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Cost-of-living shoplifting surge: Aussies pushed to the limit
newscatcher
2023-09-25 00:38
Cost-of-living shoplifting surge: Aussies pushed to the limit
The cost-of-living crisis continues to pressure Aussie households, and consumers are feeling the crunch. The Westpac-Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment reported a pessimist-favoured score of 79.7 in September, a vast departure from a neutral 100, and has been recording near recession lows for more than a year. It's no surprise consumers are re-evaluating their budgets in anticipation of ongoing financial pressures. The latest Australian Bureau of Statistics [ABS] Monthly Household Spending Indicator reported a marginal 0.

https://lens.monash.edu/@business-economy/2023/09/25/1386156/cost-of-living-shoplifting-surge-aussies-pushed-to-the-limit

#monash
Cost-of-living shoplifting surge: Aussies pushed to the limit
The cost-of-living crisis continues to pressure Aussie households, and consumers are feeling the crunch. The Westpac-Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment reported a pessimist-favoured score...
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How hormones and the menstrual cycle can affect women with ADHD – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-09-24 16:32
How hormones and the menstrual cycle can affect women with ADHD – Monash Lens
Have you noticed your levels of attention may slightly change during your menstrual cycle? This may be particularly noticeable for women and people assigned female at birth with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They have differences in their ability to easily focus and sustain their attention. There may be times during their menstrual cycle when it seems harder to plan, organise and focus their attention. And they may find their ADHD medication doesn't seem to work as well. Very little research has explored the interaction between female hormones and symptoms of ADHD .

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/09/24/1386049/how-hormones-and-the-menstrual-cycle-can-affect-women-with-adhd-5-common-questions

#monash
How hormones and the menstrual cycle can affect women with ADHD – Monash Lens
Have you noticed your levels of attention may slightly change during your menstrual cycle? This may be particularly noticeable for women and people assigned female at birth with attention deficit hype...
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Applying an ‘Indigenous paradigm' to tackle rheumatic heart disease – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-09-11 01:36
Applying an ‘Indigenous paradigm' to tackle rheumatic heart disease – Monash Lens
Three years ago, cardiologist and Monash PhD student Jessica O'Brien began an important heart research project looking at ways to understand a potentially fatal but preventable disease affecting mainly young Indigenous Australians – rheumatic heart disease. Then, two-thirds of the way into it, everything changed. After all her clinical and research training in a biomedical system, O'Brien underwent a kind of academic and cultural awakening in terms of Indigenous health and the problems with what the researchers describe as an overwhelmingly 'colonial'  health system.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/09/11/1386072/applying-an-indigenous-paradigm-to-tackle-rheumatic-heart-disease

#monash
Applying an ‘Indigenous paradigm' to tackle rheumatic heart disease – Monash Lens
Three years ago, cardiologist and Monash PhD student Jessica O'Brien began an important heart research project looking at ways to understand a potentially fatal but preventable disease affecting mainl...
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Disinformation in the city: The challenges facing Australia, Indonesia – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-09-06 01:37
Disinformation in the city: The challenges facing Australia, Indonesia – Monash Lens
‘Fake news' is a global issue. Disinformation, the dissemination of deliberately misleading or false information, is damaging. Our public and democratic institutions scramble to respond with fact checkers , registers and legislation . Politicians decry it , schools have launched programs to educate against it, and even religious leaders from the Pope to the Indonesian Ulema Council are lending their weight to stop its spread. Yet disinformation persists, and it's gathering momentum.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/09/06/1386111/disinformation-in-the-city-the-challenges-facing-australian-and-indonesian-local-governments

#monash
Disinformation in the city: The challenges facing Australia, Indonesia – Monash Lens
‘Fake news' is a global issue. Disinformation, the dissemination of deliberately misleading or false information, is damaging. Our public and democratic institutions scramble to respond with fact chec...
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Beyond reductive approaches to ‘cancel culture' as bad or good
newscatcher
2023-09-04 08:32
Beyond reductive approaches to ‘cancel culture' as bad or good
The language and spectacle of public cancellation has a long history, but in recent years movements such as #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter have prompted what's been described as a 'cancellation' or ' cultural boycott ' of celebrities, brands and companies . From its beginnings in African-American subcultures – and following a long tradition of the appropriation of black language by white people – the term 'cancel' and its meanings have been appropriated by predominantly white mainstream media since the mid-to-late 2010s.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/09/04/1386105/cancelled-beyond-reductive-approaches-to-cancel-culture-as-bad-or-good

