<![CDATA[Newsroom University of 91ɬ]]> /about/news/ en Wed, 10 Jun 2026 04:08:59 +0200 Tue, 09 Jun 2026 13:05:11 +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.

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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:

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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.

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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.

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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
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:

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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.

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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.

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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:

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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.

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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.

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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

The image was created with AI

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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.

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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: 

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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.

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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.

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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 .

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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
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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.

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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:

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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.

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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:

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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.

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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.”

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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.

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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:

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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.

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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
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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.

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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 .

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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

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Journal: Palaeontology

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

DOI:

URL:  

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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 
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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.

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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. With historic links to 91ɬ, the company’s former Colgate-Palmolive factory in Salford Quays, built in 1938, was redeveloped in 2005 into the famous landmark now known as Soapworks.

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.”

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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
Almost one in 10 people in high-risk groups may have had a hidden heart attack, study suggests /about/news/almost-one-in-10-people-in-high-risk-groups-may-have-had-a-hidden-heart-attack-study-suggests/ /about/news/almost-one-in-10-people-in-high-risk-groups-may-have-had-a-hidden-heart-attack-study-suggests/756720A “shocking” proportion of over-50s with common health problems like high blood pressure are having undetected heart attacks, based on a snapshot of a funded by British Heart Foundation (BHF) and Innovate UK and presented at the British Cardiovascular Society annual conference in 91ɬ.

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A “shocking” proportion of over-50s with common health problems like high blood pressure are having undetected heart attacks, based on a snapshot of a study funded by British Heart Foundation (BHF) and Innovate UK and presented at the British Cardiovascular Society annual conference in 91ɬ.

The study was carried out by University of 91ɬ and 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust  researchers.

The discovery was made when researchers looked at early data from volunteers in the ongoing community-based EARLY-HF study in Greater 91ɬ. When heart scans were offered to the 550 volunteers aged over 50 with cardiometabolic issues, researchers discovered that nearly one in 10 people (nine per cent) had already suffered a heart attack without realising it.

Almost a quarter (23 per cent) had undetected or poorly managed heart or circulatory problems which required medical attention.

To take part in the study, people had to have at least two health issues from a list of seven which affect millions of people in the UK. These included high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, the lung condition chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the heart rhythm problem atrial fibrillation, obesity and chronic kidney disease.

The most common issues for study participants were pre-existing high blood pressure, which had already been diagnosed in 88 per cent of the study group, and obesity, which affected 70 per cent. Meanwhile 42 per cent of the volunteers had diabetes.

Led by Consultant Cardiologist at 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust and Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine at The University of 91ɬ, researchers wanted to understand the rate of hidden illness which had been unrecognised and untreated in this group.

They discovered almost two-thirds (60 per cent) had high blood pressure which was not under proper control or being effectively managed, raising their potential risk of a heart attack or stroke.

Among the study volunteers, 34 per cent were classified as living in an area that is among the top 20 per cent most deprived in England,1 while 28 per cent lived in an area among the 20 per cent least deprived. There were more men than women in the study, with males making up 59 per cent of volunteers.

The researchers suggest the rates of undetected health problems found in Greater 91ɬ are likely to be reflected in communities across the UK.

British Heart Foundation Research Fellow at 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust and The University of 91ɬ, helped to run the study and presented the findings at the BCS conference in 91ɬ. He said:

“My colleagues and I were shocked by just how much unrecognised disease we found. While our study involves people who would be considered at higher risk of cardiovascular disease, finding so many people who had experienced a heart attack and didn’t know it was not something we ever anticipated going into this study.”

The Detecting EARLY Heart Failure in Greater 91ɬ (EARLY-HF) study aims to detect people at risk of developing heart failure earlier, within socioeconomically and ethnically diverse communities who may have reduced access to healthcare.

Heart attacks and other heart and circulatory issues, like those discovered in the study so far, can lead to heart failure – a condition which affects more than a million people in the UK and means the heart cannot pump blood properly, which can cause severe breathlessness and fatigue.

Most study participants (81 per cent) were recruited via their GP surgery, with another 12 per cent signing up after seeing a social media advert, and others recruited through community events or signposted to the project by family and friends.

Everyone involved in the study had blood tests, an ECG and a cardiac MRI scan, and answered questions about their health and medical history. These tests revealed that 125 people out of 550 (23 per cent) had a heart or circulatory issue that required medical attention.

On cardiac MRI scans, signs of scarring suggested that 46 people (nine per cent) had previously had a suspected heart attack. These diagnoses were confirmed by a consultant cardiologist, who looked over every scan. Letters were sent to people’s GPs, and they were then referred on for further tests and treatment.

Researchers found that 331 people in the study (60 per cent) had a blood pressure reading of 140/90mmHg or higher – the usual threshold for a diagnosis of high blood pressure (hypertension).

While 27 of these were undetected cases of high blood pressure, 304 people (92 per cent of them) were known to have it when they joined the study, with 224 already taking blood pressure-lowering medication. The researchers say this suggests their treatment plan was inadequate, as it had not brought their blood pressure down to a normal level.

Blood tests revealed 162 people (30 per cent) had elevated levels of the protein NT pro-BNP - a sign that their heart was under strain.

The study continues to recruit people in Greater 91ɬ with at least two cardiometabolic conditions – related to the heart, blood vessels or metabolism.

Professor Bryan Williams, Chief Scientific and Medical Officer at the British Heart Foundation, said:

"These shocking findings should ring alarm bells for our healthcare leaders. They show that our current approach to prevention isn’t fit for purpose, and too many people are slipping through the gaps as a result.

“All too often we see patients too late, when years of living with treatable risk factors like high blood pressure or high cholesterol have built up leading to heart attacks or heart failure. We have made huge strides in our ability to treat cardiovascular disease over the past 65 years, but right now we’re missing opportunities to prevent it in the first place. The picture this study paints won’t improve without a radical shift in how we identify and treat people at risk of cardiovascular disease.”

Professor Chris Miller, Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine and Consultant Cardiologist at The University of 91ɬ and 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust, who leads the EARLY-HF study said: “These findings underscore the need to address disparities in cardiovascular disease detection, healthcare access, and outcomes, including by engaging people through non-traditional channels such as text messaging and social media.”  

  • Theis supported by Innovate UK Greater 91ɬ Innovation Accelerator, AstraZeneca, and British Heart Foundation. The sponsor of the study is 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust.

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Psychological course could be game changer for carers of people with dementia /about/news/psychological-course-could-be-game-changer-for-carers-of-people-with-dementia/ /about/news/psychological-course-could-be-game-changer-for-carers-of-people-with-dementia/756666The neglected psychological support needs for carers of people with dementia in the UK could soon be addressed with a major multicentre trial led by University of 91ɬ psychologists and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)

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The neglected psychological support needs for carers of people with dementia in the UK could soon be addressed with a major multicentre trial led by University of 91ɬ psychologists and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)

Lead researchers and will trial the new course which has been shown to improve the way carers and people with dementia communicate with each other across England.

Difficulties communicating can result in a person with dementia losing confidence, withdrawing during interactions, or feeling disconnected from and devalued by the other person.

However, University of 91ɬ led research has shown that interventions focusing on communication can improve the person with dementia’s communication and behavioural symptoms.

Carers reported positive experiences of using the method called , a detailed study of the experience of 15 carers published in the journal showed.

And a second NIHR-funded study, published in found it was possible to measure participants psychological health, quality of life and service use when trialling the course.

Now the research team are able to progress to a multi-centre trial of the method across three proposed sites in England, thanks to the NIHR funding. The course will be offered across Greater 91ɬ with Greater 91ɬ Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust as the lead site.

The course, pioneered by 91ɬ’s Dr Lydia Morris and Professor Warren Mansell brings a glimmer of hope to the 700,000 people supporting a family member, partner, or friend with dementia.

Empowered Conversations uses evidence based psychological and communication theories to support carers to improve relationships and reduce stress.

For example, it uses Mentalisation Theory, which is about understanding our own thoughts and feelings while recognising that others have their own minds with different perspectives.

Professor Berry from The University of 91ɬ is also Mental Health Co-Theme Lead at the NIHR 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre and Co-Director of the Complex Trauma and Resilience Research Unit at Greater 91ɬ Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust.

She said: “In dementia care, relationships often change dramatically, for example, a child may become the carer of a parent, or a spouse may shift from partner to caregiver.  Carers often face a painful conflict between remembering the person as they used to be and coping with who they have become.

“Seeing someone who looks the same physically but has changed in memory, personality, and communication can feel confusing, distressing and bring a sense of loss and grief.

“Stress associated with these changes in close relationships can make it harder to understand and interpret another person’s thoughts and feelings.  While some carers adapt by adjusting their expectations and priorities, this kind of coping does not happen easily or automatically. This is where learning skills in mentalisation can help.”

Among the positives, carers said the course resulted in changes to themselves, their relationships, and their communication skills.

Participants also described letting go of their expectations of what the person should be able to do and replacing that with more realistic goals.

Dr Morris, who is a Senior Clinical Lecturer and Clinical Psychologist at the University, added: “In a landscape where provision of post-diagnostic dementia support is variable or limited, it appears that Empowered Conversations can offer carers an intervention that is appreciated and accessible.

“Communication difficulties are associated with increased carer stress and burden and can contribute to the breakdown of the interpersonal relationship between the carer and person with dementia.

“Training does exist, but it focuses on practical communication skills without addressing the emotional and relational contexts of care and communication.

“However, the carers we worked with reported positive experiences of participating in Empowered Conversations and valued meeting people who, despite sometimes different circumstances, shared their understanding of supporting someone with dementia.

“The course supported participants to rethink communication and have a greater appreciation of the other person’s perspective during everyday interactions.”

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A dangerous dam‑building race is threatening South Asia’s shared rivers /about/news/a-dangerous-dambuilding-race/ /about/news/a-dangerous-dambuilding-race/756474Bangladesh has just approved one of the largest river engineering projects its history: the Padma Barrage, a vast river-control project intended to restore water in the country’s drought-prone southwest.

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Bangladesh has just approved one of the largest river engineering projects its history: the Padma Barrage, a vast river-control project intended to restore water in the country’s drought-prone southwest.

It comes at a dangerous moment for South Asia’s rivers. China is building the upstream on the Brahmaputra, India is accelerating its own , and the treaty governing Ganges water-sharing between India and Bangladesh expires in December 2026.

Rather than easing regional water insecurity, the Padma Barrage risks adding to a cycle of unilateral river engineering across the subcontinent. South Asia is entering a regional dam-building race – without the institutions needed to share its rivers.

Bangladesh’s water crisis

Supporters say the barrage is a pragmatic response to chronic water insecurity in Bangladesh. The country sits at the end of the vast Ganges-Brahmaputra river system, where rivers that originate in the Himalayas spread into thousands of channels before they reach the sea. Despite all this water, the main river channels are and some smaller rivers are disappearing rapidly.


The Farakka Barrage in India, and the proposed Padma Barrage downstream. 

Bangladesh did not create this problem alone. Since the 1970s, the Farakka Barrage, built across the Ganges upstream in India, has diverted water towards the huge city of Kolkata to flush sediment away from its port.

The consequences for Bangladesh are well documented. Its rivers have dried up and become less navigable. They have also become saltier, groundwater levels have declined, and severe riverbank erosion has occurred.

Farming has become more difficult and fish stocks have declined. These environmental pressures have forced many people to migrate out of the country.

Most critically, the reduced flow of freshwater has harmed — the world’s largest mangrove forest, shared between Bangladesh and India. There, elevated salinity has caused widespread among mangrove trees and significant biodiversity loss.

The promise – and risks – of Padma Barrage

When complete, the centrepiece of the Padma Barrage will be a huge dam more than two kilometres long. It is designed to store water during the monsoon season and release it in the drier months, helping reduce salinity intrusion by maintaining freshwater flows and pushing saline water further downstream during the dry season.

In theory, the barrage will revive a host of smaller rivers in western Bangladesh. The it will support irrigation across much of the country, while increasing rice and fish production.


The proposed Padma Barrage will span the Ganges river system’s largest channel in Bangladesh.

Yet the project raises a series of that deserve serious scrutiny.

The most immediate relates to silt, because the Ganges is an exceptionally sediment-heavy river. A dam or barrage causes the river water to lose speed and the energy required to carry sediment, which is dumped upstream.

This is already a severe problem . More than a million people have been displaced from over the past three decades, as banks have been eroded and floods have become more intense.

Constructing a second major barrier downstream – the Padma Barrage – risks compounding these effects, potentially trapping additional sediment loads between the two structures and intensifying flooding pressure.

The consequences downstream could be equally serious. The diversion of water into southwestern river channels — the stated objective of the project — implies reduced flows in the main river systems. If these flows aren’t strong enough to push back salty tidal waters, then parts of coastal Bangladesh, rather than benefiting from improved water security, could face accelerating salinisation.

There is a deeper irony here. Bangladesh is responding to the damage caused by India’s Farakka Barrage with a major barrage of its own.

Farakka was built to solve an economic problem upstream, but imposed major environmental costs downstream in Bangladesh. Those economic problems are still unsolved – Kolkata port still suffers from silt and needs constant dredging.

Critics fear the Padma Barrage could reproduce the same pattern: large environmental disruption without the promised benefits. In other words, the same engineering approach that damaged Bangladesh may soon be reproduced within that country.

A regional struggle over rivers

The project also depends on sufficient water continuing to flow into Bangladesh. But China – alongside planned hydropower projects across India, including plans to – could significantly reduce the volume of water entering Bangladesh in future. If that happens, the Padma Barrage may not have enough water to work as intended.

The timing also matters. The between India and Bangladesh expires in December 2026, and governs the same flows the Padma Barrage is designed to manage. Rather than strengthening Bangladesh’s position ahead of treaty talks, the project could weaken its case for demanding more water from India by signalling that it can cope with reduced flows.

Several rivers that the barrage aims to revive flow through both India and Bangladesh, meaning restoration will require cooperation between the two countries, rather than infrastructure alone.

That makes Bangladesh’s 2025 accession to the particularly significant. As the first South Asian country to join the treaty, Bangladesh now has a stronger legal basis to push for more equitable water-sharing, particularly as the Ganges treaty negotiations approach.

Dams cannot replace diplomacy

The Padma Barrage is not an inherently misconceived project. Bangladesh’s water crisis is real, and the political pressure to respond is genuine.

But without renewed water-sharing agreements and stronger cooperation with neighbouring countries, this new barrage risks repeating the pattern of unilateral river engineering that has already destabilised South Asia’s waterways.

Infrastructure that outpaces diplomacy is a familiar reason for failure in the region. The challenge for Bangladesh is to ensure the barrage becomes part of a strong legal and diplomatic framework for river cooperation – not another step in an escalating cycle of hydropolitical competition.The Conversation

, Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, Geography, and , Associate Professor in Risk and Disaster Science,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Fri, 29 May 2026 15:42:47 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/15bdcab3-715b-493f-929c-728a2eddc1c2/500_bangladams.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/15bdcab3-715b-493f-929c-728a2eddc1c2/bangladams.jpg?10000
Dame Robina Shah receives Freedom of the City of London /about/news/dame-robina-shah-receives-freedom-of-the-city-of-london/ /about/news/dame-robina-shah-receives-freedom-of-the-city-of-london/756237One of the UK’s leading experts in patient care has received the Freedom of the City of London at Guildhall today, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to, and achievements in, healthcare and medical education. 

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One of the UK’s leading experts in patient care has received the Freedom of the City of London at Guildhall today, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to, and achievements in, healthcare and medical education. 

