Catch Your Breath Evaluation Reports
Reflecting on the success of this exhibition, particularly what went well and what could be improved was always an important
Reflecting on the success of this exhibition, particularly what went well and what could be improved was always an important
Dance is fun, social and improves fitness, making it a promising form of exercise for people experiencing breathlessness.
Exploring the conscious and unconscious relationships that people who experience breathlessness have with their health objects.
This special breath-themed issue of the journal Body and Society explores breath as a neglected topic within body studies.
As the project ends, lead researchers Jane Macnaughton and Havi Carel reflect on five years of Life of Breath.
Lundy Braun discusses how racism is literally built into the spirometer.
The project team were reunited for one last meeting and a glorious finale event in Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.
Chloe Asker considers the quiet activism of 'just' breathing.
While visiting the University of Bristol team Alexandra Pârvan was inpired to write this poem about the experience of breathlessness.
air anthropology anxiety art breath breathe Breathe Easy breathing breathing space breathless breathlessness Bristol British Lung Foundation catch your breath COPD critical medical humanities durham events exhibition family health history illness interdisciplinarity jayne wilton language Life of Breath literature london lungs medicine mental health mindfulness music phenomenology philosophy poetry rcp research royal college of physicians singing smoking teamwork tobacco yoga