#monash
Beyond reductive approaches to ‘cancel culture' as bad or good
The language and spectacle of public cancellation has a long history, but in recent years movements such as #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter have prompted what's been described as a 'cancellation' or ' cu...
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Delivering hope: anti-inflammatory drug trial for preterm babies
newscatcher
2023-08-31 06:31
Delivering hope: anti-inflammatory drug trial for preterm babies
By Jodi Yeats and Karen Sims 31 August 2023 L-R: Prof Marcel Nold, Prof Claudia Nold When baby Blessing arrived at 25 weeks, her parents joined a drug trial they hope will benefit all preterm babies. Already used for inflammatory diseases in older children and adults, the trial focuses on anakinra - a drug neonatal specialists expect to assist preterm babies, given their risk of inflammation. Being cared for at the neonatal unit at Te Whatu Ora Starship Children's Hospital at Te Toka Tumai Auckland by Dr Gergely Toldi, Blessing was her mother's first preterm birth.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2023-articles/delivering-hope-anti-inflammatory-drug-trial-for-preterm-babies

#monash
Delivering hope: anti-inflammatory drug trial for preterm babies
By Jodi Yeats and Karen Sims 31 August 2023 L-R: Prof Marcel Nold, Prof Claudia Nold When baby Blessing arrived at 25 weeks, her parents joined a drug trial they hope will benefit all preterm babies. ...
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Meet the Masters of Financial Mathematics & Mathematics
newscatcher
2023-08-24 04:37
Meet the Masters of Financial Mathematics & Mathematics
Date: 10 October 2023 at 6:30 pm – 7:00 pm Venue: Science Lecture Theatres, S2 Campus: Clayton Open to: Everyone Register here: https://www.monash.edu/graduate-events/science/meet-the-masters-of-financial-mathematics-and-mathematics Categories: Alumni; Future student events; Science; Seminars & Workshops; General Do you have an aptitude and passion for mathematics and statistics, a keen interest in finance and insurance and want to work for a major financial organisation in finance, insurance or the money market? The Monash Master of Financial Mathematics will provide you with a deep understanding of the world of finance, and give you the ability to speak its 'language'.

https://www.monash.edu/news/events/meet-the-masters-of-financial-mathematics-and-mathematics

#monash
Meet the Masters of Financial Mathematics & Mathematics
Date: 10 October 2023 at 6:30 pm – 7:00 pm Venue: Science Lecture Theatres, S2 Campus: Clayton Open to: Everyone Register here: https://www.monash.edu/graduate-events/science/meet-the-masters-of-finan...
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Australia leads the world with a new International Guideline to improve the health of women with polycystic ovary syndrome
newscatcher
2023-08-15 04:37
Australia leads the world with a new International Guideline to improve the health of women with polycystic ovary syndrome
15 August 2023 The 2023 International Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) Guideline and AskPCOS Patient App , led by the Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation (MCHRI) at Monash University, was launched online and is published in four international journals: Fertility and Sterility , Human Reproduction , Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism , and European Journal of Endocrinology . The Evidence-based Guideline involved input from thousands of health professionals and women, was developed by more than 100 experts and patients and involved partnership across 71 countries and six continents.

https://www.monash.edu/news/articles/australia-leads-the-world-with-a-new-international-guideline-to-improve-the-health-of-women-with-polycystic-ovary-syndrome

#monash
Australia leads the world with a new International Guideline to improve the health of women with polycystic ovary syndrome
15 August 2023 The 2023 International Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) Guideline and AskPCOS Patient App , led by the Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation (MCHRI) at Monash University,...
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Mainstreaming climate change in government decision-making
newscatcher
2023-08-14 03:35
Mainstreaming climate change in government decision-making
It's been a busy 12 months in the climate change policy landscape in Australia. The election of the Albanese Labor government in 2022 (together with a healthy contingent of ' teal ' and independent candidates for whom climate change action was a signature election issue) signalled a significant shift in federal climate change policy. A target of net zero emissions by 2050 and a substantially more ambitious 2030 emissions reduction target were written into law within the first six months of the new government.

https://lens.monash.edu/@business-economy/2023/08/14/1385887/mainstreaming-climate-change-in-government-decision-making

#monash
Mainstreaming climate change in government decision-making
It's been a busy 12 months in the climate change policy landscape in Australia. The election of the Albanese Labor government in 2022 (together with a healthy contingent of ' teal ' and independent ca...
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The dangers of following extreme Hollywood health routines
newscatcher
2023-08-09 02:42
The dangers of following extreme Hollywood health routines
'…when you're shooting a film like Magic Mike, and you're doing dance routines for two weeks at a time, you have to peak every day. So that became kind of crazy. We had a gym in the parking lot, and we'd all be lifting weights on set all day.'  –  actor Joe Manganiello , performing in the film Magic Mike . It's not unusual for actors to undergo drastic changes in preparation for a role, including gaining muscle and losing body fat for that shredded look. In fact, this is becoming the norm in Hollywood.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/08/09/1385989/extreme-hollywood-body-transformations-have-become-standard-preparations-for-film-actors-but-we-need-to-consider-the-consequences

#monash
The dangers of following extreme Hollywood health routines
'…when you're shooting a film like Magic Mike, and you're doing dance routines for two weeks at a time, you have to peak every day. So that became kind of crazy. We had a gym in the parking lot, and w...
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The landscape of opioid prescribing has changed, but is it for the better? Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-08-07 03:36
The landscape of opioid prescribing has changed, but is it for the better? Monash Lens
Globally, opioid prescribing has increased significantly over the past three decades. In 2019, Australia had the eighth highest level of opioid use in the world. Although opioids play an important role in managing pain, increases in prescription opioid use has led to more opioid related deaths. In the 10 years from 2007-2016, opioid-related mortality doubled from 591 to 1119 in Australia , with most deaths attributed to prescription opioids. Prescription opioids are used for medical treatment (e.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/08/07/1386024/the-landscape-of-opioid-prescribing-has-changed-but-is-it-for-the-better

#monash
The landscape of opioid prescribing has changed, but is it for the better? Monash Lens
Globally, opioid prescribing has increased significantly over the past three decades. In 2019, Australia had the eighth highest level of opioid use in the world. Although opioids play an important rol...
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Clinical quality registries: The opportunities and the challenges
newscatcher
2023-08-03 03:37
Clinical quality registries: The opportunities and the challenges
In order to have a world class healthcare system there has to be a way to objectively monitor health outcomes. Are procedures for heart disease safe and effective? Does spine surgery actually improve quality of life? Is there equity of access to necessary cancer treatments? There are 111 activities that identify as Clinical Quality Registries (CQRs) in Australia, according to the Australian Commission for Safety and Quality in Health Care. They monitor the effectiveness and efficacy of care from a range of procedures and diseases.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/08/03/1386010/clinical-quality-registries-the-opportunities-and-the-challenges

#monash
Clinical quality registries: The opportunities and the challenges
In order to have a world class healthcare system there has to be a way to objectively monitor health outcomes. Are procedures for heart disease safe and effective? Does spine surgery actually improve ...
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Housing crisis: We need innovation to boost productivity – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-07-31 03:38
Housing crisis: We need innovation to boost productivity – Monash Lens
Have we reached peak affordable-housing-debate in Australia? Or is it a case of that old mountaineering saying, 'The fog is thickest just before the summit'? As someone who has been involved in building innovation for the past decade, what strikes me about the current debate is not its height, but its flatness. By this I mean how something as complex as housing can be reduced to one or two issues of the moment. Is the key to ending our housing woes really just 'supply'? And will the Albanese government's new $10 billion Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF) solve that problem? Yes, this flatness is inherent to politics, but if we don't attempt to unflatten the problem we'll be stuck in the very public game of housing affordability 'Whac-A-Mole' for quite some time.

https://lens.monash.edu/@design-architecture/2023/07/31/1385881/building-in-the-same-old-ways-wont-end-the-housing-crisis-we-need-innovation-to-boost-productivity

