A new clinical practice could dramatically reduce the risk of fatal diseases during leukaemia treatment.

New research says people who speak more than one language can process information more efficiently and more easily than those who only know one.

The New South Wales Minerals Council says the industry cannot afford to cover coal trains to protect environmental and human health, and says fireplaces are a bigger risk anyway.

A new report shows industry professionals overwhelmingly support recycled drinking water as a way to ensure future supply security.

A research team led by The New York Stem Cell Foundation (NYSCF) Research Institute has created a human stem-cell disease model of Parkinson’s disease in a dish.

One the scale of ‘Things from Sci-Fi That Would be Useful in Real Life’ – the nanobots that inhabit the bodies of Star Trek’s Borg species are near the top.

A meeting this week will see 500 Australian and international delegates discuss new ways to tackle prescription drug abuse.

The tech world is looking to aid the fight against Ebola, as the outbreak nears its 5000th fatality.

A new study has for the first time shown an association between children’s grasp of musical rhythm and grammar.

The UK could be heading for the same science-sceptical funding arrangements that have taken over the Australian Government.

Strong questions are being asked just days after the Government announced it would try to facilitate more Australian health workers helping the fight against Ebola in West Africa.

A recent survey by the Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union has revealed widespread fear among FIFO workers, who are worried that seeking help for mental health problems would affect their job security.

The scientific world has a new machine at its disposal, with a novel tool to provide better designer organisms.

Milk is good for growing bones – or so the old adage goes, but new research suggests this is probably not true.

In the war against Ebola, one big hurdle has been cleared by a tiny mouse.

In a world-first, scientists have observed an important process in the formation of tumours.

There is concern that TV stations will no longer have to caption their programs, in a move that could cut off large parts of the deaf and hearing-impaired community.

The researcher awarded the Nobel Prize for changing the world of microscopy may have done it again.

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