world-protocols/ /about/news/beyond-disclosure-day-the-real-world-protocols/75714091ɬ astronomer leads global overhaul of rules for announcing the detection of extraterrestrial intelligenceA University of 91ɬ astronomer has led a major international overhaul of the rules that would govern how scientists announce evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence to the world.

]]>
A University of 91ɬ astronomer has led a major international overhaul of the rules that would govern how scientists announce evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence to the world.

Professor Michael Garrett, the Sir Bernard Lovell Chair of Astrophysics, chaired a global effort to update the long-standing “post-detection protocols” used by researchers involved in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI). The updated guidelines have now been formally ratified by the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA).

The revised Declaration of Principles marks the first major update to the protocols in more than 15 years and reflects a media landscape transformed by social media, artificial intelligence and the 24-hour news cycle.

Acknowledging that any credible detection of extraterrestrial technology would be a transformative event for humanity, the new Declaration establishes a rigorous framework for verification, transparency and global risk communication.

"The information environment we operate in today is vastly more complex than it was in 2010," said Professor Michael Garrett, Chair of the IAA SETI Committee. . "In an era of deepfakes, automated misinformation, and instant global connectivity, a single unverified claim could trigger confusion or panic. These new protocols ensure that scientists maintain the highest standards of evidence before making announcements to the world."

Adapting to a new era of SETI research

SETI and Technosignature research have expanded significantly since the previous protocols were adopted in 2010. Scientists now investigate the entire electromagnetic spectrum, including excess infrared heat signatures from megastructures, optical laser emission, and even multi-messenger signals. The updated Declaration explicitly recognises this broader approach.

It also addresses other modern challenges, including protections for researchers, acknowledging that scientists involved in potential detection could face harassment, doxxing, or intense media scrutiny.

It also acknowledges the risk of viral rumours, ensuring verified data is distinguished from hoaxes or terrestrial interference.

Verification before announcement

At the heart of the new rules is a reaffirmation of a core scientific principle: “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence”.

Under the revised protocols, no public announcement should be made until a signal or artifact has been rigorously authenticated by independent organisations using different instrumentation.

"We do not shout “alien” the moment we see a strange blip," Professor Garrett added. "The scientific method demands we check, check again, and then ask others to check. Only when we have reached a consensus that a signal is credible do we bring it to the world."

The 'No Reply' Consensus

While the protocols outline how to share news of a discovery, they remain firm on one critical restriction: No reply should be sent.

The Declaration reaffirms the enduring principle that transmitting a response to an extraterrestrial intelligence is a decision that belongs to all of humanity and should only take place following international consultations, specifically through the United Nations.

What happens next

With the updated Declaration ratified by the IAA Board, the aim is to see the document lodged with other stakeholders, including the United Nations. A formal technical presentation of the protocols to the wider community, including the scientific press, will take place at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) later this year in Türkiye.

The IAA SETI Committee will also establish a permanent Post-Detection Sub-Committee, bringing together experts in social science, law, and ethics, to advise on the longer-term societal implications of a confirmed discovery.

The full document is available here: 

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 16:08:41 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_lovelltelescope-anthonyholloway-695535.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/lovelltelescope-anthonyholloway-695535.jpg?10000
91ɬ professor named one of UK’s most influential environmental academics /about/news/one-of-uks-most-influential-environmental-academics/ /about/news/one-of-uks-most-influential-environmental-academics/757120The University of 91ɬ’s Professor Jamie Woodward has been recognised as one of the UK’s ten most influential environmental academics for a second time.

]]>
The University of 91ɬ’s Professor Jamie Woodward has been recognised as one of the UK’s ten most influential environmental academics for a second time.

The recognises leading figures who are shaping environmental science and policy across the UK. Professor of Physical Geography Jamie Woodward has been selected in the category of academics shaping environmental science and policy, in recognition of his major contribution to public understanding and policymaking on microplastic pollution, wastewater discharges and the health of Britain’s rivers.

Professor Woodward’s research has played a significant role in exposing the links between untreated wastewater, sewage discharges and the build-up of microplastics in river environments. His work with colleagues at 91ɬ demonstrated that riverbed microplastic contamination is closely connected to poor wastewater management, helping to shift public and political debate on the condition of the UK’s waterways.

He was one of the earliest academics to raise concerns about widespread discharges of untreated sewage, and he has worked extensively to communicate the science behind this issue to policymakers, regulators, environmental groups and the public.

Earlier this year, Professor Woodward addressed a Westminster roundtable organised by the All Party Parliamentary Group on Microplastics, where he presented evidence on microplastic pollution in riverbeds from wastewater discharges and biosolids. The event brought together parliamentarians, scientists, campaigners and industry representatives to consider how government, regulators and water companies can better limit microplastics entering river and marine environments.

His research has also informed parliamentary scrutiny of river pollution. Evidence from Professor Woodward’s work was included in a UK Parliament Environmental Audit Committee report which warned that English rivers were being polluted by a “chemical cocktail” of sewage, slurry and plastic, and called for urgent improvements to monitoring, regulation and enforcement.

Professor Woodward said: “It is a great honour to be included in the ENDS Power List alongside academics whose work is helping to shape environmental policy at such a critical time. The science is clear that the sewage scandal and the microplastic problem are closely linked - effective wastewater treatment is essential if we are serious about protecting public health, restoring river ecosystems and preventing plastic pollution from reaching our seas.”

Professor Woodward is a geomorphologist and geoarchaeologist whose research spans river systems, microplastics in river catchments, Mediterranean geomorphology, Ice Age environments and long-term environmental change. His work explores how landscapes and river systems respond to environmental pressures over timescales ranging from the deep past to the present day.

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 13:42:20 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/908f36ba-7a75-403f-babd-e5d6a915d86f/500_jamiewoodwardoldquad.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/908f36ba-7a75-403f-babd-e5d6a915d86f/jamiewoodwardoldquad.png?10000
Fungus threatens food and human health, researchers argue /about/news/fungus-threatens-food-and-human-health-researchers-argue/ /about/news/fungus-threatens-food-and-human-health-researchers-argue/757124A looming public health crisis may be spreading from Britain’s fields to its hospitals, a experts  -which include University of 91ɬ scientists-  have warned — with common farm chemicals potentially fuelling deadly infections .

]]>
A looming public health crisis may be spreading from Britain’s fields to its hospitals, a experts  -which include University of 91ɬ scientists-  have warned — with common farm chemicals potentially fuelling deadly infections .

The group, backed by House of Lords peer Baroness Natalie Bennett, say the UK urgently needs a new national strategy to tackle fungal antimicrobial resistance — a growing and often overlooked threat to human health, food production and the environment.

In a new paper published in Nature NPJ Antimicrobials and Resistance, they reveal how widespread use of fungicides in agriculture could be undermining life‑saving medicines used to treat patients.

Calling for sweeping changes, including a powerful cross-government body to coordinate action, they argue for a nationwide system to monitor resistance in both the environment and clinics, and stricter regulation of fungicides linked to resistance.

Dr Michael Bottery, co-author of the study from The University of 91ɬ, said: “Fungal resistance is a silent and underestimated threat. The same substances helping to protect crops are also reducing the effectiveness of essential medicines. If we fail to act, we risk losing critical treatments and putting lives at risk.”

The concern centres on so‑called “dual-use” fungicides — chemicals used in both medicine and farming. In the UK, these are applied to around 94 per cent of arable crops, exposing fungi in the environment to the same compounds relied upon in hospitals.

Over time, this exposure allows fungi to evolve and develop resistance, making infections harder to treat when they infect humans. Some resistant strains have already been detected in clinical settings, raising fears that treatments could become increasingly ineffective.

Fungal infections already pose a major global threat, killing an estimated 2.5 million people each year. They disproportionately affect vulnerable patients, including those undergoing chemotherapy, organ transplants, or intensive care treatment.

Despite this, researchers warn that the UK’s current response is fragmented, with responsibility split between agriculture, healthcare and environmental regulators, and limited coordination between them.

They argue that without better surveillance, dangerous resistance trends may go unnoticed until it is too late. More coordinated data-sharing, they say, could allow earlier intervention and more effective policymaking.

Speaking in parliament Baroness Bennett added that tackling the issue requires recognising the close links between human health, farming and ecosystems.

Dr Bottery added: “Without urgent action, the UK risks sleepwalking into a crisis that could threaten not only public health, but also food security, as resistance undermines crop protection and agricultural productivity.”

The full paper, “Addressing the Dual-Use of Antifungals and Fungal Antimicrobial Resistance (fAMR) through a One Health Approach”, is open-access and .

  • The image was created with AI
]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 13:32:48 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/13a884f6-1320-478a-8074-cea526549b06/500_cropsbeingsprayed.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/13a884f6-1320-478a-8074-cea526549b06/cropsbeingsprayed.png?10000
Therapy may be judged by the wrong standards, argues new analysis /about/news/therapy-may-be-judged-by-the-wrong-standards/ /about/news/therapy-may-be-judged-by-the-wrong-standards/757109Psychological therapies may be evaluated using research methods designed for drugs rather than talking treatments - potentially limiting patient choice and shaping mental health services in the wrong way - according to a new academic analysis from The University of 91ɬ.

]]>
Psychological therapies may be evaluated using research methods designed for drugs rather than talking treatments - potentially limiting patient choice and shaping mental health services in the wrong way - according to a new academic analysis from The University of 91ɬ.

Based on analysing existing research, the article argues that Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs), widely seen as the gold standard of medical evidence, may be a poor fit for assessing therapy.

Rather than presenting new experimental findings, the editorial brings together and critiques the current evidence base, making the case that talking therapies are often personal, flexible, relationship-based and evolve over time - characteristics that are difficult to capture in standard trial designs.

The analysis suggests that relying too heavily on RCTs may favour short, standardised therapies such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), while overlooking other approaches that may benefit many patients.

Key arguments

  • Psychological therapy is often assessed using research models originally developed for medicines

  • Unlike drugs, therapy is typically personalised, open-ended and shaped by the therapist–client relationship

  • Heavy reliance on RCT evidence may narrow treatment options in public healthcare and insurance systems

  • Short-term symptom measures may miss broader outcomes such as improved relationships, stability and self-understanding

  • A broader evidence base is needed, including real-world outcomes and patient experience

Why this matters

RCTs are commonly used to decide which treatments receive funding, policy backing and public provision.

The editorial argues that this has had significant consequences in mental healthcare, where therapies with strong trial evidence - particularly CBT - have become dominant in many systems.

In England’s NHS Talking Therapies programme, only a small minority of high-intensity practitioners offer non-CBT approaches, according to evidence discussed in the article.

Why therapy is different from drugs

The article highlights key differences between medicines and psychological therapies.

While drugs can typically be standardised and tested under controlled conditions, therapy is more fluid. Sessions evolve in response to the individual, progress can be non-linear, and meaningful change may include outcomes that are harder to quantify.

What current evidence may miss

The editorial argues that many therapy studies are relatively short, often capturing early symptom improvement but missing longer-term change, setbacks or deeper psychological development.

It also suggests that recovery is often more complex than a single score or endpoint, and may involve ongoing change over time.

To illustrate this, the author uses a fictional case study showing how different therapy models can lead to very different long-term outcomes, even where short-term symptom improvement appears similar.

Towards a broader understanding of evidence

Rather than rejecting trials altogether, the editorial calls for a more pluralistic approach to evidence, including:

  • Real-world service data from routine NHS and community settings

  • Research into how therapy works, including the role of relationships and context

  • Greater emphasis on patient perspectives and lived experience

What the researcher said

“We have become so used to treating Randomised Controlled Trials as the gold standard that we rarely stop to ask whether they are the right tool for every intervention,” said Dr Sahanika Ratnayake, philosopher of psychiatry at The University of 91ɬ.

“This editorial is not based on a new experiment, but on analysing the strengths and limits of the existing evidence base. Therapy is not a pill - it is a human relationship shaped by trust, timing, context and individual need.

Why it matters now

Demand for mental health support is rising, while services face pressure over waiting times, staffing and budgets.

The article argues that policymakers need evidence systems that better reflect how therapy is actually practised, and what patients themselves value from care.

Publication details

The editorial was published in BJPsych.

