Casey Beros
Casey Beros
Award Winning Health Journalist & Keynote Speaker
Casey Beros is an award-winning health journalist, bestselling author, keynote speaker and one of Australia’s leading medical MC’s.
She has spent the last 15+ years asking our brightest minds how we can all live happier, healthier lives. Along the way she found some answers, and she shares them with the Australian public in a way that’s both steeped in science and delightfully entertaining. Mentored by Australia’s foremost medical broadcaster Dr Norman Swan, she is the author of bestselling book The ‘Bad’ Girl’s Guide To Better and has hosted TV programs Tonic for the ABC as well as Everyday Health and Well Traveller for Channel 10.
Casey is fast making a name for herself as one of the best health speakers in the country, with vulnerability and quick wit her superpowers. She has a superhuman ability to absorb and synthesise the learnings of any room – translating complex science into practical and actionable strategies that are implemented on the spot and embedded as lasting behavioural change. She skilfully blends her wealth of experience in health media and the thousands of hours she’s spent crafting health messaging for the public to deliver experiences that de-complicate health and empower the most important person in the health journey – you.
Being the primary carer for her beloved Dad was the catalyst for Casey to found Next Of Kin – patient, practitioner and provider of care education. The Next Of Kin publication and podcast ignite conversation around how we can take better care of ourselves and the people we love and aims to close the elusive gap between knowledge and action.
While health and wellbeing are her passion, in short – Casey simply knows the power of a good story. She should, after all she has partied at Playboy, gone Internationally viral thanks to a particularly salacious headline and experienced more than her fair share of heartbreak. She knows better than anyone that we learn more from the things we get wrong than we’ll ever learn from the moments in which everything is going right. Mum to two little girls, she is Australia’s self-proclaimed parallel parking champion and knows the words to more pop songs than is probably normal.
Keynote Topics include:
Headlines to Live By
The result is healthier, happier, higher performing people. Can you please add: It’s her personal cheat sheet built over 20 years of asking questions, and comes with the on-the-spot action of four high-ROI tools that can be done in under a minute anywhere, any time to feel physically, mentally, socially and spiritually more well.
In this dynamic keynote, Casey simplifies the science and breaks down how we get more years in good health with the people we love most. Using the tools already at our disposal, we can prevent the diseases that wreak havoc on our health and happiness as we age.
In the current climate of misinformation overwhelm, Casey has curated the headlines to pay attention to — so you can ignore the rest. The result is healthier, happier, higher performing people.
Buying Time: The Good Old Days
In this powerful and moving keynote, Casey draws on the experience of nursing and saying goodbye to her favourite person in the world — and the question that changed everything: what makes our years good? The answer became the Good Years Framework — a practical, science-backed blueprint for adding not just years to life, but life to years.
And Casey builds it live on stage, with the audience, turning a keynote into collective action. This isn’t a health talk, but about what we’re using it to protect: the people, moments and memories that make life worth living. Build community, connection and culture through the most important thing to us all: family. Bonus: Encourage everyone to bring a +1.
The Future of Humanity in Healthcare
Healthcare is hurtling toward a more digital, AI-powered future — but what patients and carers are craving has never been clearer: humanity. Casey explores the powerful intersection between technology, compassion, and lived experience of illness, ageing and caregiving.
Drawing on global trends, frontline insights and her own journey as a carer, Casey unpacks the future of patient and carer expectations. This is a call to action: while technology will transform the system, it’s the humans inside it who will define its future.
