
Sports Need Better Game-Day Mental Health Protocols to Protect Athletes – Here’s How
A recent AFL match saw a player experience a mental‑health episode on the field, exposing a lack of in‑game protocols for such crises. While leagues have comprehensive pre‑ and post‑event mental‑health strategies, they remain focused on physical injuries during play. The article argues for dedicated on‑field safeguards, including on‑site team psychologists and trained staff able to assess and remove athletes safely. It also calls on media to report responsibly, avoiding speculation that could worsen the athlete’s condition.

Before Vaccines, Diphtheria Used to Kill Hundreds Each Year. Now It’s Back in Australia
Australia is witnessing a resurgence of diphtheria, with the Northern Territory reporting 17 respiratory cases and 60 cutaneous cases in the past year, and Western Australia’s Kimberley region logging 27 cases in the last month. The outbreak extends to Queensland...

Climate Change Means More Landslides in NZ – but New Tech Can Help Reduce the Risk
Extreme rainfall linked to climate change is driving a surge in landslides across New Zealand, where they already cost an estimated $150‑180 million USD each year and claim more lives than volcanoes or earthquakes combined. New research shows that higher‑emission scenarios could...

The NZ Census Guided Vital Economic and Social Planning. What Happens Now It’s Gone?
New Zealand’s long‑standing five‑yearly field census is set to be abolished, with legislation proposing a shift to an administrative‑data‑driven system supplemented by a 3‑5% sample survey. The plan, outlined in the Data and Statistics (Census) Amendment Bill and the Electoral...

From Floppy Discs to Claude Mythos, How Ransomware Grew Into a Multibillion-Dollar Industry
Ransomware has evolved from Joseph Popp’s 1989 floppy‑disk prank to a multibillion‑dollar criminal industry powered by Tor, cryptocurrencies and, most recently, artificial‑intelligence tools such as Anthropic’s Claude Mythos. Three generational shifts—commodity ransomware, targeted double‑extortion, and AI‑enabled ransomware‑as‑a‑service—have expanded attack vectors...

Fining Hospitals for Medical Misogyny Won’t Help Women – It Will Hurt Them
The UK health secretary Wes Streeting proposes "patient power payments" that would cut NHS hospital budgets if women’s experience scores fall short. The move follows a surge in demand: nearly 250,000 women are now on gynecological waiting lists, a figure...

6 Ways Your Smartwatch Is Lying to You, According to Science
Smartwatches have become a staple for fitness tracking, yet many of their core metrics are derived estimates rather than direct measurements. Research shows calorie‑burn calculations can miss the mark by more than 20%, while step counts under‑report by roughly 10%...

AuDHD Means Being Autistic and Having ADHD. And It Can Look Very Different to a Single Diagnosis
AuDHD, the co‑occurrence of autism and ADHD, affects a sizable minority of neurodiverse individuals, with 30‑50% of autistic people also meeting ADHD criteria. Although the DSM‑5 only permitted dual diagnosis after 2013, many still receive delayed or missed diagnoses because...

This Fuel Crisis Could Last for a While. It’s Time for a New Approach to Fuel Use – End It
Australia faces a fuel crisis as the federal government slashes fuel excise, spending roughly $1.7 billion USD over three months to lower petrol and diesel prices. State responses have been piecemeal—Victoria and Tasmania offered temporary public‑transport fare cuts, while other states...

The RBA’s Policy Deliberately Creates Unemployment. So Why Do We Treat the Jobless so Badly?
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is using higher interest rates to deliberately raise unemployment, aiming to lower inflation expectations. Current unemployment sits at 4.3% (about 650,000 people), which the RBA deems still too low for price stability. Critics argue...

Want to Get the Pill without Seeing a GP? Here’s What You Need to Know
Australian states are expanding pharmacy access to oral contraceptives, with New South Wales set to let eligible pharmacists prescribe the pill to women 18 and older from June 2026. Victoria already permits first‑time users to obtain the pill at pharmacies...

Gallipoli Has 4 Lessons for the Strait of Hormuz Crisis
The article draws parallels between the 1915‑1916 Gallipoli campaign and the 2026 U.S. blockade of Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz. It argues that small strategic moves can balloon into costly, protracted conflicts when powers underestimate chokepoint defenses and...

