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News

Filed Under: STUDY Tagged With: QAHS, Queensland Academy of Health Sciences, students

2020’s brightest school students provide future workforce pipeline

Queensland Academy of Health Science top-performing students, Aidan Luchs (left), sister Camille Luchs, Maggie Chi and Angie Zhou

A future talent pipeline is assured if the results of 2020 graduating students at the Precinct’s Queensland Academies Health Sciences Campus (QAHS) are anything to go by.

One of only three Queensland state schools for highly-capable students in Years 10 to 12, QAHS schools students in the prestigious International Baccalaureate Diploma Program, with the 2020 cohort achieving results well above the international average, and several students receiving top results that place them amongst a global elite.

Service and leadership key to achievement

Whilst Queensland’s first graduating class to be awarded an ATAR ranking received their scores before Christmas, the 136 high-achievers at QAHS had to wait until last month to receive their results – a wait well and truly worth it for Maggie Chi, who received a perfect score, IB45, the equivalent of an ATAR 99.95.

Joy was an obvious reaction for the international STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Maths) student leader.

“I was overwhelmed with joy when I received my results. It was really rewarding to see all my hard work pay off,” says Maggie.

Maggie has received a Sir Samuel Griffith Award of Excellence scholarship to study at Griffith, where she’ll undertake a Bachelor of Medical Science, as well as bringing her broad passion for combining economics and science to make a difference – her research, conducted as an integral part of the IB program, examined the ecological and economic impacts of salinity on agriculture in the Murray-Darling basin.

She was an Australian team member to the Asia-Pacific Forum for Science Talented in 2019, and part of a third-placed team for the 2020 Queensland AI for Good Challenge, a global competition run by Microsoft that saw another QAHS team top the state.

Joining Maggie at Griffith in the Bachelor of Medical Science degree is fellow high-performer Angie Zhou, who earned a near-perfect IB44 after a busy year in which she represented Australia at the International Biology Olympiad and won the Griffith Health Award for excellence in the IB core.

Angie , who honed her leadership skills as Gold Coast City Council Junior Mayor in 2019 and was also part of the Australian team for the Asia-Pacific Forum for Science Talented, completed her summer research internship at the innovative Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute in Melbourne.

“I chose Griffith to study because the medical science program is really good for getting direct entry into the doctor of medicine,“ says Angie.

“The Bachelor’s degree is only 2 years, so it effectively shortens the pathway to become a doctor and I found that a really good choice for my future.”

Angie Zhou (left) and Maggie Chi

Not to be outdone was QAHS’s top student, or “Academy Optimus’, Camille Luchs, for her innovation, service and leadership-focused achievements, as well as the outstanding academic results that saw her also earn an IB45, just pipping her brother Aidan, who received an IB44.

Amongst Camille’s remarkable achievements were a Mayor’s Telstra Technology Entrepreneurial Spirt Award for her creative initiative to tackle diabetes, while she and Aidan both received the Rotary International Interact All-Rounder Award for outstanding leadership and community involvement.

The QAHS average IB score is 35, compared with the global average of 29.8.

QAHS is conducting an information session on 16 February for 2022 Year 10 enrolments – register here.

 

February 1, 2021 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: BUSINESS, PROJECTS, Research, TECHNOLOGY Tagged With: Cohort, Griffith University, Lumina, LuminaX, NHMRC

New year, new appointments, projects and programs

Research figures and rankings grow, as Cohort launches the LuminaX Healthtech Accelerator and Dr Peter Binks (right) takes up a leading role at Griffith University

Dr Peter Binks started out with stars in his eyes – literally – studying the structure and shape of galaxies to earn his PhD from the prestigious Oxford University, after completing a science degree majoring in physics (Quantum Mechanics to be precise) at the University of Tasmania. With such impressive smarts, the academic universe was open to him, but Dr Binks instead chose a corporate career that has spanned more than three stellar decades. 

