Hospital Equipment & Supplies Feature Articles

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Huge hospital burden for intellectually disabled kids
New research from the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research has shown that children with an intellectual disability or autism are up to ten times more likely to be admitted ...
Medical students go bush
The year for rural medical students has begun early.
Kidney failure under the microscope
Better targeted treatments for 20 per cent of renal failure patients are on the horizon following a key discovery about the role of white blood cells in kidney inflammation.
Sun, sand, the sea - and a boob job
The combination of sun, sand, the sea and a boob job is proving an irresistible lure to scores of young Australian women travelling to exotic destinations for cosmetic surgery.
Stopping forced removal of babies from intellectually disabled parents
Professor Gwynnyth Llewellyn: "When babies are taken away from their mothers early on and the mother doesn't really understand why, then you have the potential for very distressed ...
A new approach to deadly influenza outbreaks in nursing homes
In developed countries people over 65 years old are the most likely to die from an influenza outbreak and people in nursing homes, where the virus is difficult to control, are ...
Olive oil could provide insight into its anti-inflammatory properties
Deakin University researchers are investigating the anti-inflammatory properties of virgin olive oil to see if it as the potential to protect against the inflammation involved in ...
Study finds most children eat four times the daily salt limit
A Deakin University study has found seven in ten children are eating more than the recommended upper limit of salt each day, putting their health at serious risk.
What if your antibiotics didn't work?
Experts call for simple measures to stem the tide of antimicrobial resistance.
Radiation detector invention granted US patent
The University of Wollongong (UOW) has developed a patented radiation detector that promises wide-ranging applications from cancer tissue identification to improved screenings of ...
Online treatment dramatically cuts suicide risks
Web-based treatment for people with depression cuts by half the number of people with the illness contemplating suicide, Australian research shows.
Australians are feeling the urge to donate to science
When Ron announced to his family that his body would be donated to science, no one was going to stand in his way.
Health workers encouraged to ask  R U OK?
With an estimated 13 million Australians aware of R U OK? Day and 1 in 5 taking part in 2011, this year’s R U OK? Day on September 13 is set to encourage even more Australians health ...
Grass pollen allergy research tackles hay fever
Queenslanders can expect to endure a longer hay fever season than the rest of Australia thanks to flowering subtropical grasses.
Unearthing clues to surviving ovarian cancer
Researchers at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research have begun Australia’s first study into lifestyle factors that may improve survival rates and quality of life for women ...
Sea anemones venom key to Multiple Sclerosis treatment
Sea anemones use venomous stinging tentacles to stun their prey, but one component of that venom is being used by researchers to treat the debilitating effects of Multiple Sclerosis ...
Mental stigma? Workers less likely to claim for psychological illness
Research has found workers are significantly less likely to claim GP visits for psychological illnesses on workers' compensation than they are for physical work-related injuries such ...
PNG doctors taught how to save hearts by Aussie teams
"They have the future of surgical medicine in their hands. It’s our job to get that first generation up and running." Dr Matthew Crawford, Anaesthetist and Operation Open Heart ...
Male circumcision: a cutting issue
The Tasmanian Law Reform Institute has recommended that male circumcision should be banned unless the religious or cultural reasons for the surgery are ‘well established’.
Mechanisms of acquired chemoresistance in ovarian cancer
The presence of multiple ovarian cancer genomes in an individual patient and the absence or downregulation of the gene LRP1B are associated with the development of chemoresistance ...
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