‘Exceptional Circumstances’: Why Was Ben Roberts-Smith Granted Bail?
In early April, decorated Australian soldier Ben Roberts‑Smith was arrested and charged with five war‑crime murders linked to operations in Afghanistan. A remote bail hearing on April 17 resulted in the judge granting bail, citing “exceptional circumstances.” The bail package...

Israel and Lebanon Have a Ceasefire, but Global Attention Shouldn’t Move On. This Isn’t a Tidy End to the War
Israel announced a ten‑day ceasefire with Lebanon after more than 2,000 deaths and one‑million displaced residents, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insists Israeli forces will stay to create a 10‑kilometre security zone. The move raises doubts that the truce will...

More than 60% of Home Battery Installations Inspected in Australia Are ‘Substandard’
Australia’s Cheaper Home Batteries Program has installed over 250,000 residential battery systems, delivering roughly 7.7 GWh of storage. A Clean Energy Regulator audit of 1,278 installations found 60.8% substandard and 1.2% unsafe, mainly due to poor wiring and labeling. The sample...

Will Retatrutide Help Me Lose Weight or Look ‘Shredded’?
Retatrutide, an experimental triple‑hormone peptide, has shown more than 20% body‑weight loss in a 48‑week clinical trial, outperforming existing GLP‑1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy. Researchers say it works by modulating GLP‑1, GIP and glucagon pathways to suppress appetite and...

The Myanmar Civil War Is at Stalemate – but Anti-Junta Forces May Be Gaining the Upper Hand
The Myanmar civil war, now in its sixth year, has settled into a stalemate, with the junta retaining control of roughly one‑fifth of the country but dominating its major cities. Anti‑junta forces, including the National Unity Government’s People’s Defence Force...

Nurses with Higher Cultural Competence Don’t Always Perform Better – New Study
A new study of New Zealand nurses finds that higher cognitive cultural intelligence – the factual knowledge of cultural norms – is associated with poorer job performance and lower satisfaction. In contrast, nurses who excel in meta‑cognitive cultural intelligence, the ability...
Canada Urgently Needs a Civilian Defence Strategy — Before the Next Crisis Forces One
Canada’s new defence agenda, driven by Prime Minister Mark Carney’s 2025 mandate and the Canada Strong budget, seeks a total‑defence model that blends military and civilian capabilities. A leaked CAF Defence Mobilisation Plan proposed training 300,000 federal employees for quasi‑combat...

‘Canadian Experience’ Keeps Skilled Immigrants Out of the Labour Market
Canada markets itself as a destination for skilled immigrants, yet the pervasive "Canadian experience" requirement leaves many newcomers underemployed. Recent data show 34.7% of new immigrants feel over‑qualified, more than double the 18.5% rate for native‑born workers. International students often...

China’s Africa Strategy Is Shifting and Iran Conflict Will Speed It Up
China is pivoting its Africa strategy from resource extraction to investment, centering the effort in Hunan Province’s “Hunan Model.” The model, formalized through the China‑Africa Economic and Trade Deep Cooperation Pilot Zone and a dedicated exhibition, streamlines logistics, free‑trade zones,...

Ads for GLP-1 Drugs Are Flooding the Internet – Here’s How to Know if It’s Safe to Buy Them Online
The surge in online advertisements for GLP‑1 weight‑loss drugs, amplified by a high‑profile Super Bowl commercial, has led many consumers to seek cheaper, compounded versions of medications like Ozempic and Wegovy. The FDA warns that these non‑brand products often bypass...

The Government Wants to Curb NDIS Spending. Here’s How It Might Succeed
The Australian government plans to curb National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) spending by cutting annual growth from roughly 10% to 5‑6% in the next budget. The scheme now serves about 760,000 people and is projected to cost over A$50 billion (~US$33 billion)...

Victoria Has Made Public Transport Free – NSW Hasn’t. Has There Been Any Difference in Uptake?
Rising fuel prices in March spurred Victoria and Tasmania to make public transport free, while Queensland kept a 50‑cent flat fare and NSW left fares unchanged. A survey of nearly 2,000 commuters across Victoria, NSW and Queensland, conducted a week...