DOI:

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 12:28:27 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/65d0e480-210e-41e7-bcd4-6a46d035c7fa/500_gettyimages-2171351601.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/65d0e480-210e-41e7-bcd4-6a46d035c7fa/gettyimages-2171351601.jpg?10000
India gained 2.1 million hectares of dry woodland in a decade, major study finds /about/news/india-gained-2-million-hectares-of-dry-woodland/ /about/news/india-gained-2-million-hectares-of-dry-woodland/757108India gained around 2.1 million hectares of tropical dry woodland between 2014 and 2024 - an area larger than Wales - according to a major new study involving researchers from The University of 91ɬ’s Global Development Institute.

]]>
India gained around 2.1 million hectares of tropical dry woodland between 2014 and 2024 - an area larger than Wales - according to a major new study involving researchers from The University of 91ɬ’s Global Development Institute.

The research found that large-scale tree planting, restoration schemes and expanding plantations have likely transformed woodland cover across parts of the country over the past decade.

But the study also warns that headline gains can hide a more complicated picture, with native woodlands still being lost in some areas even as overall tree cover increases.

Key findings

  • India gained around 2.1 million hectares of tropical dry woodland between 2014 and 2024

  • Government forest lands saw major gains linked to restoration and afforestation programmes

  • Many woodland increases outside government lands appear likely to be linked to timber and tree-crop plantations

  • Researchers also recorded continued woodland loss in some important native forest areas

  • Scientists say national tree-cover figures can mask important differences between natural forests and plantations

What did the study find?

The study mapped changes in India’s tropical dry woodlands - which cover vast areas of the country, but have received far less scientific and conservation attention than tropical rainforests - over a ten-year period using high-resolution satellite imagery.

The researchers found a large overall increase in woodland cover across the country, driven partly by major government-backed restoration efforts including the Green India Mission, the Compensatory Afforestation Fund and the National Afforestation Programme.

The findings suggest these schemes are having a visible impact on the landscape.

Where are the new woodlands appearing?

The study found contrasting patterns inside and outside government-managed forest land.

Within state-administered forest areas, researchers say gains are likely linked to restoration and conservation programmes aimed at increasing forest cover and meeting climate goals.

Outside government lands, however, many gains appear to come from commercial timber plantations and tree crops in agricultural landscapes.

Why this matters

India’s tropical dry woodlands are among the country’s most important but overlooked ecosystems.

They support wildlife, store carbon and provide livelihoods for millions of people, especially in poorer rural regions.

Researchers say understanding exactly what kind of woodland is increasing - and where - matters for biodiversity, climate policy and local communities.

Tree cover is not always the same as forest recovery

The researchers warn that national statistics showing rising tree cover do not always mean natural forests are recovering.

Some native dry woodlands inside protected or government-managed areas continued to experience losses during the study period.

Scientists say plantations can provide economic and climate benefits, but they may not fully replace the biodiversity and ecological value of long-established natural woodlands.

How researchers tracked the changes

The team used satellite imagery to reconstruct changes in woodland cover across India between 2014 and 2024 at very high detail.

This allowed them to identify where woodland was expanding, where it was being lost, and how those patterns differed across landscapes and land ownership types.

What the researchers said

“Our study shows that India has seen substantial gains in dry woodland cover over the past decade,” said lead author Dhanapal Govindarajulu. “A lot of this appears linked to major restoration and afforestation programmes, which demonstrates the scale of change that government policy can achieve - but we also found that not all woodland gains are the same.”

Why it matters now

Countries around the world are pledging large-scale tree planting and forest restoration as part of climate and biodiversity targets.

Researchers say the study highlights the importance of looking beyond headline numbers to understand whether restoration efforts are protecting natural ecosystems, supporting wildlife and benefiting local communities.

Publication details

The research was published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

DOI:

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 12:10:42 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bd90eef3-a80e-439a-b26f-0b4d6fa1183e/500_gettyimages-2200793706.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bd90eef3-a80e-439a-b26f-0b4d6fa1183e/gettyimages-2200793706.jpg?10000
91ɬ honorary professor named as L’Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science laureate /about/news/manchester-honorary-professor-named-as-loreal-unesco-women-in-science-laureate/ /about/news/manchester-honorary-professor-named-as-loreal-unesco-women-in-science-laureate/757068  cardiac and cardiovascular systems Professor at the University of Cape Town has been named as one of five L’Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science laureates for 2026.

]]>
cardiac and cardiovascular systems Professor at the University of Cape Town has been named as one of five L’Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science laureates for 2026.

Professor Zühlke is also honorary professor at The University of 91ɬ and Vice President of the South African Medical Research Council.

The award was given in  recognition for her work with children with heart conditions especially rheumatic heart disease (RHD) that disproportionately affects children living in poverty.

Zuhlke’s research repositioned RHD as a socio-political issue tied to health system deficiencies and inequities.

In a press release, UNESCO said her dedication to scientific excellence, leadership in global health, and capacity building activities have improved the lives of vulnerable children with cardiovascular disease.

The five researchers will be recognized for their pioneering contributions to life and environmental sciences ON  11 June at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris.

This year's selection highlights their major roles in tackling global health and environmental challenges, from revolutionary tissue engineering and genomic research to agricultural innovation and the impact of nutrition on mental health.

The programme, now in its 28th year, reflects the growing excellence of women in science worldwide.

The Laureates were selected from a record 504 nominations representing 89 countries, and now join the more than 5,000 women who have been recognized by the programme.

That includes 142 International Award Laureates, among whom seven have received a Nobel Prize in science.

This selection was conducted by an independent international jury chaired by Professor Brigitte L. Kieffer, Research Director Emeritus at the National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM) France, Member of the French Academy of Sciences and former Laureate of the L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science International Awards.

Professor Zühlke  said: “ I am deeply humbled by this immense honour. Childhood-onset heart disease remains not only globally neglected but also serves as a stark barometer of inequality and inequity, with profound differences in survival, outcomes, and quality of life. My sincere thanks go to all those working tirelessly in this field, as well as to the exceptional support from my academic institutions, including the University of 91ɬ, and to my collaborator of over a decade, Professor Bernard Keavney. This equitable partnership has really extended our work and improved our science, but also served as a source of capacity development for all in the team”.

