Cardiovascular health
Giving up meat can lower your risk of cardiovascular disease
New research shows the benefits of eating less meat, but not all plant-based diets are equal.
- by Sarah Berry
Latest
Do you need a stent? Here’s what you need to know
Half of them might be going into patients who don’t need them.
- by Paul Biegler
Exclusive
Healthcare
Annette was 39 when she felt a pain like ‘a knife through the back of my chest’
Twenty years on, Annette Maher and her sister are helping scientists in their quest to find the cause of heart attacks affecting otherwise fit and healthy women.
- by Angus Thomson
When Tess died in her sleep, it unravelled a family health secret that saved her mum
When fit young people like Tess Hughes, 23, pass away unexpectedly, families and pathologists are faced with a medical mystery that spans generations.
- by Wendy Tuohy
A defibrillator saved this Wiggle’s life. Now he wants them everywhere
The revelation that he was one of only 10 per cent of people to survive a sudden cardiac arrest set Greg Page on a mission to improve the situation for the other 90 per cent.
- by Angus Thomson
‘It means families are kept together’: Child heart transplant service opens
Young patients from NSW previously had to be transferred to Melbourne for the life-saving operation.
- by Mary Ward
Two small changes could transform our health. Why is it so hard?
The system is set up against people carrying more weight. Experts say it’s like climate change - and it’s up to governments to help.
- by Sarah Berry
Exclusive
Illness
Research offers hope for kids such as William, who survived 10 cardiac arrests
Researchers at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute have discovered a genetic mutation that causes cardiomyopathy, paving the way for new treatments.
- by Aisha Dow
Should heart advice be different for men and women?
A world-first study looking at the impact of diet on women’s risk of heart disease highlights a problem in the research.
- by Sarah Berry
A ‘small’ heart carries more risks, but it’s not too late to change it
A new study linking the size of one of our most vital organs to fitness level and the risk of heart failure later in life shows exercise is our best defence.
- by Sarah Berry