Men's Health Grants in Australia: Funding Better Outcomes for Men

Australian men die, on average, 4.5 years earlier than Australian women. Men are more likely to die from cancer, heart disease, and suicide, less likely to see a doctor, and more likely to engage in health-risk behaviours. Yet men's health receives relatively less dedicated funding and attention than the disease burden warrants. Understanding the men's health funding landscape helps organisations building healthier pathways for Australian men.

The men's health gap

Statistics

  • Men die on average 4.5 years earlier than women
  • Men are 3x more likely to die by suicide
  • Men have higher rates of cardiovascular disease mortality
  • Men are less likely to visit a GP (approximately 20% less likely)
  • Men have lower cancer screening rates
  • Men are more likely to engage in risky behaviours (substance use, risk-taking, occupational exposure)

Why men have worse health

The men's health gap reflects a complex mix:
- Biological factors (some conditions more prevalent in men)
- Social norms (masculinity norms discourage help-seeking — "toughen up", "she'll be right")
- Health system design (often better designed for women's needs)
- Occupational hazards (men dominate dangerous industries)
- Sociological factors (men less likely to maintain social networks, at higher risk of isolation)

Key funders for men's health

Movember Foundation

Movember is Australia's (and the world's) major men's health charity — raising over $30 million annually in Australia alone:
- Prostate cancer research and support (Movember/PCFA partnership)
- Testicular cancer research and awareness
- Mental health for men (Men in Mind, Ahead of the Game)
- Physical activity for men
- Suicide prevention
- Workplace men's health

Beyond Blue

Beyond Blue addresses depression and anxiety — with specific programmes for men:
- Heads Up (workplace mental health, particularly for men)
- NewAccess (low-intensity mental health coaching)
- Community men's mental health

Lifeline

Lifeline's crisis support is disproportionately important for men — men are far more likely to die by suicide, but Lifeline reaches many more women (men seek crisis support less). Specific men-centred outreach.

Australian Men's Shed Association (AMSA)

Men's Sheds are a significant men's health intervention — social connection, purpose, mental health:
- AMSA supports over 1,000 Men's Sheds nationally
- Gaming trusts, Lotteries, and Rotary fund local Sheds
- Men's Shed model has been exported globally

Types of funded men's health programmes

Mental health

  • Men-centred counselling approaches (often action-focused, problem-solving)
  • Peer support groups for men
  • Mental health first aid for men's workplaces
  • Online mental health programmes for men
  • Crisis support with male outreach approach

Suicide prevention

  • Rural male suicide prevention (farmers, miners)
  • Workplace suicide prevention
  • Indigenous male suicide prevention
  • Veterans suicide prevention
  • LGBTQ+ men's mental health and suicide prevention

Cancer

  • Prostate cancer early detection
  • Testicular cancer awareness (young men)
  • Skin cancer for men (men less likely to use sunscreen)
  • Bowel cancer screening for men
  • Lung cancer (men more likely to smoke)

Cardiovascular health

  • Blood pressure monitoring access for men
  • Men's heart health programmes
  • Exercise promotion
  • Cholesterol and metabolic health

Men's Sheds

  • New Men's Shed establishment grants
  • Equipment for existing Sheds (tools, machinery, computers)
  • Shed programme costs (facilitators, materials)
  • Outreach to isolated men

Workplace health

  • Trade and construction men's health
  • Mining industry mental health
  • Farming and rural men's health
  • FIFO (fly-in-fly-out) worker health

Specific populations

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men's health
  • Rural and remote men
  • Young men (15-25)
  • Older men (social isolation risk)
  • LGBTQ+ men

Men's Sheds: a case study in men's health

Men's Sheds are one of Australia's great social innovations — community spaces where men (and increasingly some women) come together to work on projects, learn skills, and connect:

  • Over 1,000 Sheds nationally, over 60,000 members
  • Mental health benefits (reducing isolation)
  • Peer support and friendship
  • Purpose and activity
  • Intergenerational connection

Funding Men's Sheds

  • Gaming trusts are the primary funder (equipment, tools, operational costs)
  • Lotteries Community (facilities and programmes)
  • Rotary Clubs (often support establishment)
  • Local councils (premises, contribution in kind)
  • State government sport and recreation grants
  • Corporate partnerships (tool suppliers, hardware retailers)

Grant applications for men's health

Masculinity-aware design

Men's health programmes fail when they ignore how men actually engage. Show that your programme is designed around men's preferences — peer connection, activity-based rather than talking-based, practical outcomes, humour and lightness as entry points.

Reaching men before crisis

Men often present when already in crisis — suicide attempts, heart attacks, advanced cancer. Applications addressing earlier intervention (regular GP checks, mental health check-ins, proactive outreach) are valuable.

Trusted messengers

Men are most influenced by other men with lived experience, sports figures, and peers in their own communities. Show that your programme uses trusted messengers rather than top-down health messaging.

Workplace as access point

Workplaces are a primary access point for men who won't voluntarily seek health services. Show how your programme uses the workplace as an engagement pathway.

Rural and Indigenous men

Rural and Indigenous men have the worst health outcomes — applications specifically addressing these communities with culturally safe approaches are compelling.


Tahua's grants management platform supports men's health funders and community organisations — with programme participant tracking, health outcome measurement, community reach data, and the reporting tools that help men's health funders demonstrate their investment in closing Australia's persistent men's health gap.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →