The Centre For Research In Childhood Early Respiratory Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,621,023.00
Summary
The Centre for Research in Childhood Early Respiratory Disease is dedicated to the prevention of lung disease in young children with chronic respiratory disease. We aim to better understand the process of lung disease to identify predictors of disease and to treat it better. We will investigate the psychosocial effects of early interventions to better manage families. We will facilitate collaborations to provide best practice guidance and will train the next generation of doctors and researchers
Our centre combines clinical and laboratory expertise to tackle autoimmune, inflammatory, and immune deficiency diseases. Starting from a genetic discovery platform, we aim to understand precisely how the immune system goes wrong in each individual patient to cause disease. This approach will make diagnoses more accurate and tailor treatment to each patient. The centre's approach should provide a template for the implementation of genomics and personalized medicine into routine clinical practice
National Clinical Centre Of Research Excellence In Severe Asthma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,597,952.00
Summary
Severe Asthma remains a large burden for the Australian community. It does not respond to current management approaches. We will develop and implement a targetted therapy approach to severe asthma that will involve assessment of needs of people with severe asthma, community burden form severe asthma, biomarkers and linked treatment strategies, as well as knowledge transfer tools and training of the health and medical workforce.
Centre Of Research Excellence For The Protection Of Pancreatic Beta Cells
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,607,110.00
Summary
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disorder that results in the destruction of the pancreatic beta cells. The overall aim of the CRE is to elucidate the gene-environment interactions and modifiable environmental exposures that are driving the development of islet autoimmunity and progression to T1D. The CRE will unify and add value to new and established collaborations with multi-disciplinary input from genomics, bioinformatics and systems biology into the investigation of T1D.
Improving The Immediate And Longer-Term Health Outcomes Of Preterm Infants
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$2,661,088.00
Summary
Premature babies develop health problems that persist throughout life and impact on mental, physical and social well-being. As all body systems are immature at birth, premature babies can develop one or many different health problems. Many factors before, during and after birth may influence the baby’s response to different treatments. Our collaborative research program seeks to understand the big picture, to help us design better treatments that improve long term outcomes after preterm birth.