Australian bioengineering inspirations, from the pacemaker to the bionic eye
Australia’s innovative engineers have played a major role in developing the world’s biomedical capabilities.
Australia’s innovative engineers have played a major role in developing the world’s biomedical capabilities.
Over the past 40 years, hundreds of thousands of people have gained hearing thanks to an Australian innovation.
Future medical devices could use the body’s own electrical signals to predict problems and help the nervous system keep them ...
Engineer Rob Baker arrived in a refugee camp with a formidable task: build a 100-bed hospital in just two months.
Some of Australia’s brightest young innovators have taken home awards at one of the world’s biggest annual student science and ...
People with diabetes use insulin to manage how much sugar their body absorbs, but run the risk of blood sugars ...
ANU researchers are making real progress on a safer form of X-ray imaging.
Advances in 3D-imaging technology using optic fibres could pave the way for pain-free, real-time medical biopsy results.
Jelena Rnjak-Kovacina is growing new tissue to heal damaged hearts — but the challenge comes with its own complications.
Researchers have been trying to develop an ideal biomaterial to patch the heart for more than a decade. Recent studies ...