Scientists have developed a mathematical model that predicts how the number and effects of bacterial mutations leading to drug resistance will influence the success of antibiotic treatments.
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17 MAY 2021
Two experts argue that many children with communication needs are not receiving the support they need, with the national shortage of speech pathologists causing long wait lists and many children – including those with NDIS funding – to miss out.
By
Postdoctoral
Researcher at the University of Iceland and Adjunct Research Fellow at Charles
Sturt.
The $204.6 million Budget boost to extend Medicare-subsidised
telehealth services until 31 December should be a huge relief for many parents in need speech pathology services. But the situation is not that simple, particularly for parents in rural and regional areas.
Wait lists and wait times to see a speech pathologist, even for a telehealth consult, are continuing to grow. Complicating the issue further is many patients are not suitable for telehealth consults.
Access to nature can support the overall health of people in cities
Your local city park may be improving your health, according to a new paper led by Stanford University researchers. The research, published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, lays out how access to nature increases people s physical activity - and therefore overall health - in cities.
Lack of physical activity in the U.S. results in $117 billion a year in related health care costs and leads to 3.2 million deaths globally every year. It may seem like an intuitive connection, but the new research closes an important gap in understanding how building nature into cities can support overall human wellbeing.
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Following a call for applications earlier this year, five early-career researchers from around the world will be joining the eLife Early-Career Advisory Group (ECAG) this month. The five new ECAG members are: Elizabeth Ochola (Kenya), Facundo Romani (Argentina), Lana Sinapayen (Japan), Lara Urban (New Zealand), and Aalok Varma (India). The aim of ECAG is to help eLife reform research communication and to promote a research culture that is healthy for science and for scientists.
New ECAG members 2021
Elizabeth Ochola: Research Scientist at Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kenya