BHF Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine , a longterm collaborator with Prof Zühlke at The University of 91ɬ, said: “This well-deserved award reflects Liesl’s huge contributions to the cardiovascular health of children and young people in poor countries. Liesl is a truly remarkable and inspiring woman.”

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 08:24:28 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/29d18f07-d599-4a79-b06a-1225c3860087/500_lieslzuumlhlke.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/29d18f07-d599-4a79-b06a-1225c3860087/lieslzuumlhlke.jpeg?10000
Register for 1st TAI Lunch and Learn /about/news/register-for-1st-tai-lunch-and-learn/ /about/news/register-for-1st-tai-lunch-and-learn/756804The Thomas Ashton Institute is launching a new Lunch and Learn series, bringing leading research and practical insights to a wider audience.

Our first session, Managing violence and aggression in retail, will be delivered by Dr Kara Ng and Professor Sheena Johnson from Alliance 91ɬ Business School.

Work-related violence and aggression is a growing issue across the retail sector, with frontline staff facing increasing levels of verbal abuse, intimidation and physical risks. These challenges not only affect individual wellbeing but can also impact staff retention, organisational performance and workplace culture.

This session will showcase new best practice guidance developed in collaboration with the Retail Trust, drawing on research, industry data and insights from employers and practitioners. Attendees will gain a clearer understanding of the challenges facing the sector, alongside practical strategies that organisations can adopt to prevent incidents and better support staff.

Date: 25 June

Time: 12:30 – 13:30pm

Location: Online

We welcome attendees from academia, policy, industry and beyond.

 

About the Violence and Aggression Research Network (VARN)

This work builds on the Thomas Ashton Institute’s ongoing activity through the Violence and Aggression Research Network (VARN)

VARN brings together researchers, policymakers and practitioners to share knowledge, explore best practice and develop solutions to address work-related violence and aggression across sectors. The network provides a platform to connect evidence with real-world challenges, helping organisations better understand and respond to these issues.

]]>
Fri, 05 Jun 2026 08:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f425cf74-3adf-4567-ad3d-3bb4adf1b952/500_retailconfrontationcopilotcreated01062026.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f425cf74-3adf-4567-ad3d-3bb4adf1b952/retailconfrontationcopilotcreated01062026.png?10000
Be curious with us at the Universally 91ɬ Festival /about/news/be-curious-universally-manchester-festival/ /about/news/be-curious-universally-manchester-festival/756964Join us at The University of 91ɬ for a family-friendly Festival that has something for everyone, including science experiments, creative workshops, and exciting talks and performances.

]]>
Join us at The University of 91ɬ for a family-friendly Festival that has something for everyone, including science experiments, creative workshops, and exciting talks and performances.

As part of the University’s ongoing civic commitment, festivalgoers can experience the best of research, teaching, and culture at the event on Saturday, June 13, 2026.

Discover, create and connect

From atoms to art, calligraphy to computing, and music to medicine there’s plenty to discover and do. With over 90 hands-on stalls, visitors will be encouraged to explore what makes for a greener, healthier and fairer world.

Find out how diverse cultures, creativity and wellbeing come together, discover fascinating stories of space, technology and engineering, or take a journey through the body and learn what makes us human.

Get moving with outdoor sporting challenges, featuring a range of fun activities designed to get everybody active and involved. Enjoy a quiet moment at the University Community Allotment, hosted in partnership with Ardwick Climate Action, a space to connect with nature.

Find out more about 91ɬ as a UNESCO City of Lifelong Learning and hear how the University is a key partner in helping to create a healthier and more inclusive city.

See the Flash Bang Show - a dazzling display of colour changes, flashes and the occasional bang.

Meet up with a heritage specialist to tour the campus on foot and hear how the University’s work has shaped innovation and society.

Vibrant cultural institutions

Visitors can take part in a lively mix of creative drop-in workshops hosted by the University’s cultural institutions in partnership with local community organisations. The Jodrell Bank engagement team are joining the University on campus to help answer some of the biggest questions about the universe. At the Whitworth, festivalgoers can immerse themselves in playful and artful spaces – get ready to build, explore and reimagine. Pop along to 91ɬ Museum to follow a language trail around the enchanting collections and stop off for a selfie with Stan the dinosaur.

Bee Curious

Our Bee Curious programme features thought-provoking talks and performances for all ages. Audiences will have the chance to meet with leading academics and explore curious questions ranging from What are asteroids made of? To How can we save the world’s frogs? And can you master the psychology to win The Traitors? Visitors can also join Afrocats musician Godfrey Pambalipe, in an entertaining and rhythmic drumming session. No experience needed – just bring your enthusiasm and have a go!

Find out more

Find out more about the free Universally 91ɬ Festival at The University of 91ɬ’s Oxford Road Campus on Saturday, June 13, from 11am to 4:30pm.

Take a look at the full programme here:

]]>
Thu, 04 Jun 2026 12:25:54 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a03d314e-40b5-4606-af1a-e17a867fbd9c/500_jodrellflooractivity95.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a03d314e-40b5-4606-af1a-e17a867fbd9c/jodrellflooractivity95.jpg?10000
Online type 2 diabetes support linked to better health outcomes /about/news/online-type-2-diabetes-support-linked-to-better-health-outcomes/ /about/news/online-type-2-diabetes-support-linked-to-better-health-outcomes/756789A free online NHS programme is delivering meaningful health improvements for adults living with type 2 diabetes (T2D) across England, a new study by University of 91ɬ researchers has shown.

]]>
A free online NHS programme is delivering meaningful health improvements for adults living with type 2 diabetes (T2D) across England, a new study by University of 91ɬ researchers has shown.

The NHS programme called “Healthy Living for people with type 2 diabetes” is a website containing written articles, videos, self-assessment quizzes and tools.

It supports people to live well with T2D by providing information and advice about eating well, becoming more active, living with diabetes, and emotional wellbeing.

Published today in PLOS One, the study is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

The research team analysed data from people with T2D who activated a Healthy Living account and found they experienced better health outcomes at one year than those who did not take part.

