¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ

23 October 2013

Research designed to help patients with cancer, schizophrenia, stroke and depression features among projects that were today awarded new funding at .

Eighteen ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ medical researchers were awarded fellowships, as part of the $50.3 million granted to ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ, from a total of $89.2 million awarded to seven Queensland research institutions, and $559 million awarded nationally.

Of the 85 ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ research projects that won NHMRC funding, four grants exceeded $1 million:

  • $1.3 million to a ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ schizophrenia research project led by
  • $1.2 million to research led by ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ co-director to investigate preventing depression and reducing the impact of aphasia language disorder in stroke patients and their caregivers
  • $1.1 million for a squamous cancer research project led by CEO and Research Director
  • $1 million to schizophrenia research led by Associate Professor Helen Cooper of the Queensland Brain Institute

¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ President and Vice-Chancellor , and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) , congratulated the funding recipients and wished them the greatest success for their projects.

“These researchers have the proven potential to improve the health of Australians and people worldwide, and to develop the knowledge to inform more effective national and state policies for health and other areas,” Professor Høj said.

“To understand the kind of outcomes they can achieve, consider that ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ’s many outstanding recipients of NHMRC funding include Professor Ian Frazer and Dr Ryan Taft.

“Professor Frazer co-invented the human papillomavirus vaccine that could save a quarter of a million lives each year.

“Dr Taft discovered a previously unknown disease in a little Melbourne boy, Massimo Damiani, featured on ABC-TV’s this week.”

Professor Lu said better health outcomes were the primary reason for high-calibre health and medical research, but there were clear economic benefits too.

“Health and medical research funding is a vital public investment because it not only benefits the well-being of our society, but can also have positive downstream effects on exports, business growth, international investment attraction – and much more,” Professor Lu said.

Nine ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ researchers won Research Fellowships, at values ranging between $600,000 and $822,000. These new fellows include Professor Matthew Cooper and Professor Peter Koopman from ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ’s , and Dr Katryn Stacey from the ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ .

Three ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ researchers were awarded Career Development Fellowships in today’s announcements, each worth more than $400,000.

Five ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ researchers won Early Career Fellowships, each worth just over $300,000.
One researcher, Dr Megan Auld, won a Translating Research into Practice Fellowship, valued at $170,689.

¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ’s Professor Beate Escher, from the , won a $252,000 European Collaborative Research Grant for her collaborative international research project that is seeking solutions for emerging pollutants in land and water resources management.

Today’s overall NHMRC announcements supported 963 grants across three NHMRC research support schemes and five fellowship schemes.

¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ’s $50.3 million funding package was the fourth largest nationally, alongside other top national universities including University of Melbourne ($79.4m), Monash University ($67.2 m) and University of Sydney ($60.5m).

¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ’s 22 per cent success rate for NHMRC Project Grants – against the number of applications lodged – led the Group of Eight Universities, and exceeded the national average success rate of 16.9 per cent.

Australia is among the top five countries in the world in producing scientific articles per capita and in the past decade alone, Australia’s health and medical research sector has produced three Nobel Prize winners.

Contact: Nicole Shively, ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ Research Grants office, ph +61 7 3365 3571, or Carolyn Varley, ¿ì²¥É«ÇéƬ Communications, ph +61 7 3365 1120.