A highly experienced consultant and chartered psychologist, Dame Robina Shah DBE has spent over 30 years working across healthcare, medical education, patient safety, public service, social justice, and inclusion.

She is currently Professor of Psychosocial Medicine and Medical Education at the University of 91ɬ Medical School and Director of the Doubleday Centre for Patient Experience.

Dame Robina’s contribution to patient care was recognised through her appointment as Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, following her earlier MBE for services to academic research in learning disabilities.

Through her roles in a wide range of sports organisations, including the FA Council, FA Women’s Football Board, 91ɬ County FA, and Oldham Athletic Football Club, Dame Robina has also made a significant contribution to football governance, player welfare, disability football, women’s football, and widening opportunity through sport.

Dame Robina has been nominated for the Freedom by the City of London Corporation’s Deputy Policy Chair, James Thomson, and City Corporation Lead Member for Sport, Edward Lord.

Speaking after her Freedom ceremony, Dame Robina Shah said: “I am deeply honoured and humbled to receive the Freedom of the City of London. This unexpected recognition has touched me greatly.

“I thank my nominators, James Thomson and Edward Lord, and accept the Freedom with humility and appreciation, mindful of the many people who have guided, supported, and encouraged me throughout my life.

“The City of London has long held a special significance for me. Although 91ɬ is my home and the place where I was born, I have had the privilege, through my civic and public roles, of attending many events in the City and seeing first-hand its unique history, traditions and contribution to public life.

“This recognition of my contribution to the NHS, sport, particularly football, and governance is especially meaningful, because these areas have shaped much of my life’s work and public service. I wish to thank the many colleagues, patients, volunteers, community partners and organisations that I have had the privilege of working alongside over the years. Much of what I have been able to contribute has only been possible through collective effort, shared purpose and the generosity, trust and support of others.

“At this time, I also think warmly of my parents, whose values, kindness and humanity shaped the lens through which I have tried to serve others. They taught me to notice people, especially those who may otherwise go unseen, and nurtured in me a curiosity about people’s stories, lives and experiences, grounded in compassion, dignity and respect.

“I also want to acknowledge my family, Tariq, Zainab, Raabiyah and Sulaymaan, whose love, support and patience have been central to all my achievements.”

City of London Corporation Policy Chairman, Chris Hayward, said: “Dame Robina Shah’s Freedom of the City of London recognises her distinguished career and expertise in a wide range of fields, including healthcare, medical education, patient care, inclusion, and football governance.

“A very deserving recipient of the Freedom, I hope that Dame Robina and her guests will have very fond memories of her ceremony at Guildhall for many years to come.”

Deputy City of London Corporation Policy Chairman, James Thomson, said: "I am honoured to have nominated Dame Robina for the Freedom of the City of London.

“Robina's public service has been extraordinary, especially, in giving young people opportunity through education and skills, tackling inequality and hate crime, and supporting the most vulnerable in society and giving them a voice.

“Robina is an inspirational role model to so many and has a personal warmth that is infectious."

City of London Corporation Lead Member for Sport, Edward Lord OBE, said: "Dame Robina has made a demonstrable contribution to public life in Greater 91ɬ, and to the nation.

“In particular, her involvement in providing independent governance expertise to the Football Association and now, on the board of Oldham Athletic Football Club, marks her out as someone worthy of recognition.

“As a fellow Lancastrian, it was a genuine pleasure to support her nomination for the City Freedom."

The City Corporation’s  aims to make the Square Mile a global sports destination, by offering attractive and valued sport facilities, venues, activations, and events for residents, workers, and visitors.

One of the City of London’s ancient traditions, the Freedom is believed to have begun in 1237 and enabled recipients to carry out their trade.

As well as being nominated for, or applying for, the Freedom, it is also offered by the City of London Corporation to individuals as a way of paying tribute to their outstanding contribution to London or public life, or to celebrate a very significant achievement.  

Recent notable recipients include broadcaster and breast cancer charity ambassador, Gloria Hunniford; two-time Academy Award-winning actor and humanitarian, Cate Blanchett; novelist, Ken Follett; actor, Ray Winstone; and City of London Police Special Constable and TV presenter, Penny Lancaster.

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The National Lottery Community Fund and #BeeWell join forces to champion young people’s wellbeing /about/news/the-national-lottery-community-fund-and-beewell-join-forces-to-champion-young-peoples-wellbeing-in-new-areas-across-england/ /about/news/the-national-lottery-community-fund-and-beewell-join-forces-to-champion-young-peoples-wellbeing-in-new-areas-across-england/756212New £5.5 million grant will support #BeeWell’s expansion in up to five new areas across England by 2030Since 2021has listened to the voices of nearly 200,000 young people and worked with over 320 secondary schools, 15 local authorities and over 160 partners to drive improvements in young people’s wellbeing - #BeeWell’s goal is to expand its reach with the aim to double the number of young people the programme reaches  

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Thousands more young people across England could soon have a stronger voice in shaping their wellbeing support thanks to a £5.5 million grant from The National Lottery Community Fund to #BeeWell. Since 2021, #BeeWell has already listened to the voices of almost 200,000 young people across an working with over 320 secondary schools.   

The partnership with The National Lottery Community Fund will last until spring 2030, enabling #BeeWell to expand into up to five new locations across England. The grant will also support #BeeWell to continue its work supporting young people in its current locations and build on its ground-breakinto understand more about essential topics such as how social media use, school attendance and discipline, teenage substance use, loneliness, and the positive impact of arts, culture, entertainment and sport are related to young people’s wellbeing and its drivers.  

The youth-centred programme was developed in response to a growing concern for the wellbeing of young people in England and was founded by The University of 91ɬ, The Gregson Family Foundation, and Anna Freud, who together with the Greater 91ɬ Combined Authority (GMCA) launched the programme in 2019. Usin#BeeWell listens to the voices of as many young people as possible; publishes the results privately to schools and publicly by neighbourhood; and aims to drive action across society to improve young people’s wellbeing.   

For the last five years, #BeeWell has provided a platform for young people to voice how they are feeling and what affects their wellbeing and worked with partners to act on what young people say. During this time, in #BeeWell’s two locations, there has been a modest but consistent upward trend in the proportion of young people reporting good levels of psychological wellbeing and life satisfaction, while the number reporting elevated symptoms of emotional difficulties has declined.  

Meera, A young person who has been involved with #BeeWell over several years highlighted the value of #BeeWell’s approach and the impact of feeling that someone is listening.   

Councillor Roberts, Children and Young People Portfolio Lead for the Greater 91ɬ Combined Authority, commented:  

Thanks to the support of National Lottery players, #BeeWell will expand its proven approach to measuring - and driving action to improve - young people’s wellbeing across England. The investment will help more local areas work directly with young people to understand the challenges affecting their wellbeing and take coordinated action across schools, services and communities.  

James Robertson, National Director of #BeeWell, said:  

Phil Chamberlain, England Director at The National Lottery Community Fund, said:  

Specifically, the investment will fund:  

  • Expansion of the #BeeWell programme into new areas across England
  • Continued delivery in Greater 91ɬ and Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Portsmouth and Southampton
  • Developing and delivering new research into the factors affecting young people’s wellbeing
  • Opportunities for young people to influence local decision-making and shape the support available to them  

You can find out more about the #BeeWell programme, its research and the work it does supporting young people 

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BeeWell has been so important due to the team always prioritising young people. I had the opportunity to shape discourse around how we speak about mental health and wellbeing which has stayed with me throughout further education and as a young professional.   Young people have always been at the heart of #BeeWell, and together we were able to create something that will continue to have a positive impact on not just us, but future generations.]]> hrough #BeeWell, Greater 91ɬ has shown what is possible if we really listen to young people. We all know that many of our teenagers are struggling with their wellbeing and mental health. Our answer to that is focusing on preventing those problems arising in the first place. This new funding will ensure we can continue to provide the support to our young people that enables them to thrive.]]> Over the last five years we’ve seen the power of directly listening to young people and acting on what they tell us to improve support in schools and local communities.  This generous funding will enable us to expand our work, potentially doubling the number of young people across England benefiting from our approach.    We welcome expressions of interest from local authorities interested in implementing the #BeeWell programme in their area]]> Wed, 27 May 2026 13:20:45 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/62b56bd9-5a7e-4a2b-b6d7-a9721037b5a5/500_beewelllogo.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/62b56bd9-5a7e-4a2b-b6d7-a9721037b5a5/beewelllogo.png?10000
Two 91ɬ Professors elected to prestigious Fellowship of the Royal Society /about/news/two-manchester-professors-elected-to-prestigious-fellowship-of-the-royal-society/ /about/news/two-manchester-professors-elected-to-prestigious-fellowship-of-the-royal-society/755650Two “outstanding researchers” from The University of 91ɬ have been elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences.

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Two “outstanding researchers” from The University of 91ɬ have been elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences.

Professor Chris Parkes, an experimental particle physicist at the University, and Professor Jeff Forshaw, a theoretical particle physicist, join over 90 other pioneers and leaders across a range of scientific fields, from astronomy and cancer research to mathematics and biotechnology.

In their election, they join the ranks of Stephen Hawking, Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Lise Meitner, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and Dorothy Hodgkin.

Professor Parkes is Head of the Physics & Astronomy Department at The University of 91ɬ and is internationally recognised for his leadership in particle physics. He previously led the LHCb experiment at CERN - one of the world’s largest scientific collaborations. His research focuses on the search for new physics through studies of matter–antimatter asymmetries and the development of radiation-hard silicon detectors.

Professor Parkes has played a central role in the development of the next generation of LHCb experiments, serving as Principal Investigator and Project Manager for the UK’s contribution to the LHCb Upgrade, installed in 2023, and leading the design of the future LHCb Upgrade II programme. Last year, the LHCb collaboration was honoured by sharing the 2025 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. Parkes was also awarded the Institute of Physics High Energy Physics Group Prize in 2010.

Professor Forshaw is a theoretical particle physicist best known for his work on quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of the strong force. His work has uncovered unexpected features of perturbative QCD and has contributed to the theoretical frameworks used to interpret high-energy particle collisions, with important applications at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and other major international experiments. 

Jeff is also a prominent communicator of science. Together with Brian Cox he has written a series of bestselling popular science books that have introduced a wide readership to the mathematical ideas underpinning modern physics. Through his books, lectures and broader public engagement he has brought the substance, and the joy, of fundamental physics to a wide audience. 

Jeff's research has been recognised by the Maxwell Medal of the Institute of Physics for outstanding contributions to theoretical physics, and his public engagement work by the Institute's Kelvin Medal for outstanding and sustained contributions to the public understanding of physics. 

Sir Paul Nurse, President of the Royal Society, said: “I am delighted to welcome this newest group of exceptional scientists to the Fellowship of the Royal Society. 

“Their contributions reflect the highest standards of scientific endeavour. Whether advancing our understanding of vaccines or exploring the transformative potential of mathematics and computation, their work exemplifies the enduring value of curiosity, creativity and rigorous inquiry. 

“Our Fellowship is strengthened not only by individual distinction, but by the diversity of perspectives and experiences its members bring. This incoming cohort highlights the truly international character of contemporary science and underscores the vital role that plays in achieving breakthroughs that benefit us all.”

The full list of newly elected Fellows can be found on the

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Wed, 27 May 2026 11:11:14 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/62cfc8ea-07bd-4e5f-b2e6-fb4dbc7dcc5f/500_untitleddesign4.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/62cfc8ea-07bd-4e5f-b2e6-fb4dbc7dcc5f/untitleddesign4.png?10000
Study of coral surface behaviour offers new tools to understand the physics underlying infertility and ovarian cancer /about/news/study-of-coral-surface-behaviour-offers-new-tools-to-understand-the-physics-underlying-infertility-and-ovarian-cancer/ /about/news/study-of-coral-surface-behaviour-offers-new-tools-to-understand-the-physics-underlying-infertility-and-ovarian-cancer/744792A study by researchers at The University of 91ɬ, carried out alongside the Universities of Melbourne and Copenhagen, could hold the key to understanding the causes of long-term health problems, such as infertility and ovarian cancer.

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A study by researchers at The University of 91ɬ, carried out alongside the Universities of Melbourne and Copenhagen, could hold the key to understanding the causes of long-term health problems, such as infertility and ovarian cancer.

The study, published in , used a combination of high-resolution imaging, flow measurements, and mathematical modelling to examine fluid flows around corals that are driven by cilia – densely packed tiny hairs on the coral’s surface. The collective beating of the cilia contributes to the movement of fluid around the surface of the coral, regulating the animal’s immediate environment through the transport of particles such as oxygen.

The researchers found that heterogeneity in ciliary orientation—small variations in the direction individual cilia beat—can significantly boost transport efficiency. For substances that diffuse slowly through the fluid, this natural variability increased particle transport by more than 50% compared to perfectly aligned cilia. This contrasts with other biological systems, highlighting how coral cilia are uniquely adapted to their environment.

However, the study also found that strong external flows, such as ocean currents, can reduce the coral’s ability to exchange materials efficiently near the surface.

Researchers believe that the mathematical modelling used in understanding the behaviour and effectiveness of these coral-based cilia structures could be applied to ciliated tissues in humans, such as those found in the respiratory system and fallopian tubes.

Dr Draga Pihler-Puzovic, Reader at the Department of Physics and Astronomy at The University of 91ɬ, said of the study, “This work provides a powerful framework for understanding how coral surfaces operate across a wide range of environmental conditions. It also opens the possibility of applying the same mathematical models to human biology, offering new ways to investigate how cilia function in the body and how their dysfunction may contribute to disease.

This paper was published in the journal:

DOI: 10.1103/fhfw-f1nv

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Wed, 27 May 2026 09:49:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2fa0fe62-5a62-451d-9b8f-e8a3eeee14ba/500_coral.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2fa0fe62-5a62-451d-9b8f-e8a3eeee14ba/coral.jpeg?10000
Experts use AI and satellite images to reveal vast damage to critical Amazon buffer zone /about/news/vast-damage-to-critical-amazon-buffer-zone/ /about/news/vast-damage-to-critical-amazon-buffer-zone/754398An international team of scientists has used artificial intelligence and 35 years of satellite data to uncover the shocking scale of environmental destruction in one of the world’s most important ecosystems.

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An international team of scientists has used artificial intelligence and 35 years of satellite data to uncover the shocking scale of environmental destruction in one of the world’s most important ecosystems.

The research, published in Biological Conservation, found that more than 493,000 square kilometres of land - an area larger than Spain - has been damaged by deforestation and fires in the vital transition zone between the Amazon rainforest and the Cerrado savanna in Brazil.

The team - led by Dr Chuanze Li from The University of 91ɬ - say the findings reveal a major conservation crisis in a region that helps protect the wider Amazon, stores huge amounts of carbon and supports exceptional biodiversity but has very little formal protection.

Key findings

  • Researchers mapped more than 35 years of environmental damage using AI and satellite imagery

  • At least 493,000 km² of land has been affected by deforestation or fire

  • Large areas damaged by fire still had not recovered even after a decade

  • Only around 2% of the study region currently has formal protection

  • Repeated human-caused fires may be permanently changing ecosystems

What did the study find?

The research focused on the Cerrado-Amazon transition (CAT) zone in Brazil, a vast area where rainforest and savanna meet.

Using decades of Landsat satellite images combined with artificial intelligence, researchers tracked how forests and vegetation changed between 1986 and 2020.

They found widespread damage caused by both large-scale forest clearing and repeated fires linked to farming expansion and cattle ranching.

