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AUSTRALIA’S BEST AND BRIGHTEST RESEARCHERS RECOGNISED IN 2010 NHMRC EXCELLENCE AWARDS

Issue date: 5 March 2010

Fifteen of Australia’s most distinguished health and medical researchers were recognised last night for their outstanding contribution to the success of medical research in this country.

The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Australia’s leading funding body for health and medical research, held its Excellence Awards in Canberra on Thursday evening.

The awards recognise the highest ranked recipients of grants and fellowships in 2010 as well as two special categories for outstanding contribution and ethics.

NHMRC Chief Executive Officer Professor Warwick Anderson AM, said this is only the third time these awards have been presented, but they have already become highly regarded among the research community.

“The NHMRC established these excellence awards because, regardless of the field people work in, it’s important to recognise and reward achievement, and all of these award winners are outstanding researchers and are truly visionary,” Professor Anderson said.

“It is important that these efforts are recognised both within and outside the research community. That is why the NHMRC continues to support and recognise the best and brightest researchers who are prepared to tackle the tough health issues facing Australia.”

The NHMRC Outstanding Contribution Award recognises outstanding long-term contribution and individual commitment and support to NHMRC, and health and medical research.

This year’s recipient is Professor David Weisbrot, AM who is Professor of Law and Governance at Macquarie University. He was formerly President of the Australian Law Reform Commission, chairing inquiries into the Protection of Human Genetic Information, Gene Patenting and Human Health, and Privacy. David is a member of the NHMRC's Human Genetics Advisory Committee and the Working Group on Research Integrity.

The NHMRC Ethics Award recognises outstanding contribution to the achievement of high ethical standards in health and medical research.

This year’s recipient is Professor Donald Chalmers, who is Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania and a Foundation Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law. He was Chair of the Australian Health Ethics Committee from 1994 to 2000 and Australian Red Cross Ethics Committee from 2000 until 2010.

Currently Don is Chair of the Gene Technology Ethics and Community Consultative Committee, Deputy Chair of the Embryo Research Licensing Committee and member of the HUGO Ethics Committee, the International Cancer Genome Consortium, and International Scientific Review Panels of Genome Canada since 2004.

The NHMRC Achievement Awards recognise outstanding achievements in health and medical research. These are awarded to the highest scoring applicants in the 2010 peer review of research support and fellowships schemes.

Details of award recipients follow.

NHMRC media contact:
Simon Tidy 02 6217 9190/ 0422 008 512



2010 NHMRC Excellence Awards

NHMRC Award for Outstanding Contribution
Professor David Weisbrot, Macquarie University, New South Wales
David Weisbrot, AM is Professor of Law and Governance at Macquarie University. He was formerly President of the Australian Law Reform Commission, chairing inquiries into the Protection of Human Genetic Information, Gene Patenting and Human Health, and Privacy. David is a member of the NHMRC's Human Genetics Advisory Committee and the Working Group on Research Integrity.

NHMRC Ethics Award
Professor Don Chalmers, University of Tasmania, Tasmania

Donald Chalmers is Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania and a Foundation Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law. He was Chair of the Australian Health Ethics Committee from 1994 to 2000 and Australian Red Cross Ethics Committee from 2000 until 2010.

Currently Don is Chair of the Gene Technology Ethics and Community Consultative Committee, Deputy Chair of the Embryo Research Licensing Committee and member of the HUGO Ethics Committee, the International Cancer Genome Consortium, and International Scientific Review Panels of Genome Canada since 2004.

Achievement Award for Highest Ranked Program Grant
Professor Sam Berkovic, University of Melbourne, Victoria
Sam Berkovic is in the Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Austin Health. He is a clinical neurologist and clinical researcher closely linked to basic scientists. His group, together with molecular genetic collaborators in Adelaide and Germany, discovered the first gene for epilepsy and subsequently have been involved the discovery of many of the known epilepsy genes.