They examined who was most likely to use the programme (uptake) and how engagement related to changes in HbA1c – a blood test used to measure average blood sugar levels - blood pressure, body mass index, insulin use, and completion of essential diabetes care processes.

The findings show, uptake of the programme was highest among women, people from least deprived areas (vs. most deprived areas), and people of White ethnicity, and current smokers (vs. never smokers).

To assess clinical outcomes, the study compared 4,940 Healthy Living users with 24,685 similar individuals who did not register for the programme. After a year, Healthy Living users saw an average HbA1c drop of 1.3 mmol/mol, alongside small but steady dips in BMI and blood pressure, all pointing to better day‑to‑day control of their diabetes.

They were also 1.6 times more likely to complete the routine yearly MOT that helps spot problems early, keeping on top of the vital checks that protect the eyes, feet, heart and kidneys in the long run.

However, the study highlights that even small average improvements can translate into meaningful reductions in T2D‑related complications when applied across large populations.

It also underscores the need to address inequalities in uptake, with notably lower participation among Asian and Black communities despite higher T2D prevalence.

Lead author Dr said: “What this study shows, in the plainest possible terms, is that a free, nationally available NHS educational programme can help people with T2D make measurable improvements to their health, even when used in the complex reality of everyday life.

“It’s not a silver bullet, but it is a practical tool that works – and the challenge now is ensuring that everyone who could benefit has the opportunity to do so.”

“We feel Healthy Living offers a scalable, accessible option for supporting type 2 diabetes self‑management, particularly for people who face barriers to attending in‑person diabetes education programmes.

“Improving uptake among underserved groups will be essential to ensuring the programme reduces existing health inequalities.”

Co-author , Principal Investigator and an Honorary Reader at The University of 91ɬ said: “People’s outcomes were better for those who attended more of the Healthy Living programme, so it would be worthwhile for the NHS to find ways to encourage people to attend for longer, such as improved signposting and motivational messages”

  • The paper Examining the uptake, retention, and effectiveness of a national online type 2 2 diabetes self-management intervention in England (Healthy Living): a retrospective 3 cohort study is available DOI
]]>
Wed, 03 Jun 2026 19:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_diabetes-2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/diabetes-2.jpg?10000
Teen wellbeing improving after years of post-pandemic concern, major study finds /about/news/teen-wellbeing-improving/ /about/news/teen-wellbeing-improving/756851A major new study of more than 115,000 young people suggests teenage wellbeing may finally be recovering after years of concern over the long-term impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

]]>
A major new study of more than 115,000 young people suggests teenage wellbeing may finally be recovering after years of concern over the long-term impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Researchers from the #BeeWell programme based at The University of 91ɬ found steady improvements in psychological wellbeing, life satisfaction and loneliness among secondary school pupils across Greater 91ɬ and Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Portsmouth and Southampton between 2021 and 2025.

The findings point to what the researchers describe as a ‘modest but sustained improvement’ in young people’s emotional wellbeing and social connection.

Key findings

• The proportion of young people reporting good psychological wellbeing rose from 51% in 2021 to 57% in 2025
• Average life satisfaction increased from 6.32 to 6.73 out of 10
• The proportion reporting elevated emotional difficulties fell from 17% to 14%
• Reports of feeling lonely always or often fell from 12% to 9%
• The amount of pupils reporting a strong sense of school belonging rose from 46% to 53%

What else did the study find?

Researchers analysed wellbeing trends among Year 10 pupils using five years of #BeeWell survey data collected from over 300 schools.

The study found evidence of gradual improvement in participating areas across several core indicators of wellbeing following years of widespread concern about young people’s mental health after the pandemic. These improvements may reflect a range of factors, including changes in local population composition.

Psychological wellbeing and life satisfaction both increased steadily over the period studied, while emotional difficulties and loneliness declined.

Researchers say the findings suggest many young people are beginning to feel more connected, supported and optimistic than they did in the immediate aftermath of Covid-19 disruption.

Why it matters

The findings are significant because they provide some indication of improvement in mental health indicators among young people in participating areas after years of concern about declining wellbeing.

Researchers say the results also reinforce the importance of school belonging, trusted adult relationships and positive peer environments in supporting wellbeing.

The report found that young people who felt more connected to school and supported by staff generally experienced better wellbeing outcomes and stronger attendance.

Teachers increasingly providing mental health assistance

The research also found growing numbers of young people are turning to teachers for mental health support.

The proportion reporting they had contacted a teacher about mental health at least sometimes rose from 17% in 2022 to 23% in 2025.

The researchers say this highlights the increasingly important role schools are playing in supporting young people’s wellbeing.

Inequalities remain

Despite the overall positive trends, the report warns that improvements have not been experienced equally across all groups.

Young people with special educational needs showed little sustained improvement in wellbeing across the five-year period.

LGBTQ+ young people also continued to report substantially lower wellbeing, lower life satisfaction and higher rates of bullying than their peers.

Researchers say these persistent inequalities underline the need for continued focus on inclusive school environments and targeted support.

What the researchers say

“More young people are reporting good wellbeing, loneliness is falling and emotional difficulties are reducing – which are encouraging findings – but the picture is not the same for everyone. Significant inequalities remain, particularly for LGBTQ+ young people and those with special educational needs, and that remains a major challenge.”

Report details

The latest #BeeWell findings report can be found .

]]>
Wed, 03 Jun 2026 16:01:57 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4eb0a6ed-bdd9-4525-bd70-5e2fa2f5b74a/500_gettyimages-2267357675.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4eb0a6ed-bdd9-4525-bd70-5e2fa2f5b74a/gettyimages-2267357675.jpg?10000
World’s largest scorpion revealed from 415-million-year-old fossils /about/news/worlds-largest-scorpion-revealed-from-415-million-year-old-fossils/ /about/news/worlds-largest-scorpion-revealed-from-415-million-year-old-fossils/756842• Fossil fragments suggest Praearcturus gigas represents the largest scorpion ever discovered, perhaps one metre in length

• Specimens held in the Natural History Museum collection since the 1870s have been reinterpreted using modern techniques

• Giant scorpion lived tens of millions of years before other famous “giant” arthropods, reshaping ideas about how and why early arthropods grew so large

]]>
Journal: Palaeontology

Full title: A revision of Praearcturus gigas: a giant scorpion from the Lower Devonian (Lochkovian) of Britain

DOI:

URL:  

]]>
A giant scorpion that once roamed what is now England and Wales has been confirmed as the largest of its kind ever to exist, thanks to new research by scientists at The University of 91ɬ and the Natural History Museum.