Why this region matters

This area is one of the world’s most important ecological frontiers, and acts as a buffer protecting the Amazon while supporting unique wildlife and storing carbon that would otherwise contribute to climate change if released.

But despite its importance, the region has received far less attention and protection than the Amazon rainforest itself.

Fires leave long-lasting scars

One of the study’s most striking findings was how slowly vegetation recovered after fire. Researchers found that even ten years later, many affected areas had still not returned to their previous condition.

The damage was particularly severe in parts of the Cerrado, where repeated human-driven burning appears to be weakening the ecosystem’s natural ability to recover.

A hidden protection gap

The study also exposed a major lack of protected areas across the region. While around 28% of the Amazon biome overall is protected, only around 2% of the Cerrado–Amazon transition area studied falls within protected zones.

Researchers warn that large areas facing repeated destruction currently have little or no legal safeguard.

How AI helped uncover the damage

The team combined satellite imagery with advanced artificial intelligence tools capable of detecting different types of environmental disturbance over time.

This allowed researchers to distinguish between forest clearing and fire damage across an enormous area spanning more than one million square kilometres.

What the 91ɬ researchers said

“The tools we used enabled us to produce the first wall-to-wall, multi-decade picture of what has actually happened to vegetation across this entire area,” said lead author Dr Chuanze Li.

“We were particularly struck by the recovery data,” said Dr Angela Harris. “The conventional view is that Cerrado vegetation bounces back after fire. What this study shows - at a regional scale and across 35 years - is that it often does not, at least not within a decade.”

"Repeated fires are eroding the very resilience these ecosystems evolved to have - this is a warning that we cannot ignore."

"This study gives policymakers something they have not had before: a precise, long-term map of where the CAT has been damaged, how badly, and how well, or how poorly, it is recovering,” added Dr Polyanna da Conceição Bispo. “This is the empirical foundation that conservation planning in this region has been missing. The protection gap we document is not acceptable, and the tools now exist to close it."

Why it matters

Researchers say the maps created by the study could help governments and conservation groups identify areas most urgently in need of protection, fire prevention and restoration.

They also warn that continued destruction in the transition zone could have consequences far beyond Brazil, affecting biodiversity, climate stability and the future health of the Amazon rainforest itself.

Publication details

The study was conducted by researchers at The University of 91ɬ (UK),  Professor Beatriz Marimon and Professor Ben Hur Marimon at UNEMAT – Universidade do Estado de Mato Grosso (Brazil), and Dr. Ricardo da Silva at CTREES (USA). Field data from the Plant Ecology Laboratory at UNEMAT, a reference network spanning the CAT since 1994, underpinned the classification and validation of satellite-derived disturbance maps.

The paper was published in the Biological Conservation journal.

DOI:

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Tue, 26 May 2026 15:44:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b21e9e37-3c4b-4dc0-ab0b-3fc968c51115/500_gettyimages-1661762632.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b21e9e37-3c4b-4dc0-ab0b-3fc968c51115/gettyimages-1661762632.jpg?10000
91ɬ researchers secure £1.3m to transform recycling of complex waste /about/news/manchester-researchers-secure-13m-to-transform-recycling-of-complex-waste/ /about/news/manchester-researchers-secure-13m-to-transform-recycling-of-complex-waste/753790The University of 91ɬ has been awarded over £1.3 million to develop technologies that could recover valuable materials from hard-to-recycle waste including disposable vapes and cars. 

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The University of 91ɬ has been awarded over £1.3 million to develop technologies that could recover valuable materials from hard-to-recycle waste including disposable vapes and cars. 

The three‑year project, REMOVE‑UM: REcovering MOlecular ValuE from Unrecycled Multi‑materials, funded by EPSRC and Defra will develop new technologies to tackle some of the most challenging waste products. 

Recycling has the potential to recover significant value from materials at the end of their life, playing a crucial role in building a more sustainable future. However, while current systems are effective for simple, single materials that can be easily sorted and cleaned, they struggle to deal with complex, multi-material products. 

Michael Shaver, Project Lead and Professor of Polymer Science at The University of 91ɬ, explains: “Recycling to recover value from materials at end-of-life is a tantalising component of a sustainable future. However, multi-material products – vapes, cars, batteries, furniture – comingle a host of plastics, metals, glass, ceramics and other materials designed to meet ever-increasing consumer demand for low-cost, high-performance, lightweight, aesthetically pleasing consumer goods. These staggeringly complex multi-materials are reaching their end-of-life with no strategy to facilitate the (re)integration of their components, materials or molecules into a circular economy.  

“Developing an economically viable and environmentally advantageous end of-life for multi-materials is vital. However, to achieve this in a just manner, it is essential we understand economic, societal, and environmental outcomes, coupling systemic approaches to ambitious fundamental research.” 

The REMOVE‑UM project will take a fundamentally new approach, developing methods to break down these materials at a molecular level and recover valuable components that can be reused. 

The work will combine expertise from across The University of 91ɬ, bringing together specialists in chemical recycling, catalysis, sustainability assessment and materials science.  

The project will focus on four key areas: 

  • Analysing waste streams to understand their composition and potential value 

  • Developing chemical processes to selectively break down complex materials into valuable products 

  • Separating recovered molecules efficiently while minimising environmental impact 

  • Working closely with industry partners to translate discoveries into real‑world applications and accelerate their commercial application. 

By targeting materials that current infrastructure cannot process, the team aims to complement existing recycling systems, rather than replace them.  

A core aim of the project is to ensure new recycling approaches are technically feasible, economically viable and environmentally sustainable. Life cycle assessment and economic analysis will be integrated throughout to guide decisions and deliver real benefits for society. The project also aims to cut reliance on fossil fuels by recovering reusable chemicals, while generating insights into how waste systems operate to reduce investment risk and support future recycling infrastructure. 

Dr Kedar Pandya, Executive Director for Strategy at EPSRC said: “This investment reflects our commitment to building a cleaner, more sustainable UK economy. By funding ambitious, collaborative and impactful research into recycling technologies, we are helping to tackle some of the most complex challenges in our waste system from collection through to currently hard-to-recycle material recovery. The research being undertaken, which is jointly funded by EPSRC and Defra, will support the long-term transition to a circular economy and creates the conditions for genuine economic and environmental benefit for the UK.” 

The project will be co-led by Dr Ciaran Lahive, Royal Academy of Engineering Research Fellow in the Department of Materials; Dr , Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemical Engineering;  , Chair in Engineering Biology; , Professor of Chemical Engineering; and Dr , Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw Fellow.  

It builds on sustained work in this area by these researchers, including:  

  • Chemical Recycling of Polycarbonate Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene Blends via Organocatalyzed Acetolysis, ChemSusChem, 
  • Recyclable Epoxy Composites Built with a Biobased Hardener, ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, 
  • Environmental Sustainability Assessment of Supercritical CO2 in Gel-spun UHMWPE Fibre Production, ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, 
  • Defining quality by quantifying degradation in the mechanical recycling of polyethylene, Nature Communications, 
  • Untangling the chemical complexity of plastics to improve life cycle outcomes, Nature Materials Reviews,   
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Tue, 26 May 2026 13:38:33 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a6f73a40-bb5a-4679-aaa9-c287222e09a1/500_reycling.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a6f73a40-bb5a-4679-aaa9-c287222e09a1/reycling.jpg?10000
New genetic map of the human eye reveals clues to vision loss /about/news/new-genetic-map-of-the-human-eye-reveals-clues-to-vision-loss/ /about/news/new-genetic-map-of-the-human-eye-reveals-clues-to-vision-loss/748841An international team led by University of 91ɬ scientists has created the most detailed picture yet of how genetic differences shape the way the human eye works.

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An international team led by University of 91ɬ scientists has created the most detailed picture yet of how genetic differences shape the way the human eye works.

The breakthrough could help explain why millions of people develop sight‑threatening conditions such as age‑related macular degeneration (AMD), as well as rarer inherited eye diseases.

The research is published in today.

Epidemiological research predicts that AMD, a leading cause of visual impairment in adults , will affect 288 million people worldwide by 2040.

And rarer inherited  eye disorders  which  interfere with cells in the retina that sense light and send visual signals to the brain include  Stargardt disease, retinitis pigmentosa, and cone‑rod dystrophy.

The researchers analysed whole‑genome sequencing data alongside RNA profiles from 201 donated human eyes.

That allowed them to study two key tissues involved in vision: the neurosensory retina, which captures light, and the retinal pigment epithelium, which supports and nourishes it.

By comparing DNA differences with gene activity in these tissues, the researchers found over 1.4 million genetic signals that influence how genes are turned on or off, known as expression quantitative trait loci, or eQTLs.

The signals influence how nearly 10,000 genes behave in the retina and almost 4,000 genes in the retinal pigment epithelium.

Many of the genetic effects were found in regions of the genome that act as regulatory switches, helping to turn genes on or off.

The study also identified hundreds of individuals whose retinal gene activity was unusually high or low compared with typical patterns.

Among these “expression outliers,” the researchers pinpointed nearly 300 rare genetic variants that could plausibly explain the unusual gene activity.

These variants included rare changes in parts of DNA that don’t code for proteins, as well as bigger structural shifts and differences in how many copies of certain DNA segments a person has.

Together, they accounted for around 28% of the outliers, offering new leads for understanding how rare mutations contribute to eye disease.

The findings provide an unprecedented resource for scientists studying the genetic roots of vision disorders, and are available to other researchers for

They also offer a roadmap for future research into personalised treatments and earlier diagnosis.

Author , from The University of 91ɬ,  said: “Our study marks a major step toward decoding the complex genetic architecture of the human eye.

“And it opens the door to new strategies for protecting and restoring vision in the future.

“It reveals how both common and rare genetic differences shape the way they are expressed in the human retina.

“By understanding these patterns, we move closer to uncovering the biological mechanisms that drive heritable vision loss and to developing more targeted therapies.”

PhD Student at The University of 91ɬ, Jacob Sampson, who performed the extensive computational analysis reported in the study, added: “We hope this dataset will accelerate discoveries across ophthalmology, genetics, and precision medicine.

“And we hope it will support efforts to identify individuals at risk of sight‑threatening disease before symptoms appear.

Prof Simon J. Clark from the  University of Tübingen in Germany, said: “These sorts of fundamental discoveries are only possible by using very well characterised human donor material.

“We are incredibly lucky to have access to one of Europe’s largest human eye donor repositories, founded originally in 91ɬ back in 2015.

“We remain forever grateful for the generosity of all those donors and their families who contributed over the years.”

The team included scientists from The University of 91ɬ, Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Harvard Medical School, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, University of Tübingen, University of Southampton, Universitas Riau, 91ɬ University NHS Foundation Trust, and the European Bioinformatics Institute.

  • The research was supported by the Macular Society, Fight For Sight, the Medical Research Council and the NIHR 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre.
  • The paper Paired DNA and RNA sequencing uncovers common 1 and rare genomic variants regulating gene 2 expression in the human retina is published in nature Communications and available . DOI https://www.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-72979-4 
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Tue, 26 May 2026 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_eyeshot.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eyeshot.jpg?10000
Physical activity as important as medication for keeping older people healthy and happy, MPs say /about/news/physical-activity-as-important-as-medication-for-keeping-older-people-healthy-and-happy-mps-say/ /about/news/physical-activity-as-important-as-medication-for-keeping-older-people-healthy-and-happy-mps-say/749934Physical activity should be at the heart of the NHS’s support for older people and is as important as providing medication, a by the Health and Social Care Committee says.

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Physical activity should be at the heart of the NHS’s support for older people and is as important as providing medication, a by the Health and Social Care Committee says.

The report, was partly based on research evidence submitted by  the University of 91ɬ’s  .

Cited in the report, Professor of Primary Care and Community Health  at the University of 91ɬ told the Committee: “Evidence-based exercise programmes, particularly resistance training, could both prevent frailty from developing and reverse it. Exercise programmes to prevent frailty could decrease the risk factors linked to developing conditions associated with ageing, including dementia.”

Boosting resilience to illness, frailty and falls through physical activity will be key to keeping the country’s ageing population healthy and living independently for longer., the MPs said.

This change will be fundamental to the Government’s objective of switching the NHS’s focus from treating illness to preventing it 

The report follows the cross-party Committee’s and recommends:

  • Advice and social prescribing of physical activity should become a core, routine offering to older people from their GPs and other clinicians.
  • Stronger links between local NHS services with leisure providers and community groups to make exercise more accessible.
  • The Care Quality Commission should be charged with checking that exercise programmes are being provided to residents in care homes. 

The Committee also called for a national conversation and a cultural shift in the way that ageing is perceived and talked about in society. Negative stereotypes can leave older people feeling resigned to becoming inactive, at the point in their lives when a sedentary lifestyle can have serious consequences, including increasing risk of falls.

Health and Social Care Committee Chair, Layla Moran MP, said: “Healthcare experts and the Government are all agreed that staying physically active can help older people to live not just longer, but healthier, happier, more sociable lives.

 

“Promoting active lifestyles among older people would also tackle two policy objectives at once – shifting the NHS’s focus to prevention, and bringing services closer to home, not the nearest hospital. Experts told us that exercise can be more effective than medication, and these changes would also cut the NHS’s vast expenditure on drugs. It’s a win-win, and this report sets out how the Government can make it happen.

Key facts

  • Being physically active cuts the risk of dementia, cardiovascular disease, stroke, type-2 diabetes, musculoskeletal conditions, and some cancers.
  • By 2035, 68% of people aged over 65 are expected to have two more serious health conditions, up from 54% in 2015. This causes lower quality of life, increases the chance of hospital admission and creates more complex care needs.
  • In 2022, there were around 12.7 million people in the UK aged 65 or over, approximately 19% of the population. This is expected to rise to 22.1 million people (27% of the population) by 2072.
  • The ONS and Health Foundation have shown that the average healthy life expectancy of children born in the most deprived areas of England is around 18 years lower than those born in the most affluent.
  • In the UK, physical inactivity is associated with one in six deaths and is estimated to cost £7.4 billion annually.
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Fri, 22 May 2026 11:44:44 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_500-dance-exercise.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500-dance-exercise.jpg?10000
Study reveals brain changes linked to alcohol addiction recovery /about/news/study-reveals-brain-changes-linked-to-alcohol-addiction-recovery/ /about/news/study-reveals-brain-changes-linked-to-alcohol-addiction-recovery/746457Scientists say they’ve uncovered striking new evidence of how alcohol addiction impacts the brain’s learning systems — and how those systems may slowly adapt during recovery – in a new study published on 22/05/26.

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Scientists say they’ve uncovered striking new evidence of how alcohol addiction impacts the brain’s learning systems — and how those systems may slowly adapt during recovery – in a new study published on 22/05/26.

Led by The University of 91ɬ and The University of Huddersfield, they combined traditional EEG brain‑wave analysis with cutting‑edge machine‑learning tools to probe how people with a history of alcohol dependence learn from rewards and punishments.

The researchers used a reward-learning game – which they asked 20 abstinent alcohol-dependent and 26 healthy volunteers to complete while their brain activity was recorded.

The team found that both groups performed the task just as well as each other, however their brain signals told a different story.

A key brain response called feedback‑related negativity (FRN)- which reflects how we react to mistakes or bad outcomes - was reduced in people with a history of alcohol dependence.

This blunted signal appeared after both good and bad outcomes and did not vary with how long someone had been abstaining from alcohol.

The scientists say this could be a stable trait of alcohol dependence, reflecting underlying reward processing differences in people who are at risk of alcohol problems.

The study also looked at another signal, the feedback‑P3, which shows how strongly your mind reacts when you get important feedback and starts updating what you’ve learned.

