GHI professor joins World Health Organisation
Griffith Health Professor Wendy Moyle has been appointed to a board of the World Health Organisation (WHO), which will revise the International Classification Diseases handbook.
Griffith Health Professor Wendy Moyle has been appointed to a board of the World Health Organisation (WHO), which will revise the International Classification Diseases handbook.
Excess sodium intake and a lack of potassium are major contributing factors towards high blood pressure in Indonesia, prompting calls for low-sodium potassium-rich salt substitutes (LSSS) to be readily available to improve health and curb health costs.
Griffith Business School celebrated industry partners, alumni and the wider business community at their Better Business Dinner on Friday, 3...
The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup in Australia and New Zealand has generated excitement but also highlighted the slow progress towards gender equality in sports. The Matildas, Australia's national women's soccer team, are using this event to advocate for improved governance, pay equity, and representation for women in sports.
Griffith University researchers influenced passing of Nigerian bill making breast, cervical and prostate cancer education compulsory in high schools, providing a sustainable pathway to cancer prevention.
With temperatures rising across the globe, the need to adapt our communities to a warmer world is both urgent and...
Four of Australia’s leading education institutions have formed an innovative collaboration with the Northern NSW Local Health District to grow and train the next generation of skilled healthcare workers and pave the way for improved health outcomes in Northern NSW.
An impressive final year Griffith student, who overcame a cancer diagnosis at 15 before embarking on a medical degree, has been awarded a prestigious 2022 Australia-At-Large Rhodes Scholarship.
Griffith University has ranked world number 17 in the latest AI Research Index and the best in Queensland.
Griffith mass gathering expert Dr Jamie Ranse has led the development of Queensland's framework outlining how we start holding mass gatherings and events again.