Strait of Hormuz Blockade: The Complex Regional Realities the US Ignores at Its Peril
President Donald Trump ordered a U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, halting Iranian port traffic. The narrow waterway moves roughly 20% of global oil—about 18 million barrels a day, worth over $1 trillion annually—so the blockade threatens to spike crude...

Is It Anxiety or OCD? 2 Psychology Experts Explain the Difference
Clinical psychologists explain how everyday anxiety differs from obsessive‑compulsive disorder (OCD). While normal anxiety becomes a disorder when it is persistent, intense and interferes with work or social life, OCD is defined by intrusive obsessions and compulsive rituals that cause...

A New Ad Campaign Is Pushing Australians to Use Less Petrol. Has This Happened Before?
The Australian federal government has launched the "every little bit helps" ad campaign urging drivers to cut fuel consumption amid a global oil crisis and volatile Middle East supply routes. The initiative follows Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Singapore trip that...

Special Agents: The Rise of the Neurodivergent Hero in TV Crime Drama
Streaming platforms are flooding audiences with crime dramas that spotlight neurodivergent protagonists, from obsessive detectives in The Killing to dyslexic lead Will Trent. Shows such as The Bridge, Bones, and Dexter portray characters on the autism spectrum or with other...

Your Say: Week Beginning April 13
A reader points out that Australia’s 15.7 million passenger‑vehicle fleet dwarfs the modest goal of 120,000 new electric‑vehicle (EV) sales per year over the next six years. Even a rapid uptake would barely dent the overall fleet, prompting a call for...

From River Stain to Your Cup of Tea: The Secret World of Tannins
The article explores tannins—bitter, astringent compounds that leach from leaves and stain concrete, cars, and timber. It explains how tannins protect plants by deterring herbivores and influence soil chemistry when washed into the ground. The piece also highlights tannins' role...

Health-Care Workers Risk Their Lives in Warzones. Are We Protecting Them Enough?
Humanitarian workers, especially health‑care staff, are facing escalating danger in conflict zones, with more than 1,000 killed in the past three years and over 750 violent incidents targeting health‑care personnel each year. Recent attacks in Ukraine, Gaza and Lebanon underscore...

This Anzac Day Falls on a Saturday – and These States Will Be Getting an Extra Public Holiday
ANZAC Day falls on Saturday, 25 April 2026, triggering different public‑holiday rules across Australian states. New South Wales, Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory will also observe a substitute holiday on Monday 27 April, while Victoria, Queensland, South Australia,...

The UK Could Make Migrants Wait up to 20 Years Before Becoming Settled – Making It One of the Longest...
The UK government plans to double the qualifying period for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) from five to ten years and extend it to up to 20 years for refugees, with some cases reaching 30 years. New eligibility rules will...

Cubans Living Abroad Now Hold the Key to Their Country’s Uncertain Future
Cuba announced in March 2026 that it will allow Cuban expatriates, especially those in the United States, to return, invest in the private sector and own businesses. The policy shift follows a deepening economic crisis marked by food, medicine shortages...

What Will It Take to Get Ships Going Through the Strait of Hormuz Again?
President Trump’s cease‑fire announcement on April 8 sparked hopes that Iran would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but traffic remained minimal. Iran’s recent threats and attacks have slashed daily commercial transits from roughly 130 vessels to only a few, creating...

Can the Middle East Ceasefire Hold?
A fragile 14‑day cease‑fire in the Iran‑Israel conflict is under strain as Israel continues air strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, rejecting Tehran’s claim that the truce covers the north. Pakistan is set to host the first round of negotiations in...

Will Knee Injections Help Your Osteoarthritis? Here’s What the Evidence Says
Knee osteoarthritis affects about 8% of Australians and prompts many patients to seek injectable therapies. Recent systematic reviews show corticosteroid shots provide only short‑term pain relief, while hyaluronic acid, platelet‑rich plasma (PRP) and stem‑cell injections deliver modest or uncertain benefits...