Overall, it did not differ between the groups, but for people recovering from alcohol dependence, this signal was largest in the early stages of abstinence, and after many years appeared more similar to that of healthy people.

Researchers say this may reflect a brain change linked to abstinence itself.

To dig deeper, the team used a machine learning method called tensor decomposition to uncover hidden patterns in the EEG signals.

In the people with alcohol dependence, this revealed unusually early and strong activity in centro‑frontal brain regions near the top and front of the head.

This early surge was most pronounced in those in the earlier stages of recovery and could reflect, the scientists say, heightened sensitivity to feedback or a compensatory mechanism helping people maintain performance despite alcohol‑related brain changes.

They also found that healthy volunteers showed a different pattern, with a later burst of activity in the brain’s parietal lobe, linked to processing sensory information before evaluating reward value.

The researchers used unsupervised machine learning - a method that finds patterns without being told what to look for - to break down the large amounts of EEG data.

This helped discover overlapping brain signals would have been difficult to spot using traditional methods alone.

Lead author from The University of 91ɬ, who is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) as part of its , said: “Alcohol dependency is a complex and challenging health condition, and many people have difficulties maintaining recovery despite treatment and support.

“We believe our findings offer fresh insight into how alcohol dependence can influence the brain systems involved in learning and reward.

“Larger, long‑term studies are now needed to understand if the EEG markers we identified here could one day help track recovery or identify those people who might need extra support.

Researchers conducting the study are funded by the is UKRI Future Leaders Fund, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, and the National Institute for health and Care Research (NIHR) 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre. It is published in the journal Clinical Neurophysiology.

  • The paper Altered EEG markers of reward learning during abstinence in alcohol dependence: a probabilistic reversal learning study is available hereDOI
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University of 91ɬ techbio spin-out secures £5 million to deploy quantum physics, AI modelling, and highly automated labs to power next gen enzyme engineering /about/news/university-of-manchester-techbio-spin-out-secures-5-million-to-deploy-quantum-physics-ai-modelling-and-highly-automated-labs-to-power-next-gen-enzyme-engineering/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-techbio-spin-out-secures-5-million-to-deploy-quantum-physics-ai-modelling-and-highly-automated-labs-to-power-next-gen-enzyme-engineering/747142
  • Round led by PXN Ventures, with additional funding from existing investors IQ Capital and Northern Gritstone
  • Company uses quantum physics, AI modelling and deeply integrated laboratory automation and robotics in a closed loop system to engineer enzymes, transforming their performance for industries including pharmaceutical manufacturing, personal care and sustainable chemical production
  • Work with a Fortune 500 personal care company delivering over 500x improvements in enzyme performance
  • Guy Levy-Yurista joins as CEO to spearhead growth in closed loop AI-guided enzyme engineering
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    A 91ɬ-based techbio company using AI and quantum physics to engineer better enzymes faster, has closed a £5 million seed funding round led by  with participation from Imperagen’s existing investors  and .

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    A 91ɬ-based techbio company using AI and quantum physics to engineer better enzymes faster, has closed a £5 million seed funding round led by  with participation from Imperagen’s existing investors  and .

    The raise brings Imperagen's total funding to £8.5 million and will accelerate research and development, expand its wet lab capabilities, and build out its go-to-market function over the next 18 months.

    Coinciding with the round , PhD joins as CEO. An experienced technology and life sciences executive with two successful exits across the US and Europe, he brings a track record of scaling deep tech businesses from early stage to market leadership. 

    Enzymes are biological catalysts used to reduce waste, lower energy usage and decrease overall production costs in everything from pharmaceutical manufacturing and personal care to sustainable chemical production. However, engineering an enzyme for practical application is a challenging and complex process. Traditional approaches rely on manual screening, a slow and expensive process with a low hit rate. More recently, zero-shot methods have promised smart designs but often fall short when deployed in real world conditions. Neither method gives industrial customers the predictability and speed they need to de-risk product development at scale.

    Imperagen's proprietary platform combines three stages into a single closed-loop system:

    1. Quantum physics simulates millions of mutation combinations in silico, generating a rich dataset of predicted properties. 

    2. Those outputs are used to train problem-specific AI models, not general-purpose ones, calibrated to the precise engineering challenge at hand.

    3. Automated robotics then test the highest-performing predictions in the physical lab, producing high-quality experimental data that feeds directly back into the AI model,  so that it continuously evolves.

    That feedback loop is what sets the approach apart, with each round of experiments making the next round more targeted. The system learns from the wet lab as it goes, narrowing in on the highest-performing variants with each iteration. The result is a platform that gets smarter round by round. This is the future of biocatalysis, a recursive, self improving AI platform to help rewrite chemical reactions.

    The company has already worked on a number of significant projects, including with a Fortune 500 personal care company looking to launch a new product line. Imperagen’s AI-guided closed loop system improved the productivity of two enzymes by 677x and 572x respectively in just five rounds. 

    Commenting on the news, Dr. Levy-Yurista said: "What I see right now is that the companies that will make a radical difference in this emerging AI-driven future are all AI-native, lean on real world data, have genuine impact, and are fundamentally deep tech. Imperagen has each of those characteristics, combining them with outstanding people, phenomenal technology and the undeniable swagger you only get from 91ɬ. It was a no-brainer to join the team and lead this next stage in its growth."

    The funds will be used to accelerate the core R&D platform, scale the wet lab operation, and grow the in-house AI team, both human and agentic. Imperagen will also invest in its go-to-market function to convert growing commercial interest into contracted revenue across its target sectors: pharmaceuticals, life sciences, personal care, sustainable fine chemicals, and industrial biotech.

    Sim Singh-Landa, Investment Director at PXN, said: "The North West’s life sciences ecosystem is becoming stronger all the time and stands to gain from Imperagen’s local hiring and growth plans, building on the company’s connection to the . We’re excited to be supporting Imperagen with investment from both the GMC Life Sciences Fund and our NPIF II fund, as the company looks to scale success in enzyme engineering and deliver progress within the life sciences sector, which is one of the key sectors highlighted in the UK Government’s Modern Industrial Strategy.” 

    Imperagen was founded in November 2021 by Dr Andrew Almond, Dr Andrew Currin and Dr Tim Eyes, all researchers from the .

    PXN invested via the GMC Life Sciences Fund By PXN Ventures, which it manages on behalf of the ,  and . Investment has also come from NPIF II – PXN Equity Finance, which is managed by PXN as part of the Northern Powerhouse Investment Fund II (NPIF II). 

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    Thu, 21 May 2026 14:25:14 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d371d02c-894a-4bf3-9ac6-39114658567a/500_imperagenleadershipteam.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d371d02c-894a-4bf3-9ac6-39114658567a/imperagenleadershipteam.jpg?10000
    Two CRUK 91ɬ Institute Clinician Scientists elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences /about/news/two-cruk-manchester-institute-clinician-scientists-elected-to-the-academy-of-medical-sciences/ /about/news/two-cruk-manchester-institute-clinician-scientists-elected-to-the-academy-of-medical-sciences/746310The Fellowship of the Academy of Medical Sciences comprises some of the UK’s leading medical researchers, each of whom has made substantial contributions to advancing patient health and care through research.

    Election to the Academy recognises excellence in science, leadership and the translation of research into real-world impact. This year we’re celebrating two such additions to the Academy - and of the Cancer Research UK 91ɬ Institute.

    The is a part of the University of 91ɬ core funded by Cancer Research UK. It forms the discovery engine within the 91ɬ Cancer Research Centre in which world-class, basic, translational and clinical research takes place to save lives from cancer.

    Professor Samra Turajlić

    Professor Turajlić is Director of the Cancer Research UK 91ɬ Institute and leader of the Institute’s group. She has been elected to the Academy for her leadership in cancer medicine and genomics, and spearheading of major national and international research programmes to better understand tumour evolution and improve cancer treatment. These include large-scale studies of renal cancer and multiomic approaches to immunotherapy, all undertaken alongside her work as a clinician at the Royal Marsden and Christie hospitals. Within 91ɬ she is now steering the future of integrated basic, translational, and clinical research initiatives in the pursuit of fresh innovations to save lives from cancer. 

    I share this moving recognition with the extraordinary scientists that have passed through my research groups and my many collaborators without which our work would never have been possible. The rapid advances we're seeing in solutions to cancer are enabled by and depend on a culture of deep collaboration between academics, clinicians, technological specialists and industry. It is in this collaborative cross-disciplinary research both in 91ɬ and across the many sectors represented in within the Academy of Medical Sciences, where our shared knowledge and expertise can be applied to save lives.

    Professor Tim Somervaille

    Professor Somervaille’s election to the Academy recognises his leadership in blood cancer research and clinical practice as Senior Group Leader at the Cancer Research UK 91ɬ Institute’s group, Professor of Haematological Oncology at The University of 91ɬ and Honorary Consultant Haematologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust. His work has advanced understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving myeloid blood cancers and broadened treatment options through a sustained commitment to translating biological discoveries into innovative therapies and clinical trials.

    “This recognition by the Academy of Medical Sciences reflects the extraordinary dedication of everyone who has worked alongside me over the years — the scientists, clinicians and, above all, the patients who make our research possible and meaningful. I am also deeply grateful to the many members of the public who have supported Cancer Research UK and Blood Cancer UK, whose funding has underpinned my research throughout my career. In 91ɬ, everything we do is ultimately about finding better treatments and improving outcomes for patients, and I have been proud to see my team contribute both to advances in our understanding of leukaemia and myeloproliferative neoplasms, and to the development of new therapeutic approaches. Within the Academy of Medical Sciences, I hope to support a strong culture of collaboration and translation, and to help champion the next generation of researchers who will build on these discoveries in ways we cannot yet imagine.”

    Recognition for 91ɬ

    This substantial recognition reflects not only Samra and Tim’s achievements, but also the contributions of Institute staff across research groups, facilities and operational teams. The collaborative environment within the Institute plays an essential role in enabling the research that ultimately benefits patients and makes achievements such as this possible.

    The Cancer Research UK 91ɬ Institute comprises of 14 research groups investigating solutions to an array of cancer challenges, and 11 core facilities in which cutting edge research technologies are being applied to innovate and improve cancer treatments.

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    Thu, 21 May 2026 10:36:00 +0100 ٳٱ://DzԳٱԳ.貹.dz/ܱDz/1369/41227-5129-4134-9424-635630/500ٳܰćԻپdz.Բ?10000 ٳٱ://DzԳٱԳ.貹.dz/ܱDz/1369/41227-5129-4134-9424-635630/ٳܰćԻپdz.Բ?10000
    BNY and The University of 91ɬ launch the Future of Work Alliance, focused on responsible use and application of human-led AI /about/news/bny-university-of-manchester-launch-future-of-work-alliance-ai/ /about/news/bny-university-of-manchester-launch-future-of-work-alliance-ai/746402BNY (NYSE: BNY), a global financial services company, and The University of 91ɬ today announced the launch of the Future of Work Alliance, a five‑year, £5 million initiative focused on advancing how human-led digital transformation can be integrated responsibly into large, data-intensive organisations in the AI era. 

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    BNY (NYSE: BNY), a global financial services company, and The University of 91ɬ today announced the launch of the Future of Work Alliance, a five-year, £5 million initiative focused on advancing how human-led digital transformation can be integrated responsibly into large, data-intensive organisations in the AI era.

    The Future of Work Alliance combines BNY’s demonstrable experience deploying AI at scale with The University of 91ɬ’s world-leading research, with deep strengths in applied AI, data science and inclusive innovation. The initiative, enabled by the University's innovation arm – Unit M – will be delivered through the Alliance 91ɬ Business School and will focus on designing, testing and scaling new models for the responsible use and application of AI.

    Centred in 91ɬ, where BNY has operated for more than two decades, the Alliance will use real operational challenges to connect academic research with day-to-day business needs. The work is intended to provide hands-on, real-world problem solving that accelerates innovation and capability building, informing how to scale AI responsibly over time. In parallel, executive and professional education programmes will support leadership, governance and change management skills needed for human-led AI adoption.

    The Future of Work Alliance will focus on five connected areas:

    • BNY Research Challenge Programme: live operational challenges converted into structured, student-led academic projects delivering practical insights and solutions.

    • Alliance 91ɬ Business School Executive Education: bespoke academic programmes designed to equip BNY leaders to excel in an AI-enabled organisation.

    • Postgraduate Internships: multi-week placements giving high-performing students hands-on experience within BNY’s 91ɬ office.

    • Scholarships and an Endowed Chair: support for five AI-focused scholarships and a BNY-endowed Chair to provide long-term academic leadership via the University’s Challenge Accepted campaign.

    • Keynote Lecture Series: convening academic and industry leaders to shape debate on the future workforce and responsible AI.

     

    The Future of Work Alliance strengthens 91ɬ’s role as a centre for responsible human-led AI innovation shaped around people, skills and work, while establishing a model with global relevance, intended to deliver meaningful outcomes to support students, leaders and organisations as AI becomes increasingly embedded in day-to-day work.

    The University of 91ɬ initiative builds on BNY’s wider engagement with universities, including with Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Central Florida, reflecting a broader effort to connect academic research and talent with real-world business challenges.

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    Thu, 21 May 2026 09:05:48 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b12aa88d-5718-496b-bb96-e4aea191b7a1/500_bnystill1.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b12aa88d-5718-496b-bb96-e4aea191b7a1/bnystill1.png?10000
    Professor Sir Louis Appleby becomes AMS Fellow /about/news/professor-sir-louis-appleby-becomes-ams-fellow/ /about/news/professor-sir-louis-appleby-becomes-ams-fellow/744987The Academy of Medical Sciences has elected Professor Sir Louis Appleby CBE  to its prestigious Fellowship, it has been announced today (Thursday 21 May 2026).

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    The Academy of Medical Sciences has elected Professor Sir Louis Appleby CBE to its prestigious Fellowship, it has been announced today (Thursday 21 May 2026).

    Professor of Psychiatry at the University of 91ɬ, he is one of 60 exceptional biomedical and health scientists, the latest cohort of Fellows have been recognised for their outstanding contributions to advancing medical science, through discovery research, translational work and the application of scientific knowledge in ways that deliver tangible benefits for patients and the wider public.

    This year’s cohort reflects the Academy’s continued focus on evolving its Fellowship to be diverse, relevant and representative of the biomedical and health research community. Of the 60 new Fellows elected in 2026, 42% are women (25 Fellows) – the highest proportion ever elected in a single year.

    The new Fellows are drawn from 28 institutions and represent eight nationalities, with representation from across the UK. The cohort includes three new Fellows from Wales, the first elected in four years, including the first Fellow ever from Bangor University, as well as the first new Fellow elected from Northern Ireland since 2021.

    The new intake spans a wide range of sectors, disciplines and research pathways. It includes five new Fellows elected from industry, alongside recognition of expertise in traditionally under‑represented areas such as speech and language therapy, medical ethics, traumatic brain injury and the application of artificial intelligence in healthcare.

    The Fellows elected this year join an esteemed Fellowship of over 1,500 researchers who are at the heart of the Academy’s work to nurture scientific talent and shape research and health policy in the UK and worldwide.

    Professor Appleby was elected for his pioneering work in suicide prevention and mental health. An epidemiologist and psychiatrist, his research has brought new rigour to the study of suicide through innovative study designs that have demonstrated how targeted interventions can reduce suicide rates. His work has directly informed national policy, including the most recent suicide prevention strategy, and he has played a central role in advising the NHS and government on mental health for more than two decades.

    He  said: “I’m delighted to become a Fellow of the Academy. I see it as recognition of the field I work in - suicide prevention - which not long ago was seen as a difficult subject, as bereaved families can tell us. At a time when people are exposed to an overload of health information online, the Academy has a vital role in setting the standards of evidence on which the public can rely.”

    Professor Andrew Morris CBE FRSE PMedSci, President of the Academy of Medical Sciences: “It is a privilege to welcome this outstanding new cohort to the Fellowship of the Academy of Medical Sciences. Each of our new Fellows has been recognised by their peers for exceptional achievement for the influence their work has had in advancing medical science and improving health.

    “The diversity of disciplines represented this year reflects the richness of modern medical science and the value of collaboration across fields. At a time when health challenges are increasingly complex, the Academy’s Fellowship provides a trusted, independent platform for scientific leaders to work together, champion excellence, and help ensure research delivers real benefits for people and communities.”

    The new Fellows will be formally admitted to the Academy at a ceremony on Tuesday 30 June.

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    Thu, 21 May 2026 07:41:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/85880ae9-922a-40ca-8baf-7feaa614f846/500_louis3.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/85880ae9-922a-40ca-8baf-7feaa614f846/louis3.png?10000
    Substandard bowel cancer care for people with learning disability highlighted /about/news/substandard-bowel-cancer-care-for-people-with-learning-disability-highlighted/ /about/news/substandard-bowel-cancer-care-for-people-with-learning-disability-highlighted/745725People with a learning disability are at higher risk of developing bowel cancer, yet face significant barriers at nearly every stage of the care pathway, University of 91ɬ and Christie NHS Foundation Trust have found.

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    People with a learning disability are at higher risk of developing bowel cancer, yet face significant barriers at nearly every stage of the care pathway, University of 91ɬ and Christie NHS Foundation Trust have found.

    The population-based study of more than two million people showed individuals with an intellectual disability are more likely to develop bowel cancer, especially before the age of 50.

    Funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Greater 91ɬ Patient Safety Research Collaboration (GM PSRC), the study is published in (20/05/26). The research team is supported by both the NIHR GM PSRC and the NIHR 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre (BRC).

    People with an intellectual disability present to their GP more often with symptoms linked to bowel cancer, but are less likely to receive key investigations such as stool tests, urgent referrals, or endoscopy the team show.

    They were less likely to be diagnosed through screening programmes and more likely to be diagnosed in emergency settings or even on the date of death.

    And they were also more likely to be diagnosed at stage IV, when the cancer has already spread.

    Among those with early-stage disease, rates of curative surgery were similar, but survival remained significantly worse for people with an intellectual disability.

    For advanced bowel cancer, individuals with an intellectual disability were far less likely to receive systemic anticancer therapy, which may contribute to poorer outcomes.

    The findings highlight multiple missed opportunities for earlier diagnosis, including lower use of stool tests used to check for early signs of bowel cancer and fewer urgent suspected cancer referrals.

    The researchers used anonymised GP records from a large UK database containing information on about 50 million people.

    The records were linked with national data on deaths, cancer, hospital care, ethnicity and deprivation to support the research.

    The study also raises concerns that current screening programmes, which often begin at age 50, may not adequately protect people with an intellectual disability, given their higher risk at younger ages.

    They also highlight that emergency diagnoses can limit the time available for coordinated treatment planning, which may contribute to poorer survival even when surgery is offered.

    However, lifestyle factors linked to early-onset bowel cancer—such as obesity, diet, and physical inactivity—may be more common among people with an intellectual disability, potentially amplifying their risk.

    And distinguishing concerning symptoms may be more challenging for people with learning disabilities, though the researchers caution that this does not fully explain the scale of under-investigation.

    Lead author Clinical Lecturer at The University of 91ɬ and The Christie said: “Our findings show clear and avoidable inequalities in bowel cancer diagnosis and treatment for people with an intellectual disability, and they underline the urgent need for earlier screening and more proactive investigation of symptoms.”

    Jon Sparkes OBE, Chief Executive of learning disability charity Mencap, said: “This study lays bare the stark truth that people with a learning disability are being diagnosed with bowel cancer too late, too often, and are missing out on chances for earlier treatment that could save lives. We need the NHS, government and cancer services to join us in making inclusive health a priority, acting on these findings and putting the right support in place at every stage of the cancer pathway.”

    Claire Coughlan, Clinical Lead at Bowel Cancer UK, said: “Bowel cancer is treatable and curable, especially if it is diagnosed early. However, this study makes clear that people with an ID are not only at increased risk of developing bowel cancer; they also face considerable barriers which can lead to later diagnosis and treatment.”

    Lisa Every and her niece Chloe’s story

    Chloe Every died aged 27 in 2019, not long after being diagnosed with an advanced form of bowel cancer. She had a learning disability and myotonic dystrophy, a muscle condition known to affect the heart and breathing.

    For Chloe’s family, the fact that her cancer was only identified at such a late stage is central to everything that followed. Like many people with a learning disability, Chloe was diagnosed when the disease was already advanced, limiting treatment options and reducing her chances of survival. Her family believe there were missed chances to investigate symptoms earlier and to take her health concerns seriously before her condition deteriorated.

    Once Chloe was admitted to Queen’s Hospital in Romford, those missed chances continued. Her aunt Lisa Every says that Chloe’s learning disability and underlying condition were not properly considered when decisions were made about her care. Despite the seriousness of her diagnosis, there was no clear, coordinated plan that took account of her complex needs.

    Chloe was left in the hospital’s initial assessment unit for six days, far longer than was appropriate. This delay meant she did not receive consistent care under one consultant at a critical point in her illness and contributed to a lack of joined up decision making. At a time when urgent, proactive care was needed, Chloe’s treatment drifted.

    Her pain was not adequately managed, and she was given medication without a clear clinical reason. Despite her myotonic dystrophy and the known cardiac risks associated with it, staff did not contact Chloe’s specialist, who had treated her for many years. This was another missed opportunity to ensure her cancer treatment was informed by her wider health needs.

    During her hospital stay, Chloe suffered two cardiac arrests. Before the first, she was not observed in line with her needs by nursing staff. An irregular heartbeat was noted shortly before she was given an enema, but this was not escalated to a doctor. After she was transferred to a general ward, Chloe was again not properly monitored. She later experienced a second cardiac arrest. The causes of either cardiac arrest were never investigated.

    Mencap supported Lisa to fight for an inquest into Chloe’s death and forced the NHS to revisit a request that had previously been ignored. The subsequent A Level 3 Serious Untoward Investigation by the NHS Trust identified a series of serious failings in Chloe’s care. These included poor pain management, lack of specialist input, failures in observation and monitoring, and the fact that the Trust’s Learning Disability Admission Pathway was not properly followed when Chloe was admitted.

    For Lisa, the experience is marked by repeated moments where earlier action could have made a difference, from diagnosis through to end-of-life care.

    ‘I was told by the head of palliative care not to be distressed if Chloe was not in ITU because she was being moved to a ward, which I assumed would be a palliative ward,’ Lisa said.

    ‘When I arrived, Chloe was not on any medical support at all. The nurse in charge did not know Chloe had a learning disability until I told her.

    ‘I was told to go home because the nurse had “11 patients to look after” and that Chloe was “fine”. Chloe was then left unmonitored until she was found unresponsive.’

    Chloe died shortly afterwards.

    Her story reflects wider evidence showing that people with a learning disability are more likely to be diagnosed with bowel cancer late, more likely to experience delays and missed chances for investigation, and more likely to face fragmented care once diagnosed. For Lisa, speaking out is about showing the consequences of those missed chances.

    ‘Chloe was young and she was loved,” she said.

    ‘She should have had the same chance as anyone else to be diagnosed earlier and to have her needs properly understood and acted on.’half goes here

    • the paper Bowel Cancer Care in Individuals with an Intellectual Disability: A Population-Based Cohort Study of Symptoms, Diagnostic Pathways, Treatment and Survival is available DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-026-04906-9
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    Wed, 20 May 2026 07:44:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bd6243c3-9179-4a6a-9955-b4771deb8c37/500_rs13366_chloeevery2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bd6243c3-9179-4a6a-9955-b4771deb8c37/rs13366_chloeevery2.jpg?10000
    The Pennine hills are full of holes – here’s how they’re helping fight climate change /about/news/the-pennine-hills-are-full-of-holes/ /about/news/the-pennine-hills-are-full-of-holes/746176Thousands of holes are appearing in the Pennine hills, as part of efforts to by restoring damaged peatland.

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    Thousands of holes are appearing in the Pennine hills, as part of efforts to by restoring damaged peatland.

    Peat itself is carbon rich and so as it grows it will help to capture the CO₂ that is produced by that is .

    Meanwhile, damaged or turn into a carbon source, releasing greenhouses gases themselves. About 15% of the world’s peatlands have been drained, making these kind of restoration projects essential.

    But now a new project is attempting to bring these wetlands back to life. On Holcombe Moor in the West Pennines, , with a further 700 in 2024 as part of Natural England’s Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme. Improvements are already starting to be seen.

    What’s the history here?


    The hills of the West Pennines are no stranger to holes, with a long history of lead and coal mining stretching back to the .

    Coal fired the mills nearby during the industrial revolution in cities such as 91ɬ, Leeds and Sheffield. Smoke drifted back to the hills, carrying the heavy metal impurities of lead and arsenic from coal burning.

    The industrial legacy remains visible in the elevated near the soil surface, which made it difficult for most plants to survive. Areas were stripped of all vegetation, leaving expanses of exposed soil. In the most affected places, these cut deep into the surface, turning places like Kinder Scout into a moonscape.

    What was exposed and eroded so quickly had taken over to form. Much of the Pennines are covered in blanket peatland, a type of bog made through the slow accumulation of partially decayed plant matter (the type of soil we call peat).

    The , with the water table maintained high enough to limit the decomposition of plant matter, while still allowing plants to grow. Not just any plant can tolerate these harsh growing conditions. One species is truly specialised to bog life and forms the main building block of peat itself – Sphagnum.

    Finding a super moss


    Sphagnum moss is the key ecosystem engineer in peatlands, holding up to in water to maintain the saturated conditions needed for its growth.

    When in a healthy state, new Sphagnum grows up through the older moss, raising the water table with it to leave the older moss submerged, partially decayed, which forms the peat itself. Bogs grow only millimetres per year, but over millennia this can build several metres of peat.

    The organic nature of peat means it is carbon rich, so much so that UK peatlands store over , around ten times more than all .

    Restored wetlands could also help protect the area from wildfires at the UK starts to see more .

    Human pressure and pollution


    With human pressures, including past industrial pollution, . Sphagnum has disappeared from these peatlands.

    Now, peatland restoration efforts are under way. From the early 2000s organisations including Moors for the Future Partnership have spent decades blocking gullies to raise water tables, reseeding bare peat and , transforming the worst affected peatlands from dark .

    Though blocking erosional gullies with stone or timber dams has in deeply eroded peat, restoring flatter moorland plateaux presents a different set of challenges. Namely, how to restore the wet conditions required to encourage more Sphagnum moss to grow. However, this hasn’t stopped restoration organisations from trying a novel restoration method which might work to restore flatter peatlands.

    Five years on from the start of the project, the original bunds are covered with grasses and many pools are now brimming with Sphagnum moss, looking more like natural bog pools.

    are crescent-shaped pools, created by digging shallow scrapes in the peat surface using special low impact excavators. The aim is to capture surface water which would otherwise run quickly off the hill after rainfall. The water stored in at the bog surface for Sphagnum moss to re-establish and grow on moorland plateaus.

    The National Trust, in partnership with the University of 91ɬ, is undertaking long-term research to understand the potential for bunds as a peatland restoration method.

    The followed one of the driest springs in England for over .

    It provided the first test of extreme weather in this peat bund experiment. Preliminary monitoring during the 2025 drought suggests bunded areas remained wetter for longer than unrestored peat, helping to maintain wetter conditions near the peat surface for longer – the .

    The excavator machines up on the hills today don’t signal a return to the industrial past, but an attempt to restore the damage it left behind.The Conversation

    , Honorary Research Associate in Peatland Hydrology,

    This article is republished from under a Creative Commons licence. Read the .

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    Tue, 19 May 2026 11:43:06 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4671cf20-833d-4a65-b43c-f09a08a1e370/500_file-20260514-77-tuy2us.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4671cf20-833d-4a65-b43c-f09a08a1e370/file-20260514-77-tuy2us.jpg?10000
    Booking site crackdown failed to cut online hotel prices – but unlocked cheaper deals offline /about/news/booking-site-crackdown/ /about/news/booking-site-crackdown/746168A major French policy designed to make hotel prices more competitive online may not have worked as intended, but it did unlock cheaper deals for customers booking directly with hotels.

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    A major French policy designed to make hotel prices more competitive online may not have worked as intended, but it did unlock cheaper deals for customers booking directly with hotels.

    A new study of European hotel markets finds that banning ‘price parity clauses’ – rules which stop hotels from offering lower prices outside major booking platforms – had little impact on publicly advertised online prices.

    Instead, savings appeared in less visible places – direct bookings made offline, where prices fell significantly and hotels saw a shift in bookings away from online platforms. 

    Key findings

    ·        Small and statistically insignificant drop in hotel prices on major online platforms and hotel websites
    ·        Prices fell by around 5% for bookings made directly with hotels offline
    ·        Customers shifted away from online travel agents towards direct booking
    ·        Offline bookings – the largest channel at the time – increased their relative sales share
    ·        Total consumer savings were meaningful, but modest relative to the overall market

    Why this matters

    Online platforms like Booking.com and Expedia play a major role in how people find and book hotels.

    For years, many of these platforms used ‘price parity clauses’ to prevent hotels from offering cheaper deals elsewhere, including on their own websites. 

    Policymakers expected that banning these rules would lead to lower prices across the board. However, the study suggests the reality is more complicated, and that headline online prices may not tell the full story.

    Hidden cheaper rooms

    For most travellers, booking a hotel is simple - search the internet, compare prices and click - but this research suggests that the best deal may not always be the one you see.

    Instead, customers willing to call, email or walk into a hotel directly were more likely to find lower prices after the policy change. In other words, the cheapest room may be the one that never appears online.

    What actually changed

    The study focuses on France, which in 2015 became the first country to fully ban price parity clauses in the hotel sector. Researchers analysed data from 166 hotels across Europe, comparing France with countries where the rules were still in place.

    They found:

    ·        Online prices showed small decreases of around 1–2%, but these are not statistically distinguishable from zero
    ·        Offline prices dropped significantly, around 5% or €8.50 per booking
    ·        Bookings shifted away from online platforms towards direct offline channels

    Why online prices didn’t fall

    One reason may be that online platforms still have powerful ways to influence hotel behaviour. Hotels that offer lower prices elsewhere risk being pushed down search rankings, making them less visible to customers.

    As a result, many hotels appear to have avoided cutting prices on visible online channels, even after the rules were removed. Instead, they offered discounts where platforms were less able to monitor - in direct, offline bookings.

    What customers may be missing

    The findings suggest that:

    ·        Not all price competition is visible online
    ·        Some of the best deals require extra effort to find
    ·        Consumers who rely only on platforms may miss cheaper options

    At the same time, many users continue to use online booking tools for the convenience and additional services they offer – such as price comparison, guest reviews, and streamlined booking – even if it means paying slightly more.

    A mixed success 

    The policy did lead to more competition between booking channels, lower prices for some consumers and a shift away from platforms.

    But overall, the impact was smaller than expected, especially on the highly visible online prices policymakers hoped to change.

