A new handbook offers emotional support and expressive writing tools for refugee adolescents in Malaysia, bridging gaps in education and mental healthcare.
The Friends of RAIL network exemplifies the value of consumer and community involvement, providing insights and shaping the future of research, education and programs.
Spousal bereavement has a profound impact on loneliness and social health. New research highlights the gendered dimensions of widowhood, and the need for targeted interventions to support the widowed.
The launch of the National Autism Strategy is a significant step forward, highlighting the need for a holistic approach to support the diverse needs of autistic individuals in Australia.
The fight against diabetes in Malaysia and Southeast Asia requires a multifaceted approach that addresses dietary habits, physical activity, and socio-economic factors.
While AI and robotics reshape our reality, experts explore how these emerging tools could be used to create a more equitable future – from healthcare breakthroughs to Indigenous-led innovation.
Researchers collaborated with healthcare practitioners, social care providers and those living with SCI to explore how they could think and behave differently to provide a better model of care.
Researchers have identified stark differences between adolescent males and females during the height of the pandemic restrictions.
Stigma within the healthcare system is being tackled head-on with the development of resources to help people with substance dependence access the care they need.
The beginning of the new school year begins today in Victoria, and for some families the date fills them with trepidation.
Can legislated obligations improve the way governments consider climate change in their decision-making?
The pandemic has impacted people from all walks of life, but academics, early-career researchers, and PhD students have been particularly hard-hit.
Post-COVID, teachers have reported student behaviour appears to be getting worse, with students more distracted and less engaged than before the pandemic.
Barriers to the engagement of women in peace operations can sustain harmful workplace cultures, scuttle gender equality, and even peace outcomes.
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) has kept poverty and inequality on the policy agenda.
With an unavoidable reduction in research output, women are forced out of science at earlier stages in their careers.
Star player Bailey Smith’s recent drug photo scandal has highlighted the need to review and change the contentious AFL three-strikes policy, and improve support mechanisms for highly anxious footballers.
The risks associated with illegal mobile phone use while driving are poorly understood, so what can be done to deter it?
Online conferences can serve as a form of peer support for students completing a PhD, providing a space for compassion, and a means of acknowledging we’re in this together.
Gender bias and an unremitting loss of women from STEMM continues due to a disproportionate allocation of funds.
A nationwide study reveals the ways school psychologists and counsellors adapted to overcome the challenges of pandemic-related restrictions.
The new peer-reviewed Journal of Beatles Studies aims to navigate and map the meanings of the Liverpool music icons, and how they’ve been investigated and narrated.
Unless vaccination rates pick up, Victoria’s snap five-day lockdown is unlikely to be enough to get on top of the infectious Delta variant.
If our education system is truly committed to reconciliation, we must first actively support the acknowledgment of our past.
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