National Centre for Sport and Exercise Medicine
The NCSEM is an Olympic legacy project delivering education, research and clinical services in sport, exercise and physical activity. It aims to apply world-class expertise to policies and practice that will benefit the health and wellbeing of the nation – from everyday people at risk of ill health through to elite athletes.
Experiences of pregnancy in elite female athletes on the World Class Programme
Tackling the Gap: Medical Equity and Women’s Rugby
Time Hacks - The psychology of time and how to spend it
Understanding disordered eating in athletes
Including females in physiology and nutrition research
London 2012 to Paris 2024: How important is social legacy at major international events?
NCSEM highlights
Celebrating Physiology at Loughborough
Exercise and Weight Management in Persons with a Spinal Cord Injury
Technological Revolution in Diabetes
Transdisciplinary sport: The promise and politics of navigating research boundaries
Cardiac risks of excessive exercise: can too much physical activity damage the heart?
Good to Grow? Realising the Developmental Potential of Physical Education and Youth Sport
Nature’s Olympians
Reflections on Enhancing Resilience and Leadership within the Military and Sport
Should we eat food in unusual contexts to help manage our weight?
"My chronic back pain is Axy What?" Axial Spondyloarthritis and Ankylosing Spondylitis
Embedding weight management in the NHS
Bowel cancer prevention - is aspirin just the start?
Ocean rowing and human evolution; an unlikely combination
Identifying and challenging racialised inequities in men’s professional football coaching in England
Prehabilitation - What is it and why is it important?
Developing faster and more robust endurance runners using strength training techniques
Male versus Female football in Europe. What are the wellbeing, health and social values?
A life course approach to menopause: what it is and why it is important
Menopause and the brain
Omega 3s and cardiometabolic disease
Menopause and your heart
Improving physical activity in older adults with hearing loss
Trying to outrun cancer