]]>
A giant scorpion that once roamed what is now England and Wales has been confirmed as the largest of its kind ever to exist, thanks to new research by scientists at The University of 91ɬ and the Natural History Museum.

Measuring around a metre in length and armed with pincers over 16 centimetres long, Praearcturus gigas would have been a formidable predator stalking floodplains around 415 million years ago. Remarkably, the fossils used to identify Praearcturus have been held in the Museum’s collection for more than 150 years.

The study, published in the journal, used modern analytical techniques and comparisons with newly described fossil species to suggest that Praearcturus is a scorpion, and a distinct species.

Dr Richard J. Howard, Curator of Fossil Arthropods at the Natural History Museum, London, and lead author of the study, said: “When we think of giant arthropods, people often picture Carboniferous rainforests with giant millipedes or dragonfly-like insects from later in Earth’s history. But Praearcturus lived at least 50 million years earlier, well before the evolution of trees, when life on land was only just getting started.

“Confirming that this animal is a scorpion fundamentally changes our understanding of how and when these creatures evolved to such extraordinary sizes.”

, Palaeontologist at The University of 91ɬ, added: “Praearcturus has puzzled us palaeontologists for more than a century. By bringing together material from several collections and using cutting edge imaging techniques , we've been able to build a clearer picture of the animal than was previously possible, which is really exciting.

“What makes Praearcturus so interesting is that it became enormous at a time when life on land was otherwise very small. But it was a world  that could somehow support a giant predator. To try and better understand this ancient world we compared the size of fossil scorpions with other animals alive at the time. To reach such extraordinary sizes, and conclude that perhaps it lived in water, where life was bigger.”

Praearcturus gigas lived during the Early Devonian. Small plants and fungi had only recently begun to spread across the landscape, and complex terrestrial ecosystems like forests had yet to evolve. This means that, unlike later giant arthropods, Praearcturus did not benefit from the high atmospheric oxygen levels associated with the rise of forests. Instead, its enormous size may reflect a world with relatively little competition from other large predators. This suggests that Praearcturus might have grown so big simply because there weren’t many other large animals around meaning it could dominate its environment in a way that wouldn’t be possible later on.

The fossils also hint that this giant scorpion may have led a partly aquatic lifestyle. Some specimens show flap-like structures on the abdomen similar to those found in modern crustaceans such as lobsters, suggesting it may have been capable of moving between water and land. Quantification of the wider arachnid fossil record, led by Dr Garwood and the team, shows that scorpions are unusually abundant in rocks of this age compared with other arachnids, supporting the idea that some early forms may have lived in freshwater environments where they are more likely to survive as fossils. This places Praearcturus at a pivotal moment in Earth’s history when animals were first experimenting with life outside the oceans.

 This places Praearcturus at a pivotal moment in Earth’s history when animals were first experimenting with life outside the oceans.

Dr Greg Edgecombe, Merit Researcher at the Natural History Musuem, London, and co-author of the study said: “The boundary between land and sea was much less defined at this time. Praearcturus gives us a fascinating glimpse into how early animals adapted to these changing environments.

“It may even represent a lineage that returned to the water after earlier ancestors had already begun living on land.”

First described in 1871, Praearcturus gigas was originally thought to be a giant crustacean, similar to a woodlouse. The known fossils fragmentary nature lacked key features such as a tail making it difficult to classify with confidence for more than a century.

The breakthrough came through comparison with better preserved fossils discovered in recent years, which revealed key anatomical features unique to scorpions. The discovery highlights the continuing scientific importance of museum collections.

Dr Howard added: “Specimens collected over a century ago can still hold entirely new insights. By revisiting them with modern techniques, we can uncover discoveries that reshape our understanding of life on Earth.”

The discovery of such a large scorpion so early in the history of life on land challenges assumptions about why prehistoric arthropods reached gigantic sizes. Rather than being driven solely by environmental factors such as oxygen levels, the findings suggest that ecological opportunity such as a lack of competition may have played a crucial role.

]]>
Wed, 03 Jun 2026 14:40:12 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3def7881-2f6c-4916-b1cd-82c566f50a0d/500_lifereconstructionofpraearcturusgigascopyfranzanthonyhighres.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3def7881-2f6c-4916-b1cd-82c566f50a0d/lifereconstructionofpraearcturusgigascopyfranzanthonyhighres.png?10000
Nuclear Early Career Researcher Conference launched /about/news/nuclear-early-career-researcher-conference-launched/ /about/news/nuclear-early-career-researcher-conference-launched/756807The Dalton Nuclear Institute hosted its first Early Career Researcher (ECR) Conference, bringing together more than 80 researchers from across The University of 91ɬ and partner CDTs.  

The event was hosted by the Dalton Champions team – early-career colleagues who support and strengthen the Institute’s nuclear research community.  

The Dalton ECR Conference showcased the breadth of modern nuclear research, with presentations spanning space reactor development, fusion energy safeguards, advanced nuclear materials, and the application of artificial intelligence in nuclear safety case automation. 

The event was opened and closed by Deputy Director of the Institute, Professor Clint Sharrad, who said: “The Conference highlighted Dalton’s commitment to fostering the development of the nuclear ECR community who displayed outstanding leadership qualities from the way they prepared and delivered the conference itself. We’re proud of our Dalton Champions team for coordinating such a successful day that really showcased the incredible breadth of research taking place at 91ɬ and the impressive talent of our ECR community.”  

Keynote sessions were delivered by Professor Ali Tehrani, Principal Nuclear Safety Inspector at the Office for Nuclear Regulation and Visiting Professor at Imperial College London, and Dr Nejdet Erkan, Senior Nuclear Engineering Researcher at the UK Atomic Energy Authority. Professor Tehrani discussed the regulatory challenges and opportunities associated with artificial intelligence in nuclear applications, while Dr Erkan addressed severe accident assessment in fission systems and design challenges in fusion energy. 