#monash
Housing crisis: We need innovation to boost productivity – Monash Lens
Have we reached peak affordable-housing-debate in Australia? Or is it a case of that old mountaineering saying, 'The fog is thickest just before the summit'? As someone who has been involved in buildi...
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AllPlay Footy: The fast-track to change for children with disability – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-07-28 03:38
AllPlay Footy: The fast-track to change for children with disability – Monash Lens
Community sports are an important part of life for many young people. Participating in the likes of community football improves players' physical and mental health, and helps them connect with peers and develop friendships and life skills. These opportunities and benefits should be accessible to all young people. Yet, young people with disability face access and participation barriers. Many coaches also lack the knowledge and skills required to support inclusion. As a result, young people with disability are often less likely to engage in sport than their neurotypical peers .

https://lens.monash.edu/@education/2023/07/28/1386003/allplay-footy-the-fast-track-to-sustainable-change-for-children-with-disability

#monash
AllPlay Footy: The fast-track to change for children with disability – Monash Lens
Community sports are an important part of life for many young people. Participating in the likes of community football improves players' physical and mental health, and helps them connect with peers a...
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End the putdowns: Older women are doing remarkable things – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-03-07 03:30
End the putdowns: Older women are doing remarkable things – Monash Lens
It's not easy to claim being an old woman. To start with, how can I be 75 when I feel about 40? And isn't it shameful to be old when youth is valued? People proudly parrot statements such as, 'I'm growing older but not getting old' (meaning, 'How terrible to be old!'). I even heard that line quoted approvingly by one of the middle-aged hosts of the recent Australia Day Award ceremony. Then there are shop assistants who serve an old person by asking, 'What can I do for you, young lady/man?' (that is, 'I see that you're old and will mock it by calling you young').

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/03/07/1385521/older-women-are-doing-remarkable-things-its-time-for-the-putdowns-to-end-maggie-kirkman-senior-research-fellow-global-and-womens-health-school-of-public-health-and-preventive-medicine-monash-university

#monash
End the putdowns: Older women are doing remarkable things – Monash Lens
It's not easy to claim being an old woman. To start with, how can I be 75 when I feel about 40? And isn't it shameful to be old when youth is valued? People proudly parrot statements such as, 'I'm gro...
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Rights violations, the death penalty, and flaunting international law – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-03-13 01:30
Rights violations, the death penalty, and flaunting international law – Monash Lens
Mai Sato grew up in Japan, where the death penalty has mainly been applied for murder, and where it's long signified 'justice' for the victims' families. She never doubted the existence or the necessity of the death penalty as a form of criminal punishment, but having spent the past two decades in countries without the death penalty, her sensibilities about what constitutes justice have changed, as well as her understanding of the social and political functions that the death penalty serves. Now, she takes the view –  together with more than half of the countries in the world  – that the death penalty is unnecessary for all crimes, including intentional killing.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/03/13/1385536/human-rights-violations-the-death-penalty-and-flaunting-international-law

#monash
Rights violations, the death penalty, and flaunting international law – Monash Lens
Mai Sato grew up in Japan, where the death penalty has mainly been applied for murder, and where it's long signified 'justice' for the victims' families. She never doubted the existence or the necessi...
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Responding to The Australian Universities Accord challenge
newscatcher
2023-04-11 03:31
Responding to The Australian Universities Accord challenge
The Higher Education Review being led by Professor Mary O'Kane, to propose a new Accord for higher education to Minister Jason Clare, is carrying the weight of heavy expectations.  O'Kane, who is experienced in the ways of academe, has thrown out a grand challenge to the sector.   In her article on 6 January, 2023, she acknowledges the evidence of success and the significance and impact of higher education for the future of Australia.   This is a year for big ideas in education.Check out this important OpEd by Mary O'Kane AO.

https://lens.monash.edu/@education/2023/04/11/1385663/responding-to-the-australian-universities-accord-challenge-margaret-gardner-ac-monash-university

#monash
Responding to The Australian Universities Accord challenge
The Higher Education Review being led by Professor Mary O'Kane, to propose a new Accord for higher education to Minister Jason Clare, is carrying the weight of heavy expectations.  O'Kane, who is expe...
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State Minister for Medical Research visits the Turner Institute
newscatcher
2022-09-30 03:31
State Minister for Medical Research visits the Turner Institute
29 September 2022 This week (Tuesday), the Victorian Minister for Innovation, Medical Research and the Digital Economy, the Hon Jaala Pulford visited the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health to meet its researchers and learn first hand about their groundbreaking work.The visit was an opportunity to showcase the Turner Institute's clinics where research findings are translated into clinical practice.Minister Pulford was welcomed by the Dean of the Monash Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Professor Christina Mitchell, who congratulated the Victorian State Government on its recently launched Health and Medical Research Strategy: 2022-2032.