    Why it matters now

    The findings are particularly relevant as new regulations, including the EU’s Digital Markets Act, aim to curb the power of large online platforms.

    Understanding how businesses respond in practice is crucial to ensuring these policies deliver real benefits for consumers.

    Publication details

    The paper was carried out by economists from The University of 91ɬ, the University of Oxford, the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre and partner institutions across Europe. It was published in The Economic Journal.

    DOI:

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    Tue, 19 May 2026 11:27:14 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2a04b84a-2db6-45e9-9596-2ffe49c3d530/500_gettyimages-1220730609.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2a04b84a-2db6-45e9-9596-2ffe49c3d530/gettyimages-1220730609.jpg?10000
    Short exposures to common air pollutants shown to have distinct impacts on lung function and brain activity /about/news/short-exposures-to-common-air-pollutants-shown-to-have-distinct-impacts-on-lung-function-and-brain-activity/ /about/news/short-exposures-to-common-air-pollutants-shown-to-have-distinct-impacts-on-lung-function-and-brain-activity/744216Paper details:

    Full title: Neurological and respiratory outcomes of the HIPTox controlled double-blind air pollution exposure trial

    Journal: Nature Partner Journals Clean Air

    DOI: 10.1038/s44407-026-00068-3

    URL: 

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    New research by a collaboration of UKbased scientists has revealed that common indoor and outdoor air pollutants can alter both brain and respiratory function within just four hours of exposure, offering key insights into how air pollution impacts brain health and may contribute to dementia risk.

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    New research by a collaboration of UKbased scientists has revealed that common indoor and outdoor air pollutants can alter both brain and respiratory function within just four hours of exposure, offering key insights into how air pollution impacts brain health and may contribute to dementia risk.

    Air pollution can influence the brain either directly, when harmful particles enter the brain, or indirectly, through inflammation in the lungs which then impacts the brain. Neurological diseases have been increasing for decades and there is now a greater appreciation that long term exposure to elevated levels of air pollution are associated in dementia risk. While we often categorise air quality by the total amount of particulate matter, this new study demonstrates that the source of the pollution matters as much as the quantity.

    The findings in reveal that different pollutant sources produce varied health effects even at identical concentrations in the air. Recognising these differences is essential for shaping public policy, improving clinical diagnosis and developing protective strategies. With an ever‑growing ageing population and increasing urbanisation, the public‑health imperative to mitigate neurological disease becomes increasingly urgent.

    Lead author Thomas Faherty of the University of Birmingham said: “This unique clinical study highlighted the importance of the lung–brain axis in brain responses to air pollution. Safely exposing the same individuals to multiple realworld pollution mixtures allowed us to detect differences between pollutants, demonstrating the value of this approach for further pollution-dementia research.”

    In a doubleblind study involving 15 healthy volunteers, participants were exposed to clean air, limonene SOA (a citrus fragrance commonly used in cleaning products), diesel exhaust, woodsmoke and cooking emissions. After 60 minutes of exposure, and a four-hour break, researchers assessed respiratory function alongside working memory, selective attention, socioemotional processing, psychomotor speed and motor control.

    Respiratory responses showed limonene had the greatest impact on lung function, followed by woodsmoke, diesel exhaust and finally cooking emissions.

    Cognitive function was also found to be significantly influenced by pollutant source. Diesel exhaust and woodsmoke improved processing speed; limonenederived secondary organic aerosol enhanced working memory compared to cooking emissions; and diesel exhaust showed signs of impairing executive function. The team suggests that the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOX), known vasodilators, may alter blood flow to the brain and contribute to these mixed cognitive effects.

    Given that measurable effects were detectable after a brief 60-minute exposure, the findings suggest that prolonged exposure could have significant longterm consequences for brain health. As rates of neurological disease increase, the study informs an immediate need for pollutant sourcespecific public health guidance, improved clinical awareness and more targeted strategies to protect vulnerable populations.

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    Tue, 19 May 2026 10:49:15 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_airpollution-2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/airpollution-2.jpg?10000
    Feeling connected at school aids pupil mental health and attendance, study finds /about/news/feeling-connected-at-school/ /about/news/feeling-connected-at-school/746022Strong relationships with school staff and a sense of belonging at school can protect teenagers’ mental wellbeing and help reduce absences, according to new findings from The University of 91ɬ’s #BeeWell programme. The large-scale study shows that while poor mental health can drive disengagement from school, positive day-to-day school experiences play a critical role in protecting young people. 

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    Strong relationships with school staff and a sense of belonging at school can protect teenagers’ mental wellbeing and help reduce absences, according to new findings from The University of 91ɬ’s #BeeWell programme. The large-scale study shows that while poor mental health can drive disengagement from school, positive day-to-day school experiences play a critical role in protecting young people.   

    About the study  

    The researchers tracked more than 25,000 students from Year 8 to Year 10 (age 12/13 to 14/15) across 154 secondary schools in England, using attendance records as well as three years of data from the #BeeWell programme. #BeeWell is a collaboration between The University of 91ɬ, The Gregson Family Foundation and Anna Freud who, together with the Greater 91ɬ Combined Authority (GMCA), launched the programme in 2019.  

    The study found that students who felt more connected to their school and had stronger relationships with staff experienced fewer emotional difficulties (e.g., worry, low mood) over time, while also supporting better attendance. The findings suggest schools should prioritise students’ experiences of connection and support, rather than focusing on attendance alone.  

    At the same time, increases in emotional difficulties were shown to predict later declines in school belonging and relationships with staff – which suggests that poor mental health can gradually erode students’ connection to school.  

    How are mental health and school experiences linked?  

    The study identified a clear pattern in which mental health and school experiences influence one another over time.  When young people experienced increased emotional distress, they were more likely to feel less connected to their school and report weaker relationships with staff in the following year. For some students, particularly girls, worsening mental health also predicted increased absence from school.  However, positive school experiences worked in the opposite direction, helping to protect later mental health.  

    Why do relationships with staff and belonging matter?  

    The findings show that supportive relationships and a sense of belonging are not just associated with better mental health - they can actively protect it.  For boys, stronger relationships with school staff drove later reductions in emotional difficulties. For girls, feeling a strong sense of belonging to the school community played a particularly important protective role.  

    Does attendance improve mental health?  

    The study found no evidence that simply improving attendance leads to better mental health.  While attendance is often used as a key indicator of student wellbeing, the findings suggest it is more a signal of underlying difficulties than a direct driver of mental health outcomes. In contrast, students’ subjective experiences of school were much more strongly linked to changes in their wellbeing. 

     What are the implications for schools?  

    The researchers say the findings point to the importance of strengthening everyday school experiences, and with the GMCA are working with the GM Local Action Attendance Alliance to develop a whole system response to attendance challenges facing schools  This includes building supportive relationships between staff and students, fostering a sense of belonging across the school community, and identifying emotional difficulties early before they lead to disengagement.  

    Researcher quotes  

    “Our findings show that how young people experience school on a day-to-day basis really matters,” said Dr Qiqi Cheng, lead author of the study. “While schools rightly focus on making progress on attendance, what happens once pupils are inside the school gates is equally crucial."

    Professor Neil Humphrey, academic lead of #BeeWell, said: “Attendance matters, but these findings show that it should not be viewed in isolation. Young people also need to feel that they belong, that they are noticed, and that they have supportive relationships with adults in school. Through #BeeWell, we are working with partners across Greater 91ɬ to ensure that responses to attendance challenges also support young people’s mental wellbeing 

    Publication details  

    This research was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.   

    DOI:   

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    Tue, 19 May 2026 09:47:24 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f39921de-23a9-4140-9b0e-bea3d7bf8dfb/500_gettyimages-1047532800.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f39921de-23a9-4140-9b0e-bea3d7bf8dfb/gettyimages-1047532800.jpg?10000
    Toolkit to support adults at risk of suicide launches /about/news/toolkit-to-support-adults-at-risk-of-suicide-launches/ /about/news/toolkit-to-support-adults-at-risk-of-suicide-launches/745194A new to support adults at risk of self‑harm or suicide-  with over 6,000 lives lost to suicide in England and Wales in 2024  - will be unveiled on 19 May at The University of 91ɬ’s Whitworth Art Gallery.

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    A new to support adults at risk of self‑harm or suicide-  with over 6,000 lives lost to suicide in England and Wales in 2024  - will be unveiled on 19 May at The University of 91ɬ’s Whitworth Art Gallery.

    The launch event introduces Jay’s Personalised Safety Planning Toolkit, a co‑designed set of materials created with researchers, people with personal experience of suicide and self-harm, and healthcare professionals.

    Inspired by the family of Jaymie Mart, known as Jay, who died by suicide in 2012 at the age of 32, the toolkit -which was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) -  offers clear, practical guidance to help adults create and review personalised safety plans.

    Jay’s mother Paula’s experiences have formed a key part of research looking at how better to support people at times of acute mental crisis and prevent deaths from suicide.

    She said: “The toolkit helps as a guide in understanding and setting up an individualised safety plan for people in difficult times. They  can help to change a mindset during times of crisis, that will hopefully keep them safe until they can get help,  if needed, from family, friends or mental health professionals.”

    Safety plans are structured tools that support people experiencing self‑harm or suicidal thoughts by helping them identify strategies to stay safe during a crisis.

    The resource is designed for families, friends, wider support networks, individuals themselves, and health and social care professionals.

    The event is open to anyone interested in suicide prevention and safety planning, including practitioners, people who use safety plans, and those who support them.

    The free full‑day programme runs from 9:30am to 3:30pm at the Whitworth Art Gallery on Oxford Road in 91ɬ.

    The day features interactive sessions and workshops designed to introduce the toolkit and demonstrate how it can be used in real‑world settings, and includes a live performance about safety plans for suicide, from an theatre-arts company run by people with learning difficulties.

    The event aims to strengthen community understanding of personalised safety planning and improve access to supportive, evidence‑based resources.

    , Professor of Psychiatry and Population Health at the University of 91ɬ is also Mental Health Theme co-lead at the NIHR Greater 91ɬ Patient Safety Research Collaboration

    He said: “Safety Plans can be a vital component of mental health care but it’s really important they meaningfully involve the person themselves.

    “I am delighted to be part of this important event which will have co-production at its heart”

    • The toolkit was funded by the , and supported by the , and NIHR Applied Research Collaboration North East and North Cumbria. The research is a collaboration between the University of 91ɬ, Northumbria University, Newcastle, and Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR GM PSRC, NIHR ARC North East and North Cumbria, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care.
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    Tue, 19 May 2026 09:30:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/95a337e4-8b26-4c9d-af22-1d3f04cc5b45/500_jaystoolkit.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/95a337e4-8b26-4c9d-af22-1d3f04cc5b45/jaystoolkit.jpeg?10000
    World first DNA study: where you live may change how fast you age /about/news/world-first-dna-study-where-you-live-may-change-how-fast-you-age/ /about/news/world-first-dna-study-where-you-live-may-change-how-fast-you-age/745070University of 91ɬ scientists, part of a global team led by Stanford University, have uncovered a remarkable link between where you live and how quickly your body ages.

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    University of 91ɬ scientists, part of a global team led by Stanford University, have uncovered a remarkable link between where you live and how quickly your body ages.

    Publishing in one of the world’s leading scientific journals Cell, the researchers analysed 322 healthy people from Europe, East Asia and South Asia to build the most detailed picture yet of how genetic ancestry and environment shape our biology.

    They used a sweeping “multiomics” approach, measuring everything from genes and proteins to gut bacteria, metabolic chemicals and metals to understand how ethnicity and geography shape our biology.

    By recruiting people of the same genetic ancestry living on different continents, the scientists were able to separate the effects of DNA from the influence of environment with unprecedented clarity.

    Genetic ancestry refers  to the estimation of where your ancestors came from based on patterns in your DNA, inherited across generations.

    They found that your ethnic background leaves a deep mark on your immune system, metabolism and gut bacteria no matter where you move.

    South Asian volunteers showed signs of higher exposure to pathogens across multiple biological layers.

    European participants had richer gut microbial diversity and higher levels of chemicals tied to heart disease risk.

    But geography also rewired key molecular networks involved in cholesterol, inflammation and energy processing.

    Moving continents was enough to shift major metabolic pathways and alter the balance of gut microbes.

    The most dramatic finding was that geography appears to change biological age — the molecular measure of how old your cells look.

    East Asians living outside Asia were biologically older than those who stayed in Asia.

    Europeans showed the opposite pattern, appearing biologically younger when living outside Europe.

    The researchers say this suggests environment and genetic ancestry interact in surprising ways that could speed up or slow down ageing.

    The study also uncovered a never-before-seen link between a telomerase gene involved in cellular ageing and a specific gut microbe, connected through a lipid molecule called sphingomyelin.

    This unexpected three-way link hints at a molecular chain reaction through which gut bacteria may influence how quickly our cells age.

    The findings create a powerful new resource for precision medicine, highlighting the need for healthcare tailored to genetic ancestry and environment rather than a one-size-fits-all model.

    The researchers say their open-access dataset will help scientists and clinicians develop more accurate diagnostics, treatments and prevention strategies tailored to genetic ancestry, environment and individual biology.

    “What this study shows, more clearly than ever before, is that our biology is shaped by a combination of both our genetic ancestry and the places we live,” said co‑author Professor from The University of 91ɬ.

    91ɬ carried out analysis of biological metals alongside the international groups looking at proteins, the immune system, metabolism and microbiomes to generate a massive integrated picture of human variability.

    Professor Unwin added: “We were struck by how consistently ethnicity influenced immunity, metabolism and the microbiome, even when people moved thousands of miles away.

    “However, it is equally clear that where we live can have substantial impacts on nudging key molecular pathways — even how our cells appear to age — in different directions depending on who you are. It proves that precision medicine must reflect real global diversity, not a single population.”

    Michael Snyder, Professor of Genetics at the Stanford School of Medicine who led the study said: “Our study is special because for the first time we have deeply profiled people from around the world, including Asia, Europe and North America. This enables us to see what properties such as metabolites and microbes are associated with ethnicity and which ones with geography.

    “One interesting finding is the association of age with geography. East Asians that live outside of Asia have a higher biological age than those residing in Asia. For Europeans, those residing outside of Europe are younger.”

    • The paper A Comparison of Deep Multiomics Profiles Across Ethnicity, Geography, and Age is available DOI
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    Fri, 15 May 2026 16:01:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a536c189-87a5-460e-9dcd-5b49b21e0927/500_geneticancestry.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a536c189-87a5-460e-9dcd-5b49b21e0927/geneticancestry.png?10000
    Bug hope to beat eczema /about/news/bug-hope-to-beat-eczema/ /about/news/bug-hope-to-beat-eczema/744985Friendly skin bacteria could hold the key to stopping eczema in its tracks according to a breakthrough by a team of UK and Japanese scientists.

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    Friendly skin bacteria could hold the key to stopping eczema in its tracks according to a breakthrough by a team of UK and Japanese scientists.

    Their new reveals harmless microbes living on our skin release powerful molecules that can shut down the inflammatory chaos triggered by Staphylococcus aureus, the bug long known to wreak havoc in eczema.

    Based at The University of 91ɬ and Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, they found that when nutrients run low, many friendly staphylococcal species release tiny lipopeptides as they age that calm the skin’s immune response.

    The lipopeptides stop keratinocytes — the skin’s frontline cells — from pumping out Interleukin-33 (IL‑33), a major driver of allergic inflammation.

    The discovery, they say, potentially open the door to a new class of safe, stable, non‑infectious treatments that could help millions living with skin and other allergic diseases.