Recognition was given to outstanding early career contributions through the Best Oral and Best Poster Presentation awards. The Best Oral Presentation was awarded to Nour Hammoud for her work on a structured framework assessing proliferation-relevant characteristics of fusion systems, including tritium handling, neutron-driven material production risks, and safeguards considerations across magnetic, inertial, and magneto-inertial confinement concepts. 

The Best Poster Presentation award was shared between Elsa Verheul – “Modelling magnetohydrodynamic effects on dendritic solidification in fusion steels during additive manufacturing”, Bengu Su Ates – “Investigating ductile fracture mechanisms in SA508 steel using in situ X-ray tomography”, and Nick Williams – “Unstable magnetic reconnection self-generates turbulence”.&Բ;

The conference organising committee was: Ahmadreza Farrokhnia, Farouq Alatassi, Francesca Brooks-Ward, Charlotte Brown, Dilek Kale, Maria Kapousidou, Ruairi McCabe, Matthew Rogers, Jake Smith, Anastasia Vasileiou, Matthew Warner, Saleh Zaila, and Qasim Ali. 

]]>
Wed, 03 Jun 2026 10:39:55 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_tab-col-white-background.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/tab-col-white-background.jpg?10000
New study examines how safety is delivered in NHS virtual wards /about/news/new-study-examines-how-safety-is-delivered-in-nhs-virtual-wards/ /about/news/new-study-examines-how-safety-is-delivered-in-nhs-virtual-wards/756802Virtual wards, also known as hospital at home, are increasingly being used across the NHS to support people who would otherwise need hospital care to receive treatment and monitoring at home. A new NIHR-funded study led by University of 91ɬ researchers  explored how safe care is delivered in virtual wards, highlighting the often unseen work carried out by patients and carers as they undertake key elements of risk-work previously held by clinicians.

]]>
Virtual wards, also known as hospital at home, are increasingly being used across the NHS to support people who would otherwise need hospital care to receive treatment and monitoring at home. A new NIHR-funded study led by University of 91ɬ researchers  explored how safe care is delivered in virtual wards, highlighting the often unseen work carried out by patients and carers as they undertake key elements of risk-work previously held by clinicians.

The findings show that virtual wards can provide a safe alternative to hospital care for some patients, allowing people to recover at home while still receiving clinical oversight. However, patients and carers often take on more practical and emotional responsibility than may be recognised as they assume duties that would normally be carried out by clinicians in hospital settings. This includes monitoring symptoms, managing equipment and responding to signs of deterioration, especially overnight or outside normal working hours.

The study, published in the journal and led by researchers at The University of 91ɬ, is funded by the NIHR Greater 91ɬ Patient Safety Research Collaboration (GM PSRC) and the NIHR Applied Research Collaboration Greater 91ɬ (ARC-GM).

Using qualitative methods, including observation work and interviews with patients and carers, the researchers evaluated virtual wards services across four sites in North-West England. Their findings show that safety in virtual wards does not rely on technology alone, but is strongly shaped by the relational and emotional support provided to patients, carers and clinicians.

Dr Kelly Howells, Research Fellow at The University of 91ɬ and the NIHR GM PSRC, said: “Virtual wards can help people receive acute care safely at home, but our study shows safe care depends on more than technology.

“Patients, carers and clinicians all play a role in managing risk, with patients and carers often taking on important practical and emotional responsibilities, particularly outside normal working hours. Health services need to recognise and better support this work.”

The researchers suggest that hospital at home services that combine technology with in‑person home visits could help make care safer, more flexible, and accessible for a wider range of patients. Recognising and supporting the work undertaken by patients and carers is essential to ensure virtual wards are safely delivered.

As virtual wards expand as a key component of NHS policy to shift acute care from hospital to community settings, practice must ensure there is space for relational and training support for clinicians, patients, and carers so that remote acute care can be safely implemented across health systems.

The paper Shifting boundaries of risk-work in virtual wards in North-West England: a multisite qualitative evaluation is available . DOI  

This study builds on earlier work by the NIHR GM PSRC and ARC-GM exploring virtual wards through the perspectives of patients, carers and staff, helping to deepen understanding of how virtual ward services operate in practice.

Read more in

  • The image was created with AI 
]]>
Wed, 03 Jun 2026 09:57:32 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4b83d5da-6787-4291-982c-68ce2bbeadee/500_virtualward.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4b83d5da-6787-4291-982c-68ce2bbeadee/virtualward.png?10000
Colgate-Palmolive renews University’s oldest business partnership /about/news/colgate-palmolive-renews-universitys-oldest-business-partnership/ /about/news/colgate-palmolive-renews-universitys-oldest-business-partnership/743045The Company, whose Colgate brand is in more homes than any other, is to fund a £2 million extension to its long-standing research partnership with dental researchers at The University of 91ɬ.

]]>
The Company, whose Colgate brand is in more homes than any other, is to fund a £2 million extension to its long-standing research partnership with dental researchers at The University of 91ɬ.

Colgate-Palmolive, a caring, innovative growth company that is reimagining a healthier future for all people, their pets and our planet, will continue to fund the renowned Dental Health Unit (DHU) at the University.

Selling its health and hygiene products in more than 200 countries and territories, Colgate-Palmolive is the global leader in toothpaste and manual toothbrushes.

The global leader in oral health has been working with The University of 91ɬ since 1968, amounting to the University’s longest ever business partnership. The DHU has been a leading centre for oral health research for almost 60 years.

Initially carrying out clinical trials to evaluate the efficacy of Colgate products in collaboration with Colgate’s Research & Development team, the DHU has quickly evolved into a public health-focused program working collaboratively to mentor PhD candidates and to develop leaders in dentistry throughout the UK and beyond.

The extension of the funding will support high-quality clinical and behavioural research to generate real-world evidence for policy and practice. It will also allow the DHU to run a Fellowship Program – training the next generation of oral health researchers. The first awards to train future leaders have been announced with funding available for early career researchers in Europe and North America.

Anne-Marie Glenny, Professor of Health Sciences and Associate Dean for Research and Innovation at the School of Medical Sciences, said: “For over 50 years, the Dental Health Unit and our proud, historic association with Colgate Palmolive has reaped real health impacts, carrying out world -leading oral health research and supporting the development of research and policy leaders.

