Exeter University - where JK Rowling and Zara Tindall studied - tops the list of 108 universities where sex assault allegations have been made by people on the Everyone s Invited website.
The forum, set up last year by former student Soma Sara for people to share their stories of sexual abuse and rape culture , has shaken Britain s educational establishments.
Along with top schools, the UK s most prestigious universities were named in the 1,000 plus testimonials and red-brick Exeter appeared most, coming up in 65 anonymous testimonials on the website.
Oxford, Leeds, Edinburgh and University College London make up the top five.
Everyone s Invited s founder Miss Sara, who set it up while living with her grandmother s Paris home during lockdown after graduating from UCL, has said they were overwhelmed with new testimonials from universities.
We re absolutely knackered, most of us are working two jobs : Student paramedics call for bursary equal to midwives and nurses scotsman.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scotsman.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Student paramedics trapped in ‘deteriorating mental health crisis’
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Student paramedics are trapped in a “deteriorating mental health crisis”, with one in 10 having considered suicide due to a lack of money, a survey has indicated.
More than two-thirds thought they did not have enough money to finish the course, and more than eight in 10 were “worried they are going to burn out”.
The findings came to light after the Pay Student Paramedics campaign group sent the survey to all paramedic science students across all five universities in Scotland which offer the course in March, receiving 200 responses.
Regular exercise cuts the risk of dying from infectious diseases such as Covid-19 by more than a third, according to new research.
An international team of scientists found 150 minutes a week of physical activity that gets you slightly out of breath can have a massive impact on immunity.
It suggests exercise can reduce fatalities by 37%, the danger of even catching similar diseases by 31% and boost the effectiveness of vaccines by up to 40%.
Professor Sebastien Chastin, who led the study, said: “You don’t need to go to a gym, as dancing around the living room, going for a run or walk is just as effective.