“The stars and planets are one of the most fundamental of human interests, and involve some of the most remarkable scientific concepts.  We know so little about forces and timescales bigger than we ever see on Earth,” Peter Binks reflects, with the awe and enthusiasm of someone with a lifelong commitment to inspiring interest in science (he’s served on the Advisory Boards of In2science and the Institute of Railway Technology and is a Director of Engagement Australia).

And while there’s nothing quite like the lure of space to capture imaginations, Peter’s true passion is for science that is very much down to earth.

“I loved my time as a physicist, but that wasn’t where I could contribute the most.  As my career has developed, I’ve realised my passion is for bringing science and technology to where it can help change people’s lives, or strengthen our economy, or address difficult problems like those of climate change.

I left the university world to learn more about the corporate and business sector, to gain the skills to develop and lead technology activities that will become products and processes from which we all benefit.”

Peter has joined Griffith after working with large businesses such as BHP, Telstra and McKinsey in Sydney, Melbourne, and San Francisco, before spending the last decade in the not-for-profit and startup sectors.

Across a diverse career, he has run a nanotechnology company, and a scholarship foundation, and served on the Boards of medtech and energytech firms. He’s a former CEO of the Business Higher Education Round Table (BHERT), of the General Sir John Monash Foundation, of the Garnet Passe & Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation, and of Nanotechnology Victoria, which he guided for six years.

With this expertise, Peter is enthusiastic about the opportunity for the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct to be a testbed for advanced nanomaterials and sensor technologies.

“Over the last decade, the application of nanotechnology to health diagnostics and therapeutics has moved from concept towards reality,” Peter enthuses.

The Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct is well placed to become a leader in trialing and demonstrating an array of new technologies, many of which are being developed by Griffith researchers in the Queensland Micro and Nanotechnology Centre (see video below).

One of the interesting applications being developed out of the QMNC are long-lasting, flexible electronics for use in implantable devices such as deep brain stimulators and cardiac pacemakers. These could be incorporated into new generations of long-life pacemakers and inserts.”

Peter’s role at Griffith is to develop and implement a university-wide engagement strategy; positioning the University for partnerships to support its major research, education, and cultural activities. He’s arrived as research success reaches a new high, less than 12 months after Professor Mario Pinto joined Griffith from Canada, as DVC Research and Chair of the Precinct’s Strategic Advisory Group.

2020 record year for research rankings, income and commercialisation

For the first time, Griffith University was ranked in the top 250 in four major global research rankings, research income hit a record $87.4 million, including strong growth in industry-funded research.

Total commissioned commercialisation revenue for Griffith Enterprise in 2020 was $38.2M, the largest in the university’s history. 

Griffith researchers published over 100 papers covering various aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic in the fields of medicine, public health, social work, environmental sciences, ecology, tourism, management, nursing, psychology, education, suicide prevention and criminology.

The university has recently released its Research and Innovation Plan 2021-25, which targets a top 200 global ranking, and a top 100 in at least 10 academic areas.

When stars collide - start-ups, corporates, clinicians, researchers, philanthropists

Given his experience across the constellation of worlds – academic, research, corporate, start-up and not-for-profit, Peter Binks is perhaps uniquely placed to understand how sparks of imagination can fly when the sectors collide (or at least connect), and to ‘manage the magic’.

“Our challenge is to stimulate, guide, and manage growth,” he says.

Attracting new partners to the precinct will bring talent and investment, and create opportunities for the activities already here.  Not every business will succeed, and not every opportunity will work, and we need to ensure new opportunities are generated so businesses can pivot and evolve.”

One exciting way to accelerate ‘collisions’ (that hopefully don’t crash) is to bring ideas and expertise together in an intensive and structured way – enter Cohort Innovation Space’s new LuminaX Healthtech Accelerator program, launched this month and kicking off in March to give 10 start-up entrepreneurs the chance to launch or scale-up, delivered in partnership with the Queensland AI Hub and IntelliHQ, and with the involvement of 25 industry partners, including Gold Coast Health.