Achievement Award for Highest Ranked Project Grant
Professor Rob Parton, University of Queensland, Queensland
Rob Parton studied biochemistry in the UK before moving to the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg, Germany. In 1996, he joined the University of Queensland where he is currently an NHMRC Australia Fellow in the Institute for Molecular Bioscience and Deputy Director of the Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis.

Achievement Award for Top Ranked NHMRC Research Fellow
Professor Jonathan Sprent, Garvan Medical Research Institute, New South Wales
Professor Sprent works on T cell immunobiology with emphasis on T cell formation, lifespan, activation, and the formation of memory cells. He is also interested in immunoregulation and the role of cytokines in controlling T cell homeostasis and survival.

Achievement Award for Top Ranked NHMRC Practitioner Fellow
Professor David Paterson, University of Queensland, Queensland
Professor David L. Paterson is an Infectious Diseases Physician and Clinical Microbiologist. He is Deputy Director (Clinical) of the University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research located at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital. His areas of research include antibiotic resistance in Gram negative bacilli and infections in immunocompromised patients.


2010 NHMRC ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS FOR CAREER DEVELOPMENT

Dr Angela T Morgan, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Victoria
Dr Morgan returned to Australia in 2006, after trans-disciplinary post-doctoral training in cognitive neuroscience, genetic linkage, and magnetic resonance imaging techniques at University College London. In the past four years she has developed a research program that aims to gain new insights into ‘genes, brain and behaviour’ in childhood speech and swallowing disorders.

Dr Marc Pellegrini, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Victoria
Marc Pellegrini is a scientist and Infectious Disease Physician. His work at WEHI uncovered the role of apoptosis in immune responses and postdoctoral studies in Canada at the Ontario Cancer Institute identified factors impairing immunity. Having returned to WEHI he studies host dynamics preventing immune clearance of chronic infections.

A/Prof Karen L Jones, Uni of Adelaide, South Australia
Associate Professor Karen Jones has had substantial involvement in clinical research for over18 years. Her current research focuses on the role of the gut in postprandial hypotension. She is currently a Chief Investigator on four NHMRC project grants and has published 89 peer-reviewed papers, 19 reviews/editorials and four book chapters.

Dr Terry Haines, Monash University, Victoria
Associate Professor Haines is the Director of the Allied Health Clinical Research Unit at Southern Health, and Director of Research for the Southern Physiotherapy Clinical-School, Monash University. He has background training as a physiotherapist and health economist, and his primary research interest is in the prevention of falls and injuries amongst older adults.

A/Prof Penelope E Schofield, University of Melbourne, Victoria
Associate Professor Penelope Schofield is a behavioural scientist and NHMRC Research Fellow. Her current research focus is quality of life and supportive care research in cancer. Most of her work employs randomised controlled trials to test psycho-educational interventions which are designed to be clinically feasible, sustainable and effective in improving outcomes for people affected by cancer.

Dr Aaron Jex, University of Melbourne, Victoria
Dr Aaron Jex is currently conducting postdoctoral research at the University of Melbourne under the supervision of Professor Robin Gasser. His major research focus is on the use of advanced molecular technologies for the detection and characterization of important food and water-borne infectious diseases in humans, livestock and companion animals.

Dr Yong LI, University of New South Wales, New South Wales
Dr Yong Li obtained a Ph.D. degree in Faculty of Medicine in 2000 from the University of New South Wales (UNSW), Sydney, Australia. Currently, he is a Senior Cancer Institute NSW Research Fellow and the Head of Cancer Research Program, St George Hospital and Conjoint Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Medicine at UNSW.

Dr Mark Shackleton, University of Melbourne, Victoria
Mark Shackleton is a Medical Oncologist and Group Leader of the Melanoma Research Laboratory at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, Australia. He studies the mechanisms through which melanomas develop and progress in order to identify better methods of preventing and treating this disease in patients.

Assoc Professor Josephine M Forbes, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Victoria
Associate Professor Josephine Forbes is the Group Leader of the Glycation and Diabetes Laboratory at the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute. Her primary research focuses on the biochemical process of advanced glycation, which is essentially biological “caramelisation” and its contribution to diabetes and its vascular complications, in particular kidney disease.

 

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