https://www.monash.edu/turner-institute/news-and-events/latest-news/2022-articles/state-minister-for-medical-research-visits-the-turner-institute

#monash
State Minister for Medical Research visits the Turner Institute
29 September 2022 This week (Tuesday), the Victorian Minister for Innovation, Medical Research and the Digital Economy, the Hon Jaala Pulford visited the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health t...
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Combating Endometriosis related pain with $100K
newscatcher
2022-09-29 03:31
Combating Endometriosis related pain with $100K
By Marla Sommer 29 September 2022 Dr Thomas Tapmeier has been awarded a combined $100K to develop new antagonists against the Neuropeptide S Receptor 1Congratulations to Dr Thomas Tapmeier of the Uterine Biology and Gynaecological Diseases group at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, who has been awarded a combined $100K from Therapeutic Innovation Australia (TIA) and the Monash Research Impact Fund (MRIF) to develop new antagonists against the Neuropeptide S Receptor 1 (NPSR1).'I am delighted! This is a wonderful opportunity to drive the search for new and better treatments for endometriosis — and other indications — forward.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/combating-endometriosis-related-pain-with-$100k

#monash
Combating Endometriosis related pain with $100K
By Marla Sommer 29 September 2022 Dr Thomas Tapmeier has been awarded a combined $100K to develop new antagonists against the Neuropeptide S Receptor 1Congratulations to Dr Thomas Tapmeier of the Uter...
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Treatment offers new hope for lupus, and other autoimmune diseases – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2022-10-05 05:31
Treatment offers new hope for lupus, and other autoimmune diseases – Monash Lens
When real patients have unprecedented positive outcomes to a new treatment, it's tempting to talk about it as 'breakthrough' for medical science. This describes the excitement around a new report from researchers in Germany of a radical new treatment for lupus. The patients in the study – five people with severe lupus – went into remission following pioneering CAR T-cell treatment, which uses genetically altered cells. So what is lupus, why is this such big news, and what could it mean for other patients and diseases? Lupus and the immune system About five million people are affected by some form of lupus worldwide.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2022/10/05/1385103?slug=treatment-offers-new-hope-for-lupus-and-maybe-for-other-autoimmune-diseases-too

#monash
Treatment offers new hope for lupus, and other autoimmune diseases – Monash Lens
When real patients have unprecedented positive outcomes to a new treatment, it's tempting to talk about it as 'breakthrough' for medical science. This describes the excitement around a new report from...
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Welcome to Professor Johannes Kern
newscatcher
2022-10-28 03:30
Welcome to Professor Johannes Kern
+61 3 9903 0026 28 October 2022 Prof Johannes Kern, new joint appointment for MonashUniversity and Alfred HealthFrom Professor Terry O'Brien and Associate Professor Douglas GinWe are delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Johannes Kern (MD, PhD, ICDP-UEMS (Dermpath), FEBDV, FACD) to the joint clinical academic appointment between Alfred Health and Monash University as Professor and Deputy Director, Dermatology. He is also Vice President and Board Director of the Skin Health Institute.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/welcome-to-professor-johannes-kern

#monash
Welcome to Professor Johannes Kern
+61 3 9903 0026 28 October 2022 Prof Johannes Kern, new joint appointment for MonashUniversity and Alfred HealthFrom Professor Terry O'Brien and Associate Professor Douglas GinWe are delighted to anno...
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Gippsland doctors take part in Teaching on the Run
newscatcher
2022-09-05 03:30
Gippsland doctors take part in Teaching on the Run
05 September 2022 Doctors from across Gippsland have been able to improve their teaching skills and confidence by participating in the Teaching on the Run program, delivered locally by Monash Rural Health. Administered by the TELL Centre, the Teaching on the Run program is a nationally recognised medical education program, designed to improve the practical skills, knowledge and confidence of doctors as clinical teachers, supervisors and assessors in the workplace.Associate Professor Cathy Haigh, Director of Monash Rural Health Gippsland co-delivered the training with Associate Professor Bruce Waxman, Clinical Dean at Monash Rural Health Wonthaggi and Clinical Lead of Accreditation at the Postgraduate Medical Council of Victoria.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/gippsland-doctors-take-part-in-teaching-on-the-run