Associate Professor Kate Seib is one of the Institute for Glycomics researchers who share in $2.56m in NHMRC grant funding

Also kicking off are seven newly-announced National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Ideas projects worth $4.5m and led by Griffith, along with three other projects to which Griffith researchers will significantly contribute. The projects tackle a range of health conditions such as influenza, brain injury and osteoarthritis.

With new appointments, programs and research projects, 2021 is shaping as a real year of growth for the Precinct as it consolidates a reputation as a new post-pandemic horizon and haven of opportunity.

January 29, 2021 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: BUSINESS, HEALTH, INVEST, People of the Precinct, PROJECTS, Research

Bright spots in 2020 and bright future in 2021 and beyond

Professor Mario Pinto, Deputy Vice Chancellor (Research), Griffith University and Chair GCHKP Strategic Advisory Group

2020 marks the 20th anniversary of the Precinct’s Institute for Glycomics at Griffith University, and Institute founder Professor Mark von Itzstein started on a high, by being named Gold Coast Citizen of the Year on Australia Day. Of course the year, and the celebrations didn’t quite go to plan.

We look forward to Australia Day 2021, with one of our Precinct’s favourite people, Dr Dinesh Palipana OAM, named Queensland Australian of the Year, and in the running for the nation’s top honour, capping off a stellar year for Queensland’s first quadriplegic doctor.

In between, much has happened in the Precinct and we can be sure that amidst the challenges, change and ‘pandemic pivoting’ that Australia is indeed the lucky country, and Queensland and the Gold Coast are the best places to be for a bright future, as GCHKP Strategic Advisory Group Chair Professor Mario Pinto reflects.

“For all the upheaval, and that very much includes our university sector, this pandemic year has brought research success, new partnerships and some business growth, and certainly heightened commercial interest in our Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct, beyond the COVID-19 horizon.

Who would have predicted that the pandemic would serve as a catalyst for increased interest in our Precinct?”

Probiotics-based biotech company Cluster Biotech moved into our Precinct in May, taking one of the new lab spaces at Cohort Innovation Space, and is already building new business. Compliance software start-up Virtual Mgr, also based at Cohort, turned the pandemic into an opportunity to pivot and even expand into the UK. Just a couple of ‘bright spots’.

Geography, stability and relative safety are strong attributes that will be more important than ever for our Precinct’s future success.

Social distancing has altered perspectives on company locations and remote working and only intensified the premium lifestyle appeal of the Gold Coast, as is evident by interstate and international company interest and reports of growing real estate sales through interstate migration, in the general absence of overseas migration and opportunities for international engagement.

Like other innovation precincts, we have a significant opportunity to build on renewed respect for science and research, and the appreciation of the value of our world-class Australian health system.

Given our healthcare assets and emerging and growing capability in advanced design and other Industry 4.0 technologies for future manufacturing, particularly in the area of medical technologies, our Precinct is well-placed to ride on a wave of interest and investment in the new economy, that will lead us through recovery and drive future growth.

Initiatives such as the Australian Government’s $1.5billion Modern Manufacturing Strategy and the focus on sovereign capacity and supply chain resilience, will assist us to partner with and attract innovative companies actively engaged in R&D, enrich and grow our existing innovation ecosystem, and enhance our impact.

Importantly, as an emerging Precinct, in a youthful city and relatively young nation, we genuinely represent a new horizon for global talent and innovative businesses, in a post-pandemic world.”

2020 Bright Spots

Professor of Emergency Care Julia Crilley (second from left) and nurse colleagues

Well-earned recognition in this International Year of the Nurse

2020 could not have been a more appropriate year to dedicate to acknowledging the amazing work of nurses.

