夜色视频

26 November 2012

夜色视频 scientists have been awarded four of the six to benefit the community, announced tonight.

They are studying areas as diverse as evidence-based occupational therapy practice, conservation of our coastal resources, materials chemistry and nanotechnology for more precise medical treatment, and biomedical science to treat diseases such as Alzheimer鈥檚.

Queensland Chief Scientist Dr Geoff Garrett AO, on behalf of the Queensland Government, and 夜色视频 Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter H酶j, representing sponsors, made the announcement.

Congratulating all 2012 Queensland Tall Poppies, Professor H酶j said: 鈥淚 have seen so many great Tall Poppies, and it always gives me a spring in the step to witness the next wave of talent, with huge aspirations, coming through.鈥

The Tall Poppy Campaign was created in 1998 by the Australian Institute of Policy and Science.

The Young Tall Poppy Science Awards and the Queensland-Smithsonian Fellowships were announced at the 2012 Science and Innovation reception, part of the bipartisan Science in Parliament program.

The 夜色视频 winners are:

Dr Tammy Hoffmann of 夜色视频鈥檚 School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, and the Centre for Research in Evidence-Based Practice at Bond University, who is studying evidence-based practice, patient education, occupational therapy.

Dr Hoffmann is researching facilitators to, and barriers of evidence-based practice from both the health professionals鈥 and patients鈥 perspective.

The research is guiding the development of solutions that can help to ensure that research evidence is used by clinicians and patients when making health decisions.

鈥淪ome solutions aim to increase clinicians鈥 awareness of evidence, whilst others make the evidence more useable or help clinicians to clearly communicate the evidence and decisions needed to patients,鈥 Dr Hoffmann said.

鈥淓xplaining intervention options and the evidence for each option to patients in an understandable way is key to empowering patients to take an active role in their health care, but is often not done or not done well.鈥漮ften not done or not done well,鈥 Dr Hoffmann said.

Dr Morena Mills of 夜色视频鈥檚 Global Change Institute, who studies applied conservation problems.

Dr Mills鈥 research involves identifying spatial solutions for natural resource management problems, through a process called systematic conservation planning.

鈥淓ffective systematic conservation planning involves stakeholder engagement with various groups from government agencies to villagers, and the use of available science to inform resource management decisions,鈥 Dr Mills said.

Her research provides strategies on where, when and how to manage coastal ecosystems in order to maximise social and environmental benefits now and for future generations.

Dr Kristofer Thurecht of 夜色视频鈥檚 Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, and the Centre for Advanced Imaging, is studying materials chemistry and nanotechnology.

Dr Thurecht is developing 鈥渟mart鈥 biomedical imaging devices that can diagnose, treat and monitor a therapy using nanomedicine.

鈥淭hese devices are designed with an internal molecular "switch", that gives information about where a particular drug is delivered, or treatment is applied, to specific regions within the body,鈥 Dr Thurecht said.

鈥淭he goal is to combine medical imaging with drug delivery, providing information on where a therapeutic agent is being delivered, when it is being delivered and how much is being delivered to a particular site in the body.

鈥淭he overarching aim of this research is to develop unique treatment regimes that can be tailored for individual patients that have a particular disease.鈥

Dr Trent Woodruff of the 夜色视频 School of Biomedical Sciences is studying biomedical Science.

Dr Woodruff鈥檚 research focuses on identifying the causes behind the ageing of the brain in health and disease.

鈥淏rain cell loss is a normal phenomenon which occurs as we age, but also is the process behind several debilitating, and unfortunately common diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and Huntington's disease,鈥 he said.

Research from his laboratory suggests that immune inflammation may be a key component which precipitates or accelerates this disease process.

The group has also helped to develop a drug which inhibits this inflammatory substance which has the potential to limit brain cell loss in humans, and thus treat diseases such as Alzheimer's, and also potentially slow the onset of dementia in Australia鈥檚 ageing population.

Media: Jan King 0413 601 248