Healthcare is increasingly turning to AI to make patient care more effective, safe, and efficient, but the question remains: Does the reality match the intentions?
One of the special things about Australian words is that they’re near and dear to who we are – and we take pleasure in confusing other people about them.
As Hollywood rolls out the red carpet for the Academy Awards, new research has revealed that movies with LGBT-inclusive representation are a ticket to box-office success.
Heard the one about the Scottish physiotherapist wearing a vulva suit? It’s spawned an international collaboration examining the effectiveness of humour in serious health messaging.
The practice of using gendered structural language is out of date, misleading and confusing, and doesn’t support a culture of healthcare inclusivity.
Students enter medical training with preconceived ideas of doctors’ professional identity, but how do academics foster it in the transition to online teaching?
A new study shows Palorchestes azael had unique elbows unlike any other mammal – which may have contributed to its extinction.
In this final episode about exploring our history, Monash alum Elizabeth Finkel AM explains why she tells the stories of how science works, and our experts offer their best tips and advice on where to dig deeper for knowledge.
We’re kicking off Series 4 of What Happens Next by looking back, way back. This time we’ll ponder what happens if we stop exploring natural history – what would we lose?
Advances in anatomy education have allowed it to successfully pivot to online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, but laboratory dissection remains a cornerstone of the discipline.
COVID-19 has brought unprecedented challenges to Monash, but it has strengthened our resolve to innovate and advance to provide our communities with a better, brighter future.
Relationships from friendships, business partnerships and even marriages continue to be forged at Monash. Read stories from fellow Monash alumni on how they 'met at Monash'.
To have a chance of making a positive impact on how adult women feel about their genital appearance, we have to reach them as adolescents.
The “Tasmanian tiger” was hunted to extinction based on its perceived size as a predator big enough to take sheep, but new research shows it weighed just 16.7kg.
A breakthrough discovery in a South African cave proves three species of human ancestors lived in the same place at the same time.
The need for physical autopsies may be reduced through a project in which digital 3D anatomical models can more accurately map bullet trajectories.
Friendships, marriages and business partnerships continue to be forged at Monash.
Combating a virus that can cause disease and life-threatening transplant complications is the focus of Eureka Prize-winning research.
Despite our reliance on digital technologies in the classroom, there are too few natural resources to produce and sustain them at the levels we expect.
Protesters have urged a boycott of Sydney's Real Bodies exhibition over claims that it could be displaying remains of executed Chinese political prisoners.
Northern seals use strong claws to tear apart large prey, giving us clues about how they behaved when they first began feeding in water.
Researchers focus on immune cells to save eyesight in adults and premature babies.
Advances in simulation are allowing trainee and professional surgeons to hone their craft, and so improving outcomes for the world’s youngest patients.
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