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Field of Research : Paediatrics
Research Topic : life-skills development
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  • Funded Activity

    Understanding Childhood Speech And Language Disorders: What Goes Wrong, When And Why It Matters?

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $466,849.00
    Summary
    My vision for the next five years is to improve greatly the diagnosis, prevention and management of childhood communication impairments. Making a difference for these children and their families means improving our understanding of how speech and language develops, what goes wrong, when, and why it matters. My research program will target each of these topics and outline a plan for translation, that is how to get the new knowledge and best evidence into practice.
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    Funded Activity

    Nutritional Rehabilitation Od Children With Spastic Quadriplegia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $77,051.00
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    Funded Activity

    The Effect Of Obstructive Sleep Apnoea And Its Treatment On Exercise Capacity On Obese Children

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $60,787.00
    Summary
    The aim of the study is to explore the effect of sleep apnoea and its treatment on obese children aged between 7 - 13 years. The project will study the effect of sleep apnoea and its recommended treatment on: 1. lung and cardiovascular function 2. blood markers (including cholesterol and insulin), and 3. quality of life in obese children. It is hoped this study will show treatment reverses any negative outcomes caused by sleep apnoea in obese children.
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    Funded Activity

    ED Cough Study

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $48,335.00
    Summary
    Acute respiratory illness and cough in children accounts for a substantial proportion of childhood morbidity and associated costs. This project aims to identify how many children develop a chronic cough after acute respiratory infection, what the risk factors are, how it affects everyday life and how much it costs families and society. This information will help inform health policy and guidelines to facilitate early detection of chronic lung disease and reduce the burden of coughing illness in .... Acute respiratory illness and cough in children accounts for a substantial proportion of childhood morbidity and associated costs. This project aims to identify how many children develop a chronic cough after acute respiratory infection, what the risk factors are, how it affects everyday life and how much it costs families and society. This information will help inform health policy and guidelines to facilitate early detection of chronic lung disease and reduce the burden of coughing illness in children.
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    Funded Activity

    The Impact Of Sleep Disturbance On Daytime Functioning, Mood And Quality Of Life In Children And Adolescents With Cystic Fibrosis.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $62,146.00
    Summary
    Cystic fibrosis(CF) is the most common inherited chronic disease affecting Australian children. In adults with CF sleep complaints are common and associated with depression and reduced quality of life(QOL). There is a paucity of international data however regarding sleep in children with CF and assessment of paediatric sleep problems in CF is not routine. The aim of this study is to determine sleep patterns in children with CF and to examine the relationship between sleep quality, QOL and mood.
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    Funded Activity

    Modern Chemical Exposures In Utero And In Infancy, And Their Impact Upon Early Neurodevelopmental Outcomes In The Barwon Infant Study, An Unselected Birth Cohort Study

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $138,353.00
    Summary
    I am a paediatric doctor interested in the effects of modern industrial chemicals on children’s development. Even in the womb babies are exposed to industrial chemicals and we know some, like lead, are harmful to developing brains. I am interested in other chemicals that are now suspected to affect development, including the polybrominated diphenyl esters (PBDEs), and I intend to investigate this as part of the Barwon Infant Study, which follows 1250 children from before birth to 3 years.
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    Funded Activity

    Impact Of A Sleep Intervention In ADHD: Translational Randomised Trial

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $1,020,595.00
    Summary
    Up to 50% of children with ADHD experience sleep problems which worsen their ADHD symptoms, behaviour, quality of life and day to day functioning. In a previous trial, we showed that treating sleep problems in children with ADHD improves these outcomes. We now want to know if these benefits can be replicated when general paediatrcians and psychologists deliver the same sleep intervention in community settings.
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    Funded Activity

    Health-Related Quality Of Life In Intractable Paediatric Epilepsy: Using A New Measure To Improve Management

