Overview
Worldwide, infectious diseases remain a major problem for people and animals. Climate change and globalisation have led to the emergence of new diseases. At the University of Liverpool, we’re renowned for our infectious disease research and study a wide range of pathogens that infect people and animals including zoonotic and ‘One Health’ high-consequence threats.
Introduction
The University of Liverpool’s Institute of Infection, Veterinary, and Ecological Sciences (IVES) brings together leading medical, veterinary and basic science researchers from across the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences.
Our infectious disease-related research in humans includes basic, clinical and epidemiological studies of a range of neurological, gastrointestinal, respiratory, vector-borne and sexually transmitted infections, including zoonotic diseases. We investigate the spread of zoonotic pathogens, the escalation and spread of antimicrobial and anti-viral resistance, diagnostic and vaccine development, human behaviour as a driver of disease transmission, and the influence of the environment and climate on the transmission of disease.
We are home to the Microbiome Innovation Centre, which promotes and facilitates academic and industrial innovations in microbiome research, as well as the impact of microbiomes on human and animal health and disease. We also played a fundamental role in understanding the biology of SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic and respiratory challenges including tuberculosis (TB).
Research topics
Aspects of infectious diseases you could explore on this research degree include:
- Vector borne diseases
- Parasitic diseases
- Viral diseases
- Bacterial diseases
- Human and anthropogenic drivers of infectious diseases
- Environmental and climate drivers of infectious diseases
- Emerging threats in infectious diseases
- Emerging zoonotic diseases
- Antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
- Gastrointestinal diseases
- Respiratory diseases.
Research culture
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Protection Research Unit (HPRU) in Gastrointestinal Infections at the University of Liverpool is one of 14 HPRUs across England, part of a £58.7 million investment by the NIHR to protect the health of the nation. We operate the unit in partnership with the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and the University of Warwick.
The Institute also host the NIHR funded Global Health Research Group on Gastrointestinal Infections, in partnership with Kamuzu University of Health Sciences (Malawi), Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kenya) and Addis Ababa University (Ethiopia). This partnership also works closely with leading researchers at Yale University and Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Programme (Malawi).