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Filed Under: BUSINESS, INVEST Tagged With: ADaPT, Business Events, Destination Gold Coast

GCHKP stars as Gold Coast Business Events attract eyes of the world

Sheriff Karamat, President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association (second from left), visits ADaPT

Having launched its revitalised business events brand ‘Imagination Capital of Australia’ last year, Destination Gold Coast (DGC) has rebooted its Ambassadors program and tapped Precinct stars Dr Hal Rice and Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM as two of the first city ambassadors to sell the Gold Coast as a business events city on the world stage.

And in a series of promotional partnerships between the Precinct and DGC, exciting medical device and additive manufacturing projects by Griffith University’s Advanced Design and Prototyping Technologies Institute (ADaPT) were showcased at the business events industry’s peak conference. GCHKP also hosted a visit from the global President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association Sheriff Karamat, including a tour of ADaPT.

Business events are big business for the Gold Coast, injecting $570m into the city’s economy pre-Covid. The benefits of staging events goes beyond tourism and hospitality and extends to profiling the Gold Coast’s capabilities and offerings for talent and investment attraction.

The Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct benefits from the investment focus that conferences bring to the city and, according to Destination Gold Coast’s Head of Business Events Selina Sinclair, is a key catalyst for attracting business events thanks to our talent and world-leading capabilities.

“With 50 percent of meetings globally in the medical field, like-minded professionals are provided a platform to come together to exchange knowledge, discuss and debate new ideas and forthcoming technologies,” Ms Sinclair says.

“At the heart of the Gold Coast’s advancement is a thriving innovation economy driven by our hospitals, three distinguished universities, innovative startups and the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct.

“Beyond the direct economic contribution these business events inject into the Gold Coast economy, they also lead to new partnerships and attract talent to our hospitals, universities and research institutes.”

Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM
Dr Hal Rice (left) with Mayor Tom Tate and Destination Gold Coast representatives
Dr Rice and Selina Sinclair at the Medtronic Neuorexchange conference

The Precinct is also playing a key role in the relaunch of the BE Connected Gold Coast Ambassador Program to attract business events to the city, with Queensland Australian of the Year 2021, Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM, and Gold Coast Australian of the Year 2022, Dr Hal Rice, among the first chosen for the revamped program, supported by Mayor Tom Tate as patron.

“Dr Hal Rice, the Gold Coast’s Australian of the Year 2022, renowned stroke specialist and one of the founding ambassadors from the original program, is a great example of partnering with Destination Gold Coast to not only bring events to our city but through his work put the Gold Coast on the world medical stage,” Ms Sinclair says.

“Dr Rice has continued to bring international medical conferences to the Gold Coast, generating millions of dollars in economic benefit for the city and is now, through both public and private sector investment, in the final stages of building a world-class training centre for image-guided surgeries right here at the Gold Coast’s $1bn Health and Knowledge Precinct.”

Business events marketing has also taken Precinct expertise to the industry’s peak annual conference, Asia Pacific Incentives and Meeting Events (AIMe) as part of a showcase of all that the Gold Coast has to offer conference organisers.

At the Melbourne event, a selection of custom 3D-printed items (including replica brain aneurysm training models, lightweight small satellite prototypes and even a 3D-printed metal skull of an extinct Australian animal) were displayed to highlight the broad design and prototyping capability at ADaPT.

Following the conference, global conference industry leader Sheriff Karamat, President and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association, visited the Gold Coast for a first-hand look at the Precinct’s additive manufacturing capabilities and other opportunities.

Precinct showcase alongside Swell sculptures
3D printed bone model and cutting guide on display
Sheriff Karamat visits the Precinct

Destination Gold Coast has secured 146 events worth almost $200m in the events pipeline between now and 2030, with momentum building as the city’s reputation for business events grows.