Here in the GCHKP, Griffith University celebrated its Nursing and Midwifery program ranking No 1 in Australia, and No 2 in the world!

Meanwhile, Gold Coast Health became the first full health service in Australia to win prestigious International Magnet recognition for Nursing and Midwifery services.

Dedicated Gold Coast University Hospital nurse and Professor of Emergency Care Julia Crilley OAM was recognised in the Queen’s Birthday Honours, alongside Griffith University Pro-Vice-Chancellor Health, Professor Sheena Reilly AM, who is a renowned paediatric health researcher.

COVID - health and research response

  • Professor Michael Good AO, Principal Research Leader, Institute for Glycomics, past Chairman of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and Queensland Great was appointed to the National Covid-19 Health and Research Advisory Committee. 

    Professor Michael Good
  • Gold Coast University Hospital treated some of Australia’s first COVID-19 patients in late January, and completed major COVID training across the health service, including 250 clinical simulations in April alone.
  • COVID 19 Clinical Research – researchers and clinicians have developed a world-first Precision Medicine Data Platform, including a COVID-19 dashboard, to help ICU clinicians make critical patient care decisions utilising artificial intelligence (AI). Start-up company Datarwe was awarded $1.5m Advance Queensland funding for platform and has set up a new data lab as Queensland’s new AI Hub for health at Cohort Innovation Space.
  • COVID-19 vaccine and therapy research – there’s been extensive research into COVID-19 vaccines and therapies as well as pandemic impacts, including a multi-pronged Glycomics approach (which included a $200,000 investment by the Queensland Government and City of Gold Coast); $300,000 from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) awarded to Professor Nigel McMillan of Griffith’s Menzies Health Institute Qld for gene silencing (sRNA) technologies targeting COVID; and Professor Suresh Mahalingham, also of Menzies, partnering with a major Indian vaccines company to develop a live attenuated COVID vaccine.

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Research, clinical trials, partnerships and developments

A major partnership between Griffith University and Gilmour Space will speed the launch of new low earth orbit satellites
  • Aerospace technology – Griffith University and Gilmour Space signed a major 5-year partnership that will see Low Earth Orbit satellites developed locally and launched to space by 2023, with extensive R&D anticipated in 3D printing and prototyping, sensor technology and AI, along with a range of student training opportunities.
  • Clinical trials – The GCHKP accelerates as a clinical trial hub during COVID-19 – Griffith University’s Clinical Trial unit became the first location in the world to recruit patients for a multi-national rheumatology trial while screening the first patient in Australia for another multi-national trial. Griffith researchers were awarded a $2m grant from Queensland Cancer Council to expand ovarian cancer clinical trials., while other university scientists received $1.46m from the National Health and Medical Research Council for diagnostics and therapies for chronic fatigue syndrome. Gold Coast Health reported 94 active clinical trials and 151 research projects, including a world-first trial of a robotic arm brain aneurysm procedure and will co-lead a $2.3m trial into treatments for deadly sepsis.
  • Medical technologies – materials science researchers developed new implantable electronics for use in brain stimulation and cardiac pacemakers; health technology researchers won the national iAwards 2020 Business Industry Solution of the Year with a device to better identify and treat pain, while another major biomedical engineering project is developing world-first artificial wrist ligament.
Proxima – child health and education centre of excellence

The $80m Proxima development by Evans Long was announced as a prestige integrated centre of excellence in child education and health – the first private commercial development in the GCHKP’s Lumina commercial cluster. Construction is set to start in the first half of 2021, with Sanctuary Learning Adventure named as the innovative operator of a special-needs focused childcare centre.

Cohort Labs opened in May

Cohort Labs – Cohort Innovation Space opened new PC1 and PC2 labs in May, including a new biotechnology lab quickly taken up by probiotics-based biotech company Cluster Biotech.

December 16, 2020 By Kathy Kruger

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Healthtech Summit celebrates a future of personalised medicine, AI and hope

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

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