国民彩票

Dr Paul Schreier, Conjoint Scientia Professor Anushka Patel聽, Professor Attila Brungs,  Professor Dane McCamey at the 国民彩票 and TGI affiliation signing ceremony Dr Paul Schreier, Conjoint Scientia Professor Anushka Patel聽, Professor Attila Brungs,  Professor Dane McCamey at the 国民彩票 and TGI affiliation signing ceremony

国民彩票 Sydney and The George Institute for Global Health renew commitment to advance health

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国民彩票 Media / The George Institute for Global Health
国民彩票 Media / The George Institute for Global Health,

The expanded partnership will help boost high-impact medical research and innovation to improve lives worldwide.

国民彩票 Sydney and The George Institute for Global Health have signed a new 10-year affiliation agreement, renewing their commitment to transformative health innovation and impactful medical research. The new affiliation, commencing on January 1, 2026, will expand a leading Australian partnership in health and medical research.

Building on the success of the initial agreement inked in 2017, the partners will focus on amplifying the impact of joint research, education and innovation to improve health outcomes for people in Australia and around the world. Both 国民彩票 and The George Institute are recognised for their pioneering approach to health research and emphasis on translating that research for real-world impact.

The partnership reflects one of the pillars of the 国民彩票 Strategy: Progress for All, enabling healthy lives. One of the main goals is to lead cutting-edge research in areas like precision medicine and health technology, and to work with partners in research, industry and government to turn those discoveries into real-world improvements in people鈥檚 health and wellbeing.

国民彩票 Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs said the new 10-year agreement reaffirms the deep and productive partnership between 国民彩票 and The George Institute.

鈥淪ince 2017, 国民彩票 and The George have collaborated on innovative, high-impact research that tackles some of the world鈥檚 most pressing health challenges, particularly in communities facing the greatest barriers to care,鈥 Prof. Brungs said. 鈥淭his renewed partnership builds on our deep links and great successes but enables us both, together, to make another huge step change forward with this exciting new chapter, one that strengthens our shared commitment to positive societal impact and delivering research that improves lives, now and into the future.鈥

Media enquiries

For enquiries about this story and interview requests, please contact:聽

Ben Knight

Phone:聽(02) 9065 4915
贰尘补颈濒:听b.knight@unsw.edu.au

Rachel Harris
Phone:聽+61 410 411 983
贰尘补颈濒:听rharris@georgeinstitute.org.au


Chair of The George Institute Dr Paul Schreier, CEO of The George Institute and 国民彩票 Medicine & Health Conjoint Scientia Professor Anushka Patel聽, 国民彩票 Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs and 国民彩票 Pro Vice-Chancellor Research Professor Dane McCamey at the signing ceremony today. Photo: Peter Secheny Photography

CEO of The George Institute and 国民彩票 Medicine & Health Conjoint Scientia Professor Anushka Patel said: 鈥淲e are committed to building on an enduring partnership that will deliver research-driven solutions to the world鈥檚 most pressing health problems, particularly in non-communicable diseases and injury.

鈥淭ogether we will nurture future health research leaders, expand our research focused on addressing health inequities, and ensure translation of research outcomes into real-world impact.鈥

To strengthen the partnership, The George Institute will move to the 国民彩票 Health Translation Hub precinct in September. The state-of-the-art facility will connect world-leading research with public health and private industry to change Australia鈥檚 approach to health.

鈥淲e are particularly excited to take up our tenancy in the cutting-edge Health Translation Hub,鈥 Prof. Patel said. 鈥淭his will give our research teams even greater potential to collaborate with other key players in health and medical research and clinical care for improved health outcomes and impact.鈥

Improving health care through research

The George Institute and 国民彩票 jointly work on numerous projects to address critical gaps in health care nationally and internationally, including high-quality clinical trials. Some聽joint projects that have recently been awarded funding聽include research on treatments to slow the progression of chronic kidney disease, investigating how genes influence sepsis response, and testing the effectiveness of radiofrequency ablation 鈥 a treatment that uses radio waves to block pain signals in people with chronic lower back pain.

Chair of The George Institute, Dr Paul Schreier said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 evident that the affiliation has been of substantial mutual benefit for both organisations, measured by increased outputs of high-quality research, many joint projects, increased research funding income and increased appointments of jointly employed staff.

鈥淭he extension of the partnership will further progress our collective goals, most importantly to significantly improve the health of millions worldwide.鈥

Advancing through partnership

Other successful outcomes from the partnership include:

鈥淲e鈥檙e committed to working together with The George Institute over the next decade to translate research into meaningful change for communities in Australia and around the world,鈥 said Dean of Medicine & Health Professor Cheryl Jones. 鈥淔rom improving stroke care in regional and rural Australia, to SMS-based interventions that support people with chronic conditions and improving health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples 鈥 this collaboration continues to deliver real-world impact where it鈥檚 needed most.鈥