“The next chapter for the Dental Health Unit aims to enhance our impact in areas such as dental public health, behavioural science and clinical study management by building a robust network of collaborations with leading academic institutions.

"We will strategically expand our PhD program across renowned universities throughout the UK, Europe and North America.

"By fostering alliances with leading researchers, we are committed to advancing innovation and shaping thought leadership in oral health and behavioural insights.”

Professor Jan Clarkson, Academic Director at the DHU said: “This collaboration between the University and Colgate-Palmolive aims to establish the DHU as a strategic hub for advancing oral health behaviour change, leveraging behavioural insights, and innovative oral health research to deliver impactful, scalable outcomes that improve public health policies and oral health globally.

“This long standing private-public collaboration endeavours to advance global oral health research and education, leveraging industry and academic expertise to drive international excellence in scientific innovation, improve patient outcomes, and shape public health policies.”

 

Maria Ryan, DDS, PhD, Executive Vice President Chief Clinical Officer, Colgate Palmolive, said: “Colgate-Palmolive’s purpose is to reimagine a healthier future for all. We are proud of the accomplishments of our longstanding partnership with the University of 91ɬ through this Dental Health Unit. The pioneer DHU at the University of 91ɬ has advanced oral health through innovative, multidisciplinary research streams for more than half a century, breaking down silos between academia, clinicians, industry, policy makers and the communities that we all serve. And our collaboration has served as a model for others globally, with our more recent DHUs based in Latin America and India.”

]]>
Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:03:05 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8d4d70d6-4959-421b-b557-aa486caf98c1/500_toothbrushingkids2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8d4d70d6-4959-421b-b557-aa486caf98c1/toothbrushingkids2.jpg?10000
Methods Fair 2026: A celebration of creativity, connection and care /about/news/methods-fair-2026-a-celebration-of-creativity-connection-and-care/ /about/news/methods-fair-2026-a-celebration-of-creativity-connection-and-care/756746Last week’s Methods Fair organised by Methods@91ɬ brought together researchers, practitioners and community partners from across the North West and beyond for a day of creativity, conversation and collaboration.The Fair has become a highlight in the research calendar with a strong sense of openness and curiosity. As one attendee reflected: “The atmosphere was really friendly and inspiring and I’ve come away with lots of thoughts on where to take my research.”

A keynote grounded in friendship and care

The day opened with a thoughtful and engaging keynote from Prof Sarah Marie Hall and Sally Bonnie, FRSA-Founder and Director of Inspiring Futures Partnership CIC, who shared their journey of working together over the past eight years. Their talk moved beyond traditional academic narratives, offering instead a story of care, friendship and collaboration.

Using the metaphor of weaving, they illustrated how relationships are not simply part of research practice, they are what holds it together. Threads of trust, care and shared experience ran throughout their reflections, setting a powerful tone for the rest of the day.

Getting hands-on with methods

Across the programme, participants had the chance to immerse themselves in a wide range of interactive and practice-based workshops, alongside lightning talks and poster presentations (including but not limited to sessions on drawing research, ethical practices in multiligual research, lived experience and co-production, more than human methods and Lego serious play). Attendees also had the opportunity to experience the University’s flagship Data Visualisation Observatory.

Interdisciplinary moments of exchange, their unplanned and conversational nature, and the way in which discussions extended well before the sessions themselves are a defining feature of the Methods Fair.

Bringing people together

One of the most distinctive aspects of the day was the bringing together of people who might not otherwise cross paths. This year’s event included community participants, creating a genuinely inclusive and collaborative environment.

Inspire Women Oldham’s collaboration on the zine-making workshop captured the spirit of the day: opening up research methods as a shared space for learning, creativity and connection.

As Professor Emma Banister, Director of Methods@91ɬ, reflects:

Leaving inspired

Our hope is that the Methods Fair can create a space where people feel able to experiment, connect and think differently about research. An aim that was not lost on this attendee who reported feeling: “Inspired, refreshed and rejuvenated to try out new methods and build them into my research design."

]]>
Tue, 02 Jun 2026 16:43:45 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ac5f0908-0f29-446f-b362-8d3ef8c3f45a/500_m@m1.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ac5f0908-0f29-446f-b362-8d3ef8c3f45a/m@m1.jpg?10000
UCAE and Jisc Collaboration Reveals Student Perspectives on AI and Pre-sessionals /about/news/ucae-and-jisc-collaboration-reveals-student-perspectives-on-ai-and-pre-sessionals/ /about/news/ucae-and-jisc-collaboration-reveals-student-perspectives-on-ai-and-pre-sessionals/756739UCAE have collaborated with JISC to find out what Pre-sessional students think about intensive summer English courses in the context of the rapidly changing world influenced by GenAI.UCAE have to find out what Pre-sessional students think about intensive summer English courses in the context of the rapidly changing world influenced by GenAI.

As a Centre, we have a lot of thoughts about what the content and goals should be of our courses, and we get input from all areas of the University on how these should evolve and develop.

However, getting international student (and looking at our courses demographics, Chinese student) input can be tricky for a variety of reasons, not least the sometimes shorter periods students are with us, and the obvious challenges of those teaching / assessing also asking their classes for honest feedback and critique.

It was with this in mind that we approached JISC to collaborate on the focus group in the hope that we could get more genuine insights that would help us in the future.

Some of the resulting views in the report one could guess (e.g. student requests for guidance over punishment), but the thoughts on how GenAI could be a potential equaliser, and detection tools could further bias with ‘false positives’ gave food for thought.

The JISC piece was followed with a University Language Centre Directors’ Network meeting on ‘the future of Pre-sessionals in a world of GenAI (November 2025) – with both these events contributing to a more rethink of the University’s Pre-sessional for Summer 2027.

]]>
Tue, 02 Jun 2026 16:22:22 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cb053319-a2eb-4cc2-ae4f-8bca39395176/500_screenshot_2-6-2026_162115_.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cb053319-a2eb-4cc2-ae4f-8bca39395176/screenshot_2-6-2026_162115_.jpeg?10000