    The findings are the latest breakthrough by the team, after previously showing that a protein released by Staphylococcus aureus, known as Sbi, triggers IL-33 and sparks eczema flare‑ups. Applying the lipopeptides to the skin of mice prevented IL‑33 release and stopped eczema from developing.

    Certain types of lipopeptides -  diacylated were the most effective, while another type -   monoacylated versions had no effect. The molecules blocked IL‑33 from leaving the nucleus, trapping it in the perinuclear space- the gap between the inner and outer membranes of the nucleus and preventing it from fuelling inflammation.

    The new findings- published in the journal Nature Communications today -   confirm their suspicion that good bacteria might naturally counteract this effect.

    Study author from The University of 91ɬ said: “We think this is a very exciting result as lipopeptides are small, stable, non-infectious chemical structures that have the potential to be used as a topical treatment for eczema. They might also be used in the future to treat other allergic diseases such as hay fever.”

    Study author from The University of 91ɬ commented: “For years we’ve known that children raised around farm animals or exposed to diverse microbes early in life are less likely to develop allergies, but we haven’t understood the precise mechanisms behind this protection.

    Study author Professor Akane Tanaka from Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology said: “We have previously already shown that blocking IL‑33 with a biologic drug stops eczema in the same mouse model. Now we’ve shown that bacteria can do it themselves- an exciting and potentially game-changing discovery.”

    Study author Professor Hiroshi Matsuda from Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology said: “Our findings overturn long‑held assumptions about how bacterial molecules behave. Instead of triggering immune alarms through TLR pathways, these lipopeptides bypass them entirely. The next step is testing these lipopeptides in people with eczema to see if they can be turned into real‑world treatments.”

    The study was supported by the Leo Foundation and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

    • The paper Soluble bacterial lipopeptides suppress gasdermin D-associated IL-33 release in keratinocytes and atopic dermatitis in mice is available DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-72376-x
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    Thu, 14 May 2026 15:25:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/971da968-c27b-4522-9dcd-89a252db7e4c/500_staphylococcus_aureus_visa_2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/971da968-c27b-4522-9dcd-89a252db7e4c/staphylococcus_aureus_visa_2.jpg?10000
    New research reveals rapid methane release mechanism at the front of retreating ice sheets /about/news/new-research-reveals-rapid-methane-release-mechanism-at-the-front-of-retreating-ice-sheets/ /about/news/new-research-reveals-rapid-methane-release-mechanism-at-the-front-of-retreating-ice-sheets/744211Paper details:

    Full title: Gas hydrate dissolution triggered by subglacial groundwater flushing during deglaciation

    Journal: Nature Geoscience

    DOI: 10.1038/s41561-026-01978-3

    URL:

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    An international team of scientists has discovered that methane hydrates beneath the northwest Greenland continental shelf became rapidly destabilised by meltwater, releasing large stores of methane during ice-sheet retreat across the continental shelf.

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    An international team of scientists has discovered that methane hydrates beneath the northwest Greenland continental shelf became rapidly destabilised by meltwater, releasing large stores of methane during ice-sheet retreat across the continental shelf.

    The findings, published in , suggest that this fastacting mechanism may have contributed to past climate events and could well contribute to future climate change as polar ice sheets continue to retreat.

    The study draws on samples collected during the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 400, one of the final missions of the decades longrunning global marine research programme. By analysing sediment cores drilled offshore in northwest Greenland, researchers found unexpectedly low methane concentrations in layers where methane hydrates would normally be abundant.

    Highresolution 3D seismic imaging revealed widespread pockmarks and fluidescape structures on the seafloor, indicating that methanerich fluids had once migrated rapidly through the sediments. The evidence points to a striking conclusion, methane hydrates in this region were locally dissolved and flushed out by large volumes of meltwater during the last glacial cycle.

    Scientists have long suspected that rapid methane release from destabilised hydrates may have played a role in major climate events in Earth’s history, including the Palaeocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) around 56 million years ago. During this period, global temperatures rose by 5–8°C, triggering ocean acidification, species extinctions, and widespread environmental disruption. Although the Greenland findings relate to a much more recent period, they reveal a mechanism capable of producing similarly abrupt methane release under the right conditions.

    Methane hydrates, icelike solids that trap methane within a crystalline structure, typically form under lowtemperature, highpressure conditions known as stability zones, typically found beneath permafrost or in deepsea sediments.

    Approximately 1,800 Gigatons of methane is stored in gas hydrates beneath continental margins and permafrost, making them one of the largest methane reservoirs in the global carbon cycle and a massive potential greenhouse gas source.

    Until now, destabilisation was thought to occur mainly through slow changes in temperature or pressure. The new findings reveal that meltwaterdriven dissolution can rapidly destabilise hydrates even within gas hydrate stability zones, previously thought of as safe stores of methane.

    As ice sheets continue to thin and retreat, this newly identified process could influence the timing and magnitude of future methane emissions and shape the trajectory of climate change.

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    Thu, 14 May 2026 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4d34a57-80ad-4d12-ae1f-cd124e7bbe72/500_d93b67e7eb60f515b03f35482ca64edf.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4d34a57-80ad-4d12-ae1f-cd124e7bbe72/d93b67e7eb60f515b03f35482ca64edf.jpg?10000
    91ɬ academic’s personal homelessness story shortlisted for Orwell Prize /about/news/homelessness-story-shortlisted-for-orwell-prize/ /about/news/homelessness-story-shortlisted-for-orwell-prize/744791An academic from The University of 91ɬ has been shortlisted for one of Britain’s most prestigious awards for political writing after publishing a deeply personal account of his experiences of hidden homelessness as a teenager.

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    An academic from The University of 91ɬ has been shortlisted for one of Britain’s most prestigious awards for political writing after publishing a deeply personal account of his experiences of hidden homelessness as a teenager.

    , a History researcher at the University, has been shortlisted for the 2026 Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness for his article The Shame of Britain’s Hidden Homeless, which was published in .

    The article combined data and analysis on the scale of hidden homelessness in Britain with Dr Seaton’s own experiences of housing insecurity as a young person, including the impact it had on his education and wellbeing. The Orwell Prize judges praised the article for blending rigorous reporting with personal testimony. 

    Sarah O’Connor, judge for The Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness 2026, said: “Andrew’s piece was data heavy, rich with facts and explanation about hidden homelessness, but what really stood out to us was the way in which Andrew talked about his own experience of being part of that story, of being homeless as a young person, and all the effects which that had on him and his education - and how he ultimately overcame them.”

    Dr Seaton’s research and writing focuses on inequality, welfare, medicine and the environment, with particular interests in using lived experiences in the past to inform our present. His Orwell Prize nomination places him alongside journalists from national organisations including the BBC, The Daily Mail and The Big Issue.

    It’s amazing to be shortlisted alongside these wonderful writers for a prize that draws attention to homelessness,” said Andrew. 

    The Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness was established to champion journalism that sheds light on one of Britain’s most enduring social challenges. The prize recognises reporting that is person-centred, data-driven or policy-focused.

    Chair of judges Michael Gove said: “The Orwell Prize attracts some of the most powerful and most exciting journalism being produced in Britain today. Homelessness is a huge social evil, but it has also inspired some great reporting and fantastic analysis. It has been a joy to spend time both with this work and with my fellow judges, who have brought a huge amount of passion and authority to the business of sifting some brilliant entries.”

    The Orwell Foundation, which runs the awards, promotes the values associated with George Orwell’s writing, including integrity, courage and fidelity to truth.

    The winners of the 2026 Orwell Prizes will be announced on 25 June at the Bloomsbury Theatre in London.

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    Wed, 13 May 2026 10:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/12bf66ef-b3e7-4609-8ae3-b69588c2962a/500_orwell.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/12bf66ef-b3e7-4609-8ae3-b69588c2962a/orwell.png?10000
    Climate-ready countries attracting more international students, major study finds /about/news/climate-ready-countries-attracting-more-international-students/ /about/news/climate-ready-countries-attracting-more-international-students/744773Countries that are better prepared for climate change are becoming more attractive to international students while more vulnerable nations are losing their appeal, according to a major new global study involving researchers from The University of 91ɬ.

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    Countries that are better prepared for climate change are becoming more attractive to international students while more vulnerable nations are losing their appeal, according to a major new global study involving researchers from The University of 91ɬ.

    The research analysed 1.15 million international student flows, and found that climate resilience is now an increasingly important factor in where students choose to study abroad.

    The findings suggest that alongside university rankings, jobs and living standards, students are also paying attention to whether countries appear ready for a warmer, more uncertain future.

    Key findings

    - Countries with higher climate vulnerability attract fewer international students
    - Strong climate adaptation readiness significantly boosts student inflows
    - Major climate summits such as COP15 and COP21 marked a turning point in student decision-making
    - Economic factors still matter, but students increasingly weigh climate risk and resilience
    - China, India and other emerging hubs could gain market share through stronger climate action and growing academic strength

    What did the study find?

    The study examined global student mobility patterns over two decades. Researchers found that a destination country’s climate vulnerability significantly reduced its attractiveness to prospective international students.

    By contrast, countries with stronger climate adaptation readiness - meaning they are better prepared to respond to climate risks such as extreme weather, heat and infrastructure disruption - saw significantly higher student inflows.

    Why climate now matters to students

    Traditionally, international students have been drawn by factors such as prestigious universities, stronger economies, language links and career opportunities - but the study found this picture has changed.

    Major global climate summits, including the Copenhagen Accord (COP15) in 2009 and the Paris Agreement (COP21) in 2015, acted as key turning points. After these moments, student choices increasingly reflected a country’s climate readiness and vulnerability, not just its economic strength.

    A new competition for global talent

    The findings suggest countries are now competing for students not only on education quality, but also on resilience, liveability and long-term stability. This could reshape the global higher education market in the years ahead.

    Researchers found that proactive climate adaptation, combined with rising university capacity, could help emerging destinations such as China and India capture a larger share of international students.

    Who could lose out?

    The study suggests some traditional destinations could face growing pressure if climate vulnerability worsens or if progress on adaptation stalls.

    Researchers say climate preparedness may increasingly influence how students judge future safety, quality of life and opportunity in a host country.

    What the researchers said

    “International students are making one of the biggest decisions of their lives when choosing where to study,” said Dr Haoyu Hu.

    “Our findings suggest they are not only thinking about degrees and careers, but also about what kind of future a country offers - whether it feels safe, stable and prepared for climate change.”

    Dr Hu is based at The University of 91ɬ, which has been recognised globally for its social and environmental impact and is the only university in the world to rank in the top ten of both the QS World University Sustainability Rankings and the Times Higher Education Impact Rankings. 

    The rankings recognise universities’ contributions towards the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including research, teaching, public engagement and campus operations aimed at creating a healthier, fairer and more sustainable future. 

    Why this matters

    International students contribute billions to economies, strengthen research systems and help fill skills gaps.

    The researchers say governments and universities may need to treat climate resilience as part of their international education strategy - from greener campuses and better infrastructure to stronger public climate policy.

    They also say support is needed for climate-vulnerable countries, so global talent flows do not become even more unequal.

    Publication details

    The study was published in the Nature Portfolio journal Communications Sustainability.

    DOI:  

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    Tue, 12 May 2026 14:47:17 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b2f6128f-4b95-4bf8-8711-7025e56831c7/500_gettyimages-1147070895.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b2f6128f-4b95-4bf8-8711-7025e56831c7/gettyimages-1147070895.jpg?10000
    Long-term study shows 91ɬ “sponge park” is still boosting health and wellbeing five years on /about/news/sponge-park-is-still-boosting-health-and-wellbeing/ /about/news/sponge-park-is-still-boosting-health-and-wellbeing/744719A major study by researchers at The University of 91ɬ has found that transforming a neglected park in West Gorton led to lasting increases in walking, social interaction and time spent outdoors.

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    A major study by researchers at The University of 91ɬ has found that transforming a neglected park in West Gorton led to lasting increases in walking, social interaction and time spent outdoors.

    Known locally as “Sponge Park” because of its flood-prevention design, West Gorton Community Park has become a symbol of the wider regeneration of the area.

    Key findings

    · Walking increased by around 70% in the improved park compared with similar nearby sites
    · More people were spending time sitting, relaxing and socialising outdoors
    · The biggest increases in park use were among young people and non-white residents
    · Benefits were still evident five years after the park was redesigned

    What did the study find?

    The study tracked changes in how people used West Gorton Community Park over a seven year period in one of 91ɬ’s most deprived neighbourhoods.

    West Gorton was once known for the kind of urban deprivation depicted in Channel 4’s Shameless, which filmed in the area and became synonymous with life on struggling northern estates. Researchers say the transformation of the local park shows how investment in green spaces can help reshape communities over time.

    Compared with similar green spaces in Greater 91ɬ, the redesigned space saw sustained increases in walking, social interaction and outdoor activity. Researchers also found people were more likely to stop, sit and spend time enjoying the environment.

    What changed in the park?

    The park was redesigned in 2020 from a neglected open space into a greener, more welcoming environment. New features included play areas, walking routes, seating, planting and community spaces. The redesign also improved visibility across the park, helping residents feel safer.

    The site became known as “Sponge Park” because it was designed to absorb excess rainwater and reduce flood risk while creating an attractive public space.

    Local residents were involved in shaping the redesign to ensure the park reflected the needs of the community.

    How did it affect everyday life?

    The improvements appear to have made a tangible difference to how people use the space.

    Residents were not only more active, but also more likely to spend time relaxing, meeting others and engaging with nature. Survey data showed a clear increase in how often people reported spending time outdoors in the area. 

    These kinds of everyday behaviours - walking, socialising, and noticing the environment - are all linked to better physical and mental wellbeing.

    Who benefited most?

    The largest increases in park use were seen among young people and non-white residents.

    This suggests that improving local green spaces may help reach groups who are often underserved by traditional health interventions.

    The findings also highlight the potential for parks to help reduce health inequalities, particularly in more deprived communities.

    Do the effects last?

    While the biggest increases were seen shortly after the park opened, the study found that many of the benefits were still present five years later.

    Some effects had reduced over time, but overall activity and use of the park remained higher than before the improvements.

    This makes the study one of the first to show that urban park redesigns can have lasting impacts, rather than just short-term boosts.

    Why does this matter?

    As cities grow, access to high-quality green space is becoming increasingly important for public health.

    The findings suggest that relatively simple changes to the built environment - like improving parks - can make it easier for people to be active and connect with others, without requiring major lifestyle changes.

    Because these interventions do not rely heavily on individual motivation or resources, they may be particularly effective in reducing inequalities.

    What are the implications?

    The researchers say the findings provide strong evidence for investing in high-quality, community-designed green spaces, particularly in disadvantaged areas.

    They argue that urban park improvements could form a key part of strategies to improve public health, support wellbeing and create more equitable cities.

    Publication details

    The study was published in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.

    DOI:

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    Tue, 12 May 2026 11:46:22 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8cef7ff1-6bc5-4fa7-82a5-eef239da56a1/500__jap1384.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8cef7ff1-6bc5-4fa7-82a5-eef239da56a1/_jap1384.jpg?10000
    Making a Difference Awards 2026 – celebrating excellence in social responsibility /about/news/making-a-difference-awards-2026-social-responsibility/ /about/news/making-a-difference-awards-2026-social-responsibility/744324On Wednesday, 6 May, the University of 91ɬ hosted its annual  ceremony to recognise and celebrate the inspiring social responsibility achievements of colleagues, students, alumni and external partners.

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    On Wednesday, 6 May, the University of 91ɬ hosted its annual  ceremony to recognise and celebrate the inspiring social responsibility achievements of colleagues, students, alumni and external partners.

