A new national survey has found career stability and funding are two key factors turning young scientists away from research.
Medical faculties globally have been slow to recognise the training needs of the next generation of doctors regarding the health consequences of a heating planet.
Antibiotics have been around for less than a century. But as resistant bacteria become increasingly difficult to treat, we risk a greater number of deaths from infections.
Sea ice around Antarctica has always followed a predictable seasonal cycle. Now, we’ve experienced a sudden dramatic loss, and the changes are here to stay.
Monash's award-winning podcast, “What Happens Next?”, returns for an eighth season that explores pressing global issues.
We all face it – whether we invite it in or not. From our workplaces to the societies within which we live, uncertainty is everywhere.
This week on Monash University's “What Happens Next?” podcast, meet the change-makers on the front lines of food.
Season 7 of Monash University’s podcast returns from hiatus with an investigation into food security. How will we feed more people than ever on an ever-warming planet?
A new international study has found that more than five million extra deaths a year can be attributed to hot and cold temperatures.
Will we see driverless cars, personalised public transport and flying taxis in the future? In this episode we ask the experts what the future of travel looks like.
Our experts provide tips and information for those who want to better understand and embrace the idea of planetary health.
Melbourne is again blanketed in smoke from bushfires, but the health implications from it may not be known for years.
The NSW and Queensland fires are unprecedented in terms of seasonality, and ominous for the summer ahead.
For the first time in human history, the world's population is rapidly ageing, and in an ageist society we're ill-prepared to handle it. A Different Lens explores the challenges of an ageing population.
The fires in the Amazon are already a major threat to the environment, and a potentially bigger disaster awaits below the ground. Could we reach the tipping point for climate change?
Work is under way on how to best teach our future health workforce about environmental sustainability and its impacts.
Philanthropy is now viewed as a way of creating communities of people with a shared goal of bringing positive, practical change to the world.
Monash alumni’s first Nobel Laureate, Associate Professor Tilman Ruff AM, has spent his life working to safeguard the future of human health.
A springtime threat that’s nothing to sneeze at.
Techniques used in aerospace research have led to surprising insights into asthma inhalers – with potentially life-changing results.
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