Fixating on a ‘Magic Number’ of Childcare Hours Misses What’s Most Important for Kids’ Development
The Australian Department of Education released data from the First Five Years project, which tracked 274,000 children and linked early‑childhood education hours to development in the first school year. Children who spent 40 hours or more per week in formal care...

New Research Shows How Forests Can Prevent Floods of All Sizes
New research challenges the prevailing view that forests only curb small to moderate floods, showing they also lessen large flood risk. By applying causal analysis linking forest cover changes to flood frequency and magnitude, the authors demonstrate that deforestation can...

Artificial Intelligence and Biology: AI’s Potential for Launching a Novel Era for Health and Medicine
Artificial intelligence is reshaping biology by rapidly predicting protein structures and gene variant effects, exemplified by AlphaFold’s Nobel‑winning breakthrough and AlphaGenome’s genome‑wide insights. Researchers are moving beyond correlation‑based models toward hybrid frameworks that combine causal knowledge with multimodal datasets, as...

Just How Bad Are Generative AI Chatbots for Our Mental Health?
Generative AI chatbots now serve over 987 million users worldwide, with roughly 64 % of American teens engaging them for advice, emotional support, and companionship. A recent analysis of 71 news stories covering 36 mental‑health crises found media coverage heavily weighted toward...

Wildflower Once Used to Treat Wounds and Sore Throats Shows Promise in Fighting Dangerous Superbugs
Researchers at Irish universities have demonstrated that extracts from the wildflower tormentil (Potentilla erecta) possess strong antimicrobial activity against multidrug‑resistant bacteria, including strains that cause pneumonia and urinary‑tract infections. The study identified ellagic acid and agrimoniin as the key compounds...

Why Windfarms and Electricity Pylons Have Become a Major Issue in the Welsh Election
Renewable energy is a decisive issue in Wales's Senedd election as the Labour government pushes a deal to meet a 100% renewable electricity target by 2035, requiring extensive new wind farms, solar parks and transmission lines. Opposition to on‑shore wind...

Babies: Raw, Nuanced, Real – What This BBC Drama Gets Right About Recurrent Miscarriage
The BBC drama "Babies" offers a raw, nuanced portrayal of recurrent miscarriage through the story of Lisa and Stephen, a couple in their thirties grappling with repeated loss. The series slows its pacing to mirror the liminal experience of trying...
What’s the Place of Humans in a World Redefined by AI? Steve Toltz’s New Novel Has some Ideas
Steve Toltz’s new novel A Rising of the Lights follows Rusty Wilson, a former child psychologist whose government job is usurped by an AI system called DUPIN. As Rusty grapples with divorce, unemployment and a society saturated with technology, the...
Should Clinics Prescribe Medicinal Cannabis that They Also Supply? We Asked 5 Experts
Australian medicinal cannabis prescriptions have exploded, driven by convenient online consultations and one‑stop‑shop models that combine prescribing with dispensing. Critics label this vertical integration a conflict of interest, arguing that clinics may prioritize profit over patient safety and prescribe unapproved...
Australia’s Biggest Stock Exchange Needs Tougher Competition, or We All Risk Paying the Price
The Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) has been condemned by a nine‑month ASIC inquiry for systemic, cultural flaws that have led to repeated technology outages and costly mix‑ups. Holding 81.5% of domestic turnover, the ASX enjoys near‑monopoly status with only Cboe...
From ‘Sustainable’ to ‘Regenerative’ Agriculture: What’s in a Name?
Regenerative agriculture is emerging as a buzzword that promises to go beyond the maintenance focus of sustainability by embedding an ethical relationship with land, water, and biodiversity. Originating from farmer‑led movements, the concept stresses reciprocity and ecosystem health, but corporate...
Why Starting a Hobby as an Adult Can Feel so Hard — and Why You Should Embrace Beginnerhood
Starting a new hobby as an adult often feels intimidating because fear of failure, judgment, and limited time create psychological barriers. Research consistently shows that leisure activities boost mental health, lower stress, and foster social connection. The article explains why...
The Dark Side of Music as ‘Therapy’
The article highlights that while music is widely embraced as a low‑risk therapeutic tool in hospitals and care settings, it can also cause harm when imposed without consent. It cites historical examples of music as torture and recent evidence that...