The potential risk of brain injury playing sport is well-documented, but less-known is the effects of intimate partner violence on the brain. New research is aiming to change that.
Australia’s professional sports players aren’t covered by the same injury rules as other workers – unlike in New Zealand.
Female prisoner numbers have skyrocketed over the past decade, and an overwhelming majority of them have experienced domestic violence.
A "citizens' jury" can offer fresh eyes on an enduring problem in healthcare and public health, particularly in areas that usually struggle for ongoing funding.
Pioneering research indicates that those with an acquired brain injury are particularly vulnerable to falling victim to online fraud.
Although a great deal of research is still required, it may one day be possible to identify and treat people suffering from CTE, or at risk of it.
A Monash research team studying head impacts at the elite level of Australian football says it's too soon to make a direct link between concussion in the sport and brain problems later in life.
The nature of Aussie rules means players risk injuries to their hands and wrists serious enough to send them to the emergency department.
A world-first neurological study has found that many athletes are returning to play too soon after suffering concussion.
For the stem cell researchers at ARMI, one small 'superfish' holds the key to repairing the brain and spinal cord in humans.
When it comes to people’s homes, neither Di Winkler nor Dan McKenna are prepared to accept the status quo. They're challenging traditional housing models for a greater social good.
Monash alumna Dr Di Winkler is determined to change the systems that move young people with serious disabilities into nursing homes.
Exercising healthy limbs to treat their injured opposites is increasingly being used in therapy.
The tiny roundworm holds a vital key to transforming human health.
TBI is the leading cause globally of mortality among young adults.
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