    The University’s social responsibility activity spans across its research, teaching, public engagement activities and University operations. 

    The Making a Difference Awards highlight the extensive range of social responsibility initiatives across the University community and include categories such as environmental sustainability, alumni contribution, widening access and student success and equality, diversity and inclusion.

    By sharing ideas, time, expertise and innovation, these inspiring projects accept the challenge to deliver real-world change. 

    Over 140 entries were submitted this year, with judges recognising 14 winners and 20 highly commended. Winners included: 

    • A project which pioneers a proactive digital approach to reduce relapse risk and improve outcomes for people experiencing psychosis.
    • An initiative that re-imagined the traditional graduation ceremony to create an accessible and inclusive event for graduates and their families who may have otherwise been unable to attend.
    • Student-led initiatives such as growing organic produce using low-waste methods and donating fresh food to community groups across 91ɬ, and an outreach project bringing practical dental advice to expectant parents across Greater 91ɬ. 

    In addition to the Making a Difference Awards, two University Medals for Social Responsibility were presented, one to a member of staff and one to an alumnus. The recipients were: 

    • The Bee Cup Scheme, a scheme reducing disposable cup use on campus through a free, app-based reusable cup system
    • Alumna Hannah Broughton for transforming support for young people and families through early communication programmes and therapeutic outdoor sessions. 

    During the event, a special Making a Difference Award was presented to the 91ɬ Access Programme (MAP). The Award recognised 20 years of the University’s flagship widening access scheme, which supports local Year 12 students across Greater 91ɬ to access higher education. 

    • See the full list of all the
    • Watch our 
    • Watch the 
    • Find out more about our Challenge accepted campaign, where alumni, colleagues, students and our community are coming together to tackle urgent challenges – globally and locally. 
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    Ian Curtis archive to go on display in New York in major international exhibition from The John Rylands Library /about/news/ian-curtis-archive-to-go-on-display-in-new-york-in-major-international-exhibition-from-the-john-rylands-library/ /about/news/ian-curtis-archive-to-go-on-display-in-new-york-in-major-international-exhibition-from-the-john-rylands-library/744222A major exhibition exploring the life and creative legacy of Ian Curtis will open in New York this summer, bringing rare archival material from the iconic Joy Division frontman to the United States for the first time.

    IAN CURTIS: INSIGHT

    Voltz Clarke Gallery, New York City
    25 June – 22 July 2026

    A major exhibition exploring the life and creative legacy of Ian Curtis will open in New York this summer, bringing rare archival material from the iconic Joy Division frontman to the United States for the first time.

    Ian Curtis: Insight presents an intimate and revealing selection of handwritten lyrics, photographs, personal letters, ephemera and artefacts drawn from the Ian Curtis archive, held by The John Rylands Library at The University of 91ɬ as part of the . The exhibition offers a new perspective on an artist whose work continues to shape global music and culture.

    Curated with full access to the Ian Curtis archive, the exhibition reveals the tension, tenderness, and raw creative energy that defined his, and Joy Division’s short life and enduring legacy. It also evokes the environment that shaped him: late‑1970s 91ɬ, with its industrial landscapes, DIY urgency, stark textures and the energy Curtis carried with him both on and off stage.

    Insight situates Ian Curtis not only as a musical icon, but as a writer and observer whose words captured a particular time and place while speaking to universal themes of alienation, vulnerability and connection. Many of the materials included will be shown publicly in the United States for the first time, offering audiences an unprecedented encounter with the human story behind the music.

    By bringing these materials to New York, the exhibition traces the journey of a creative voice rooted in 91ɬ and carried across continents, reflecting the enduring international reach of the city’s music, ideas and cultural identity.

    About the archive

    The Ian Curtis Archive forms part of the British Pop Archive, held within The University of 91ɬ’s Special Collections at The John Rylands Library. The exhibition follows recent international collaborations that have shared the Rylands’ special collections with new audiences abroad, reflecting its ongoing commitment to cultural exchange and public access to globally significant archives.

    Visiting information

    Ian Curtis: Insight

    195 Chrystie Street
    New York, NY 10002
    25 June – 22 July 2026
    Free admission

    Notes to editors

    • The British Pop Archive is a national collection dedicated to the preservation of popular culture, youth culture and counter‑
    • The John Rylands Library is one of the world’s leading research libraries and a major cultural institution based in 91ɬ, UK.
    • . Credit: Handwritten lyric to 'Love Will Tear Us Apart by Joy Division, Ian Curtis, c 1979. Image courtesy The University of 91ɬ

    Find out more

    For more further media, information, images and interviews contact:

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    Britain’s ‘accent bias’ revealed in new book by 91ɬ expert /about/news/britains-accent-bias-revealed-in-new-book/ /about/news/britains-accent-bias-revealed-in-new-book/744228A new book by The University of 91ɬ’s Dr Alex Baratta has revealed how deeply ingrained accent prejudice remains in British society - from classrooms to job interviews - and why it’s time to challenge it.

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    If you speak with a Northern, regional or working-class accent in Britain, you may still be judged before you’ve even finished your sentence.

    A new book by The University of 91ɬ’s Dr Alex Baratta has revealed how deeply ingrained accent prejudice remains in British society - from classrooms to job interviews - and why it’s time to challenge it.

    Key insights

    • Accent bias remains widespread across British society, including in education

    • People are routinely stereotyped based on how they sound

    • No accent is inherently ‘better’, ‘worse’ or more ‘professional’ than another

    • Linguistic science contradicts many common assumptions about accents

    • Practical steps are needed to tackle accent bias


    Why this matters

    From the way we pronounce words like ‘bath’ or ‘bus’ to whether we use a glottal stop in ‘water’, accents continue to carry powerful - and often unfair - social meanings.

    Baratta’s new book, Putting an Accent on British Accents, explores what he calls the ‘social reality’ of accents - the knee-jerk judgments people make about others based on their speech. These can include assumptions about intelligence, trustworthiness, class and even personality. 

    But the ‘linguistic reality’ tells a very different story.

    “There is nothing inherent in any accent,” Baratta argues. “No sound can ever be ‘stupid’, ‘sexy’ or ‘unprofessional’ - these are social judgements we attach to speech, not properties of the speech itself.”

    A hidden prejudice in plain sight

    Drawing on a study of British teachers, the book uncovers striking examples of accent bias in professional settings.

    One teacher reported that his interview for a PGCE course was nearly terminated unless he modified his Rossendale accent, which was deemed ‘unprofessional’ for teaching English.

    A secondary school Art teacher from Croydon was instructed to write the word ‘water’ with a capital ‘T’ to discourage pupils from using a glottal stop - a common feature of many British accents.

    Another teacher from Nottingham, working in primary phonics in the South of England, was told it would be ‘best to go back to where you come from’ if she could not adopt Southern pronunciation.

    These examples, Baratta argues, show that accent bias is not only persistent, but can directly affect careers and opportunities.

    The sound of inequality

    At the heart of the book is the simple but powerful idea that we interpret accents rather than just hearing them. A particular pronunciation can trigger assumptions about class, education, behaviour and even lifestyle, and these assumptions can then shape how individuals are treated in everyday life.

    In this way, accent becomes a form of social inequality that often goes unrecognised.

    What needs to change

    Rather than accepting accent bias as inevitable, Baratta calls for a more informed and inclusive approach - particularly within education.

    The book outlines practical steps to challenge accent prejudice, including greater awareness of linguistic diversity, changes in teacher training, and a shift away from the idea that one way of speaking is more ‘correct’ than another.

    Ultimately, the aim is to move towards a society where people are judged by what they say, not how they say it.

    “Accent bias isn’t about language at all - it’s about the social meanings we attach to it,” said Dr Baratta. “When we hear an accent, we’re not just processing sounds - we’re making assumptions shaped by history, class and culture.”

    Publication details

    Putting an Accent on British Accents by Dr Alex Baratta is published by and is available in hardcover and digital formats.

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    Wed, 06 May 2026 17:09:02 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b5ea3e26-cf0c-4367-afdc-3b5d6bc3fd76/500_be764d7d-3ff4-4100-8843-28798ed8da19.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b5ea3e26-cf0c-4367-afdc-3b5d6bc3fd76/be764d7d-3ff4-4100-8843-28798ed8da19.png?10000
    Chronic sunlight exposure disrupts body clocks in skin /about/news/chronic-sunlight-exposure-disrupts-body-clocks-in-skin/ /about/news/chronic-sunlight-exposure-disrupts-body-clocks-in-skin/743990Years of chronic exposure of human skin to sunlight strongly disrupts its body‑clock rhythm, according to a pioneering study led by University of 91ɬ, No7 Beauty Company, a member of The Boots Group, and University of Pennsylvania scientists.

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    Years of chronic exposure of human skin to sunlight strongly disrupts its body‑clock rhythm, according to a pioneering led by University of 91ɬ, No7 Beauty Company, a member of The Boots Group, and University of Pennsylvania scientists.

    The findings could explain how ultraviolet (UV) light triggers inflammation and damage in exposed skin, so-called photoageing, which breaks down its supportive structure, altering how its cells behave.

    Published in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology, the study could have important implications on skin health and the design of skincare products that takes into account the time of day when they are applied.

    The study is the first to directly compare daily rhythms of genes being turned on and off in human skin exposed to and protected from sunlight over half a century.

    Almost all organs - including skin - exhibit 24 hourly rhythms which allows the body to anticipate and adapt to changes associated with the light-dark cycle, including daily exposure to solar radiation.

    Lead researcher from The University of 91ɬ said: “According to the “escape from light” hypothesis, one of the driving forces of the evolution of clocks in ancient life forms was to restrict vulnerable biological processes - specifically DNA synthesis and cell division - to the nighttime to avoid harmful radiation from the sun.

    “So over evolution, organisms that timed DNA copying to happen at night or in low-light conditions had fewer mutations and survived better. Their built-in “clocks” helped schedule risky processes for safer times. This ancestral protective mechanism seems to be still evident today in mammalian organs, such as the skin. 

    “Understanding human skin chronobiology and how it adapts to and anticipates daily variations in stressors such as UV light is critical for the maintenance of skin health.”

    He added: “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first in vivo skin body clock study that directly compares UV damaged against sun protected skin from the same human subjects.

    “And we found chronic UV light exposure is linked to weaker body clocks, and earlier rhythms, suggesting that our skin body clocks could be disrupted or reprogrammed, which could have important implications on skin health.”

    The researchers worked with 20 volunteers by taking skin biopsies from both the covered upper buttock and exposed dorsal forearm at noon, 6PM, midnight, and 6AM, across a 24-hour cycle.

    Both sets of samples were taken from the same people, ensuring the results were more statistically reliable.

    Gene activity in the samples was measured using RNA sequencing, and sophisticated statistical analysis identified how strong the body clock cycles were and when each gene’s activity peaked.

    Co-lead researcher Prof. Ron Anafi from the University of Pennsylvania said: “Sun-exposed skin shows a different daily pattern of gene activity than skin that is usually protected. We don’t yet know if these changes help protect the skin or signal early damage”.

    Nearly two‑thirds of the genes active in sun‑exposed human skin reach their highest levels at night, compared with just over half in protected skin, showing that many biological pathways - including those responsible for DNA repair - follow a coordinated rhythm with peak activity at night‑time.

    Crucially, oscillating DNA repair genes show weaker rhythm in sun‑exposed human skin, suggesting a lack of temporal coordination of this important pathway.

    A small group of repair‑related genes also became unusually active in sun-exposed skin, raising important questions about whether the shift helps the skin better cope with sun damage or instead signals harmful changes that make cells more prone to moving and spreading.

    Although night‑time DNA repair has been observed before in mice, its purpose in humans is still unclear. Some scientists argue they may have evolved because repair works best when UV light is absent, or because cells anticipate daily stress and prepare in advance.

    Because proteins are produced some time after their corresponding genes switch on, the night‑time surge may ensure that repair proteins are ready and active when UV exposure begins the next day.

    No7 has a 20-year research partnership with The University of 91ɬ, focusing on anti-ageing skin science, immunology, and, more recently, peptide technology and skin microbiome.

    The long term partnership led to the development of the  , which features patented peptide technology, and includes the Future Renew Day and Night Serums.

    Dr. Mike Bell, Head of Science Research from No7 Beauty Company and co-author said, “Circadian biology is an exciting and rapidly evolving field, yet its role in human skin remains relatively unexplored. That’s why we were thrilled to collaborate with the University of 91ɬ and world leading chronobiologist Professor Qing-Jun Meng, to conduct this pioneering research.

    “Our findings reveal new insights into how chronic sun exposure disrupts the skin’s natural circadian rhythms, an effect that may contribute towards the accelerated ageing phenotype characteristic of sun exposed skin.

    “This work also highlights the promising potential of chronotechnology, including targeted day and night skincare solutions designed to work in harmony with the skin’s internal clock to provide better preventative and treatment outcomes for our customers.”

    • The research was funded by No7 Beauty Company, the BBSRC and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) 91ɬ Biomedical Research Centre.
    • The paper Comparative Circadian Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Dampened and Phase-Advanced Rhythms in Sun-Exposed Human Skin is to be published in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology and available DOI:
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    in vivo skin body clock study that directly compares UV damaged against sun protected skin from the same human subjects ]]> Wed, 06 May 2026 13:20:58 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_skin.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/skin.jpg?10000
    One of the world’s leading AI experts is visiting The University of 91ɬ /about/news/one-of-the-worlds-leading-ai-experts/ /about/news/one-of-the-worlds-leading-ai-experts/744162The University of 91ɬ is set to welcome internationally renowned journalist, author and broadcaster Karen Hao for a major public lecture on Thursday 28 May, offering a rare opportunity to hear directly from one of the world’s leading voices on artificial intelligence.

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    The University of 91ɬ is set to welcome internationally renowned journalist, author and broadcaster Karen Hao for a major public lecture on Thursday 28 May, offering a rare opportunity to hear directly from one of the world’s leading voices on artificial intelligence.

    Hao, best known for her acclaimed book Empire of AI and her reporting on the global AI industry, has built a reputation for deeply researched, incisive journalism that cuts through the hype to examine the real-world impacts of emerging technologies. 

    Her work spans investigations into major technology companies, the geopolitics of AI and the societal consequences of rapid innovation, making her one of the most authoritative commentators in the field today.

    Her lecture will explore the forces shaping the global AI landscape - from corporate power and data extraction to governance, ethics and the future of work. It is open to academics, students, industry professionals, policymakers and members of the public, reflecting the University’s commitment to fostering inclusive conversations about technologies that are reshaping society.

    “It is a real privilege to welcome Karen Hao to 91ɬ. She is one of the most important voices on AI today - her work is not only groundbreaking but exceptionally rigorous and well-sourced, cutting through hype to address what actually matters,” said João C. Magalhães, Senior Lecturer in AI, Trust and Security and co-lead of the AI, Trust and Security Cluster at the University’s Centre for Digital Trust and Society. 

    Hao’s career includes reporting for leading global publications and producing widely respected analysis of artificial intelligence systems and their societal implications. She is also known for her work as a podcast host and commentator, bringing complex technical and political issues to wider audiences with clarity and nuance.

    Her visit comes at a time of intense global debate around AI governance, safety and economic impact. As governments and industries grapple with regulation and deployment, events such as this provide a vital forum for informed public discussion.

    The lecture will take place at 5.30pm in Lecture theatre G.003 of Alliance 91ɬ Business School. Tickets are available via , and early booking is encouraged due to anticipated high demand.

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