March 13, 2023 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: BUSINESS, INVEST Tagged With: Dubai, Dubai Academic Health Corporation, Dubai Futures Foundation, Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences

Precinct set to partner with Dubai

I hope you all have had a great start to 2023.

I wanted to provide our Gold Coast Health & Knowledge Precinct network with an insight into the business development work undertaken by the Precinct Office, in conjunction with our key partners.

Specifically, this article is focused on my recent visit to Dubai.

By way of background, the Gold Coast and Dubai have held a Sister City relationship for the past 22 years. People from Dubai love visiting the Gold Coast. During their summer months, the Gold Coast is a highly popular destination for people from the Middle East. Whilst I was in Dubai, many people knew of the Gold Coast and told me of their great family holidays to our city. It’s these relationships that provide a foundation for the Gold Coast and Dubai to progress new business relationships.

Dubai is fast becoming a global city powerhouse, with their vision to make Dubai one of the world’s foremost future cities. They are investing significantly in infrastructure, energy, transportation, ICT, education, security and health. They are creating partnerships globally and bringing some of the most highly qualified experts to work in Dubai. Through the Sister City relationship, Dubai can connect the Gold Coast into a global network of innovation.

Mayor Tom Tate

My visit to Dubai was specifically to follow on from Mayor Tom Tate and City of Gold Coast CEO Tim Baker’s visit in November 2022. During their visit, health was identified as a key priority for Dubai.

Therefore, I travelled to Dubai and pitched five of the Gold Coast’s leading health technologies to the Dubai Futures Foundation, Dubai Academic Health Corporation and the Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences. These projects included:

  1. Artificial intelligence in healthcare
  2. Image guided and robotic treatment for stroke and aneurysm
  3. Drugs, vaccines and diagnostics
  4. Advanced rehabilitation with a focus on spinal injury
  5. Orthopedic surgery techniques.
BioSpine is a key technology for partnership opportunities in Dubai

Post my visit, I am now in regular contact with the stakeholders I met with and in the process of connecting and facilitating our local Gold Coast experts to meet with associated Dubai stakeholders. It is our intent that by introducing these Gold Coast capabilities to Dubai, that new partnerships and investment can be facilitated, to fast-track these technologies for the benefit of Gold Coast, Dubai and beyond.

These efforts in the health sector, if progressed successfully will build further opportunities in the other key priority sectors for Dubai identified above.”

This visit could not have been undertaken without the support of Trade and Investment Queensland’s Geoffrey Schuhkraft. His relationships and commitment to our city is exceptional.

I hope this piece gives you an insight into the work done by the Precinct Office in promoting our leading Gold Coast technologies and showcasing our talent internationally.

Best,

Craig

March 1, 2023 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: BUSINESS, HEALTH, TECHNOLOGY Tagged With: BioAz, Cohort, food tech, health tech

Food tech brings nature’s intelligence to synergistic Precinct ecosystem

The Bio-az lab at Cohort

Functional food tech scale-up and LuminaX 2022 graduate Bio-az, is on a mission to bring back wellness to food and beverages at a time when processed foods have stripped our diets of the natural ingredients we need for good gut and overall health. Having been awarded the NutraIngredients-Asia Start-up of the Year in 2021, the company has the science to back what they believe is a world-first synbiotic ingredient – combining prebiotics, probiotic microbes and postbiotics – that amplifies wellness.

The synbiotic platform Bio-az has developed – based on their team’s many decades of combined expertise in microbiology and food science – combines the best prebiotics, probiotic microbes and postbiotics in an optimal way. These millions of beneficial bacteria work together synergistically in the digestive system and within the entire body Microbiome, hence the name ‘synbiotic’.

“It’s all about creating the right ecosystem,” explains Bio-az CEO Maryann Thexton, who says Bio-az has found a great innovation ecosystem since setting up its laboratory at Cohort and taking part in this year’s LuminaX Accelerator.

“A healthy Microbiome provides a foundation of good health – there is a lot of science to support this now.”