#monash
Gippsland doctors take part in Teaching on the Run
05 September 2022 Doctors from across Gippsland have been able to improve their teaching skills and confidence by participating in the Teaching on the Run program, delivered locally by Monash Rural He...
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Investigations into antibiotic prescriptions awarded the highest overall mark
newscatcher
2022-12-15 03:32
Investigations into antibiotic prescriptions awarded the highest overall mark
By Marla Sommer 15 December 2022 Congratulations to Molly Horne who has achieved the highest overall mark for the Bachelor of Medical Science (Honours) at Clayton or Malaysia. She received a prize of $1000 for her research that aimed to identify possible abnormalities within the microbiome of individuals who had been receiving extremely long courses of antibiotics.Antibiotics are occasionally prescribed for extended or indefinite courses to patients with chronic infections that are presumed to be incurable.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/investigations-into-antibiotic-prescriptions-awarded-the-highest-overall-mark

#monash
Investigations into antibiotic prescriptions awarded the highest overall mark
By Marla Sommer 15 December 2022 Congratulations to Molly Horne who has achieved the highest overall mark for the Bachelor of Medical Science (Honours) at Clayton or Malaysia. She received a prize of ...
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Mind matters: Sharpening the focus on ‘brain age' – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-04-19 03:31
Mind matters: Sharpening the focus on ‘brain age' – Monash Lens
Do you know how old your brain is? This isn't a trick question – a brain might not be the same age as its host. Two Monash researchers are working on this question from different angles in an effort to find answers. Jo Wrigglesworth is a PhD candidate in Monash's School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine , specialising in brain age. While working alongside Associate Professor Joanne Ryan,  on research about epigenetics, she learned of a new (in 2017) method to predict ageing based on neuroimaging data and machine learning.

https://lens.monash.edu/@medicine-health/2023/04/19/1385564/sharpening-the-focus-on-brain-age

#monash
Mind matters: Sharpening the focus on ‘brain age' – Monash Lens
Do you know how old your brain is? This isn't a trick question – a brain might not be the same age as its host. Two Monash researchers are working on this question from different angles in an effort t...
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Explainer: Why does Saudi Arabia want a ‘nuclear Aramco'? – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-06-16 03:31
Explainer: Why does Saudi Arabia want a ‘nuclear Aramco'? – Monash Lens
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Riyadh at the beginning of June to bargain with the Saudis over a package of concessions to be granted to the kingdom in exchange for normalisation of relations with Israel. Under the leadership of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), the Saudis reportedly asked the US to jointly create a 'nuclear Aramco', modelled after the kingdom's oil and gas giant that has played such a large role in building the country's substantial wealth. The people who've discussed the nuclear Aramco idea with the Saudis recently tell Semafor that the issue is further complicated by Riyadh's belief that it can simply turn toward China or Russia if the U.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/06/16/1385882/explainer-why-does-saudi-arabia-want-a-nuclear-aramco

#monash
Explainer: Why does Saudi Arabia want a ‘nuclear Aramco'? – Monash Lens
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Riyadh at the beginning of June to bargain with the Saudis over a package of concessions to be granted to the kingdom in exchange for normalisation of rela...
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Gender equality: Overcoming institutional resistance to change – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-06-26 03:34
Gender equality: Overcoming institutional resistance to change – Monash Lens
In recent weeks, media coverage out of Australia's national Parliament has been dominated by the unedifying spectacle of political point-scoring over the leaked phone messages of former political staffer and victim of alleged rape, Brittany Higgins. Allegations of sexual harassment and assault by Liberal senator David Van from current and former senators Lidia Thorpe and Amanda Stoker quickly followed. These disturbing developments have led many to wonder whether the toxic workplace culture within Parliament House has improved at all, despite the groundbreaking Jenkins review and the implementation of a raft of the review's recommendations.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/06/26/1385901/the-long-road-to-gender-equality-overcoming-institutional-resistance-to-change

