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Research Topic : Descriptive pathobiology
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  • Funded Activity

    Cellular Ceramide Pathways And Parkinsons Disease

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $90,442.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Concentric Tears Of The Annulus Fibrosus Of The Intervertebral Disc

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $212,544.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Causes And Treatment Of Disc Degeneration Associated Wi Th Low Back Pain

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $305,073.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Research Fellowship - Grant ID:403904

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $664,574.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Prevention Of Failure Of Artificial Joints

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $167,810.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Trends In The Presentation, Management And Outcome Of Key Cancers In Western Australia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $361,439.00
    More information
    Funded Activity

    Understanding And Influencing Physical Activity To Improve Population Health

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $4,668,376.00
    Summary
    Three of Australia's leading researchers on physical activity and population health will use new NHMRC program grant funding to consolidate and extend their already internationally-recognised studies. Doing regular physical activity is very important for maintaining good health. It helps to prevent weight gain, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and breast and colon cancer. Unfortunately, most Australian adults are not active enough for health benefits. Rates of overweight and obesity are increasing .... Three of Australia's leading researchers on physical activity and population health will use new NHMRC program grant funding to consolidate and extend their already internationally-recognised studies. Doing regular physical activity is very important for maintaining good health. It helps to prevent weight gain, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and breast and colon cancer. Unfortunately, most Australian adults are not active enough for health benefits. Rates of overweight and obesity are increasing rapidly; more than 50% of Australian adults are above the healthy weight range. Rates of type 2 diabetes have doubled in the past 20 years. New ideas and practical tools are therefore needed to tackle these serious ‘diseases of inactivity’. To this end, Professors Neville Owen, Adrian Bauman and Wendy Brown will bring together innovative and practically useful scientific approaches drawn from psychology, epidemiology and exercise physiology. The approach is interdisciplinary – it combines theories and methods from their individual disciplines in an innovative manner, within a public health framework. Their research to date has developed better methods for measuring people’s exercise habits and has provided new insights into how personal, social and environmental circumstances can make people less active. They have also shown how to design and deliver wide-reaching programs for different social groups and evaluated their effectiveness. Their new research program will build on and significantly extend these ideas and approaches into new areas.For example, they will develop new measures of incidental physical activity and sedentary behaviour and will develop and test new, complex community interventions.Their new program will involve in-depth study of some of the most challenging researchproblems in an important and under-researched area of public health. They will further combine their disciplines and the skills of their research team in new, creative and practical ways, to answer important research questions about physical activity and population health. These ideas and approaches will be used to identify practical ways to help more people to be more physically active.
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    Funded Activity

    Building Capacity For Physical Activity Research In Population Health

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $2,118,560.00
    Summary
    The program will focus on the 'diseases of inactivity' and will look at factors like obtaining accurate statistics on rates of inactivity and better statistics on which social groups are least active. It will look at: • the types of activity that are best for different people; • what the best types of exercise programs are; • the types of information campaigns that will be most effective; and • how community amenities and local environments might be used to help people to be active in ways that .... The program will focus on the 'diseases of inactivity' and will look at factors like obtaining accurate statistics on rates of inactivity and better statistics on which social groups are least active. It will look at: • the types of activity that are best for different people; • what the best types of exercise programs are; • the types of information campaigns that will be most effective; and • how community amenities and local environments might be used to help people to be active in ways that are more convenient and enjoyable.
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    More information
    Funded Activity

    The Physiology Of Health Systems: Port Lincoln As A Case Study

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $2,228,073.00
    Summary
    No health system in Australia has a complete, population-wide view of how they are used, by whom, and with what effect on health. Our plan is to capture and describe comprehensively all health system activity relating to a sizeable and carefully-defined Australian population and to complement this with a population-wide census of health status. Such 'intelligence' is fundamental to evaluating the current performance of health systems and to planning changes to them.
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    Funded Activity

    SES And Injury In Children: A Cohort Study To Identify And Measure The Effects Of Preventable Mediating Factors

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $360,505.00
    Summary
    While changing an individual or group SES is at best a long term and challenging social objective, proximal risk factors for injury can be more readily modified. Once the proximal risk factor differential across SES groups has been adequately delineated, then the possibility arises for targeted public health intervention to redress the SES differential in the incidence of injury. The sophistication of the proposed modeling will result in a good assessment of the best point to target.
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    Showing 1-10 of 10 Funded Activites

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