The Bio-az core team of five began bringing the science behind Synbiotics together in 2018, sharing a common vision to ‘embed the wellness of synbiotics into everyday foods’ and waiting until 2020 to incorporate as a company (formerly known as Marl Corporation) and begin commercialisation.

Bio-az CEO Maryann Thexton

“It was important for us to take the time to get the science right in what is a rapidly emerging field,” says Thexton.

While scientists, and to a varying extent consumers, have understood the benefits of probiotics for some time and come to discover more about the role of pre-biotics, understanding the value of post-biotics (inanimate or so-called ‘dead cells’) is a more recent development. And putting them all together in a complimentary way makes all the difference.

This requires a marriage of microbiology with food technology to create stable and effective microbial ingredient blends that don’t negatively impact flavour, are able to withstand variables such as temperature change and that are commercially and logistically viable in a range of  ‘fridge free’ products – a key innovation. While there’s a lot of modern technology involved in formulating, the understanding behind the benefits of ingredients for a healthy Microbiome is ancient.

“Cultures all over the world have been fermenting foods for thousands of years and using peat and bog to achieve good microbial environments for food cultivation,” says Thexton.

Our modern food processing system has killed off good microbes and over-sanitised our foods, and people can relate to that.”

While acknowledging the element of scepticism felt by consumers navigating a crowded functional foods market, she says doing the R&D and publishing results to satisfy the FSANZ (Food Standards Code) has been critical for Bio-az, as is a partnership with German-based global natural ingredients distributor Döhler to find the right partners to work with in incorporating their synbiotic ingredients into the right products.

Human health is the focus, but Bio-az also produces pet blends – and what’s good for the horse (Thexton has a long background in animal health and specifically the Equine industry) isn’t necessarily good for the dog. The same goes for humans – what’s good for Peter, may not be just right for Paula.

In humans they can design symbiotic microbial blends focused on different health aims – the overall objective being to fight ‘baddies’ and strengthen the body’s immune system while nurturing the ‘goodies’ – but also more specifically to influence targeted health and nutritional requirements in the future.

Bio-az co-founder Lynette Rouse and CEO and co-founder Maryann Thexton

Aside from their powdered ingredients, Bio-az has produced its first synbiotic consumer product – Bioitica Water. Their customer Naked Life has introduced synbiotics into the burgeoning non-alcoholic distilled botanical beverages market through two products, Glow and Immunity, currently available in supermarkets

The Bio-az team want to help improve children’s health through introducing their ingredients into dried fruit and other kids snacks, while another pillar of the company is developing microbial blends for wound healing and skincare.

Even chocolate is set to get a microbial makeover!

Thexton, who is the only non-scientist in the foundation team, tries to achieve the right balance between science and business in their growth plans, and says the LuminaX program was both a valuable learning and re-learning process.

“Bio-az was a little more advanced as a company than some of the other start-ups involved, however we still got insights out of every workshop or mentoring session, whether it be learning something new, reinforcing existing knowledge or just benefiting from the energy and diverse ideas of peers in different areas of the healthtech sector,” she says.

Now with their lab location grounding them in the Precinct’s growing innovation system, BioAZ is confident it has the recipe for success in a highly-competitive global market.

Meanwhile, we’ll also drink to related exciting news, that Griffith University researchers in the Precinct have helped put postbiotics into coffee, in a partnership with CSIRO and local company Coffee Roasters Australia.

October 14, 2022 By Kathy Kruger

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From Research to Reality: GCHKP Talent Leads the LuminaX 2025 Cohort image

From Research to Reality: GCHKP Talent Leads the LuminaX 2025 Cohort

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Clinician Entrepreneurship Program wraps as a big success

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Associate Prof Lara Herrero leading the fight against mosquito-borne diseases and advancing medical research image

Associate Prof Lara Herrero leading the fight against mosquito-borne diseases and advancing medical research

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