Category: Health and Wellbeing
-

Men’s Health Forum in Ireland launches key report for their 21st Birthday
As the Men’s Health Forum in Ireland launches its 21st anniversary report, Dr Karen Galway and Shane O’Donnell look at why it is important to consider men’s health.
-

Why have a men’s health policy?
On International Men’s Day 2020, Dr Erin Early and Dr Paula Devine look at how placing men’s health within key government policies is pivotal to achieving good male health.
-

Man with flu-COVID infection found in the US – but he’s not the first
Should we be concerned about our chances of catching both the flu and Covid at the same time asks Dr David Courtney?
-

How do coronavirus researchers avoid catching COVID-19?
Dr Grace C Roberts looks at how virologists stay safe from pathogens such as those causing coronavirus.
-

-

Why urban density is good for health – even during a pandemic
The spread of COVID-19 in some of the world’s most populous cities has raised concerns about density but are these concerns well founded asks Dr Deepti Adlakha and guest contributor Prof James F Sallis from the University of California San Diego.
-

Changes to Work Patterns during Covid-19 – New Podcast
As part of a new series of #InConversation Podcasts by Slugger O’Toole and Queen’s, Dr John Moriarty talks about changes to work patterns during Covid-19.
-

Looking out for Big Brother: Queen’s launches Covid-19 Research Roundtable video series
Hosted by Prof Emma Flynn, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Research and Enterprise, researchers and practitioners discuss the key issues raised by the pandemic and begin to plot a course for the future.
-

In the future, your phone could test you for coronavirus – here’s how
Chris Elliott, Gonçalo Rosas da Silva and Joost Nelis from the Institute of Global Food Security at Queen’s look at the potential of using mobile phone technology to fight the coronavirus.
-

Coronavirus: how artists in the Spanish-speaking world turn to religious imagery to help cope in a crisis
Some artists have used their time in isolation to create work using religious imagery as a way to tell the story of the crisis says Dr Ricki O’Rawe, and Dr Eamon McCarthy from the University of Glasgow.