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $252,940.00
    Summary
    Until recently there was no adequate measure to assess the quality of life of children with epilepsy. Our Australian centre was the first to develop, validate and publish such an instrument; the Quality of Life in Childhood Epilepsy Questionnaire (QOLCE). We now aim to collect more data using the QOLCE to gain further understanding of the effects of epilepsy and its treatment on the quality of life of children. We will determine if surgery in children stops seizures and improves quality of life. .... Until recently there was no adequate measure to assess the quality of life of children with epilepsy. Our Australian centre was the first to develop, validate and publish such an instrument; the Quality of Life in Childhood Epilepsy Questionnaire (QOLCE). We now aim to collect more data using the QOLCE to gain further understanding of the effects of epilepsy and its treatment on the quality of life of children. We will determine if surgery in children stops seizures and improves quality of life. We also aim to find out if children with different types of epilepsies have unique quality of life issues. Finally, we aim to determine if the quality of a child's life depends on how well they are thinking and learning or how often they are having seizures. We will conduct this study in children with difficult epilepsy recruited from three major children's hospitals (Sydney Children's Hospital, the Children's Hospital, Westmead, Miami Children's Hospital, Florida USA) using a well designed methodology. Each child will have their particular type of epilepsy characterised using video and brain wave analysis. Each parent and older child will receive a quality of life package including the QOLCE to assess life function. In addition, all children will have an assessment of their thinking and learning by a child psychologist. At the completion of this project we will have established whether surgical treatment in children with epilepsy stops seizures and improves quality of life. This will allow clinicians and parents to better understand the effects of surgical treatment in this population. In addition, we will determine if problems in quality of life are associated with specific types of epilepsy. This information can be used to counsel families and tailor interventions and treatments. Finally, we will know whether a child's quality of life is determined by problems with thinking and learning and-or seizures.
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    Funded Activity

    AUTONOMIC FUNCTION IN NORMAL AND

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $292,916.00
    Summary
    Previous research has shown that SIDS victims have a number of subtle abnormalities that set them apart from the normal population. These include the occurrence of upper airway obstruction in sleep, a reduced ability to awaken from sleep and abnormalities of the automatic control of heart rate and blood pressure in sleep. These body functions are controlled by a component of the brain called the autonomic nervous system which controls the heart and other internal functions by means of nerves cal .... Previous research has shown that SIDS victims have a number of subtle abnormalities that set them apart from the normal population. These include the occurrence of upper airway obstruction in sleep, a reduced ability to awaken from sleep and abnormalities of the automatic control of heart rate and blood pressure in sleep. These body functions are controlled by a component of the brain called the autonomic nervous system which controls the heart and other internal functions by means of nerves called the parasymmpathetic and sympathetic systems. The purpose of this project is to undertake studies of the autonomic system in normal infants and in those infants who are considered to be at risk for SIDS. As SIDS occurs almost exclusively in sleep it is important to study the infant?s heart rate and blood pressure responses to various challenges whilst asleep. All infants (both controls and subjects) enrolled in the protocol will therefore undergo overnight sleep studies during which their automatic responses to a variety of stimuli will be measured. Once we have established the normal response to these stimuli we can then compare them to the results of the at risk group. If, as we anticipate, there is a difference between our at risk group and the normal controls in automatic function then we will measure some of the stress hormones in the body which reflect the function of the autonomic nervous system. If there is a difference in the levels of these hormones between the normal and the at risk groups which correlates with the expected subtle abnormalities in function we may be able to devise an accessible and quantifiable measure for those infants at risk of SIDS
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    Funded Activity

    Being Born Small Is Not Good For The Heart:early Detection Of Cardiovascular Risk

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $486,757.00
    Summary
    Intra uterine growth restriction(IUGR) is linked to adult onset of cardiovascular disease. However, little is known about the mechanism(s) which underlie this link or which babies are most at risk. This study aims to assess cardiovascular function in infants and children who were growth restricted. Early identification of cardiovascular dysfunction may aid in new opportunities for monitoring and therapeutic targets to ultimately reduce later onset of cardiovascular morbidity in this population.
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