TGI researchers hailed as women leaders

Senior researchers from The George Institute for Global Health are being hailed as women leaders.

Today, Professor Rebecca Ivers was announced as one of Australia’s most influential female innovators, in The Australian Financial Review and Westpac 100 Women of Influence Awards in the Innovation category.

Yesterday, Professor Jane Latimer was featured as one of Australia’s 31 most powerful part-timers on the website Women’s Agenda. Professor Latimer says her international reputation and achievements have been made possible by her part-time status at TGI.

“Had my research position been offered on a full-time basis only I would have had to reconsider my choice of career,” Professor Latimer said.

Respiratory Division Director Professor Christine Jenkins is featured in a new book by ABC broadcaster and journalist Geraldine Doogue, titled The Climb – Conversations with Australian Women in Power.

In the book she talks about how she has managed to juggle being a researcher, doctor, mother, wife, friend, sister, daughter, reader, gym-attender, and gardener. In what is a gigantic understatement, she says: “I have a lot of energy and can fit a lot into my day. I can burn the candle at both ends…”

Global TGI executive director Professor Robyn Norton, who co-founded the institute 15 years ago, says she is delighted at the recognition of the work of her female colleagues, for their leadership as women as well as their international reputations as academics.

“We are putting a big emphasis on working out how we can help our female researchers progress to become future leaders.”

“TGI has put in place a gender equity group to work out how best to provide practical solutions at times of career disruption because of family commitments.”

Professor Norton says recent weeks have been significant for achievements by TGI female researchers. Half of the four recent NHMRC research fellowships awarded to TGI researchers went to females.

“I would like to congratulate Professor Anushka Patel and Professor Cathie Sherrington for the funding wins, which will help them with their flagship projects.”

In addition, Professor Patel has become a Fellow and a Member of Council of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences, and Dr Lizzy Dunford recently received the World Obesity Federation’s New Investigator Award.

Event

Safety 2024 – the 15th World Conference on Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion

The 15th World Conference on Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion (Safety 2024) will be held between 2nd - 4th September 2024 at the Taj Palace in New Delhi, India.

Safety 2024 global event will focus worldwide attention on safety and injury prevention. This will gather international experts in the field with a united goal of “Building a safer future for all: Equitable and sustainable strategies for injury and violence prevention”.

The conference hopes to:

  • Have a lecture/scholarship in the name of Dinesh Mohan.
  • Encourage youth participation through inclusion and involvement.
  • Focus on the need for civil society engagement and involvement.
  • Encourage equity by ensuring balanced gender, country, seniority, etc profiles in all committees.
  • Build capacity in the region.
  • Facilitate policy action for injury and violence prevention in India.
  • Raise the profile of The George Institute India as a world-renowned research institute and foster strong collaborations between WHO Collaborating Centres in India, the region, developing a network for injury prevention and safety promotion.

The conference is hosted by The George Institute for Global Health in collaboration with three other WHO Collaborating Centres in the region, viz Transportation Research and Injury Prevention Center at the Indian Institute of Technology (TRIP), IIT Delhi, Department of Emergency Medicine, All India Institute for Medical Sciences (AIIMS), and the Department of Epidemiology, National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS).

The conference is co-sponsored by the World Health Organization.