#monash
Gender equality: Overcoming institutional resistance to change – Monash Lens
In recent weeks, media coverage out of Australia's national Parliament has been dominated by the unedifying spectacle of political point-scoring over the leaked phone messages of former political staf...
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The Love of My Life: The extraordinary story of an ordinary couple – Monash Lens
newscatcher
2023-06-30 03:31
The Love of My Life: The extraordinary story of an ordinary couple – Monash Lens
The Love of My Life is a short Australian documentary portraying the sweet, fierce, and uncompromising love story between the newly-married Gail and Lisette, a transgender lesbian couple in their 60s who live in suburban Adelaide/Kaurna Country. The documentary, directed by Francesca Rizzoli and produced by Trevor Graham, has been recently aired on ABC TV in Australia, and is since then available on ABC iview . This work is a strong example of artivism – namely, art plus activism – raising awareness of the LGBTQIA+ community in Australia, as well as making the viewers reflect on how genders are performed, portrayed and perceived in our society.

https://lens.monash.edu/@politics-society/2023/06/30/1385849/the-love-of-my-life-the-extraordinary-story-of-an-ordinary-couple

#monash
The Love of My Life: The extraordinary story of an ordinary couple – Monash Lens
The Love of My Life is a short Australian documentary portraying the sweet, fierce, and uncompromising love story between the newly-married Gail and Lisette, a transgender lesbian couple in their 60s ...
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Providing feedback to GPs: an effective solution to overuse of musculoskeletal diagnostic imaging
newscatcher
2022-09-07 03:30
Providing feedback to GPs: an effective solution to overuse of musculoskeletal diagnostic imaging
07 September 2022 A simple audit and feedback mechanism can successfully reduce overuse of musculoskeletal imaging by General Practitioners (GPs) at a national scale, saving precious health system resources, and saving patients' time, money, potential for incidental findings, unnecessary treatment and risk of harm from cumulative exposure to ionising radiation. The findings, from a collaboration between musculoskeletal research experts at Monash Public Health and Preventive Medicine and the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care, were published in high-impact journal JAMA today.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/providing-feedback-to-gps-an-effective-solution-to-overuse-of-musculoskeletal-diagnostic-imaging

#monash
Providing feedback to GPs: an effective solution to overuse of musculoskeletal diagnostic imaging
07 September 2022 A simple audit and feedback mechanism can successfully reduce overuse of musculoskeletal imaging by General Practitioners (GPs) at a national scale, saving precious health system res...
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World-first preventative DNA screening for cancer and heart disease risk
newscatcher
2022-08-22 03:30
World-first preventative DNA screening for cancer and heart disease risk
22 August 2022 Young Australians can now access a free DNA saliva test to learn whether they face increased risk of some cancers and heart disease, which can be prevented or treated early if detected, in a world-first DNA screening study.The nationally collaborative project, led by A/Professor Paul Lacaze at Monash University's School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, is supported by researchers and clinicians across Australia. It will screen at least 10,000 people aged 18-40 for genes that increase risk of certain types of cancers and heart disease that often go undetected.

https://www.monash.edu/medicine/news/latest/2022-articles/world-first-preventative-dna-screening-for-cancer-and-heart-disease-risk

#monash
World-first preventative DNA screening for cancer and heart disease risk
22 August 2022 Young Australians can now access a free DNA saliva test to learn whether they face increased risk of some cancers and heart disease, which can be prevented or treated early if detected,...
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0
Australian classrooms are among the 'least favourable' for discipline in the OECD
newscatcher
2023-04-13 03:31
Australian classrooms are among the 'least favourable' for discipline in the OECD
A major international report says the 'disciplinary climate' in Australian schools is among the 'least favourable' in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). On Tuesday, the OECD released a profile on education in Australia. Its findings follow headlines about student behaviour and a federal parliamentary inquiry into 'increasing disruption in Australian school classrooms'. How severe is the problem and what can we do about it? What does the OECD report say The OECD report looks at many aspects of Australia's education system.

https://lens.monash.edu/@education/2023/04/13/1385664/australian-classrooms-are-among-the-least-favourable-for-discipline-in-the-oecd-heres-how-to-improve-student-behaviour

#monash
Australian classrooms are among the 'least favourable' for discipline in the OECD
A major international report says the 'disciplinary climate' in Australian schools is among the 'least favourable' in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). On Tuesday, the...
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