Demand for public emergency department (ED) care across Australia increased by 37 per cent throughout the decade ending in early 2010.

This is the finding of a Queensland University of Technology (QUT) study published in the latest issue of Emergency Medicine Australasia, the journal of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.

"The growth in demand for ED services is a partial contributor to the crowding being experienced in EDs in Australia," Professor Gerry FitzGerald from QUT's School of Public Health said.

A new specialist cancer centre is being built at Lyell McEwin Hospital in Elizabeth Vale, one of Adelaide’s northern suburbs, with funding of $11.5 million provided jointly by the State and Commonwealth Government.

The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) has released a publication Ten of the Best Research Projects 2011, which profiles ten leading research projects undertaken by NHMRC-funded researchers.

The Boards of the  Children's Health Foundation Queensland and Royal Children's Hospital Foundation have agreed to create a single, new Children's Health Foundation Queensland that will preserve the structure of the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation - including staff and volunteers, - while also taking on a broader perspective across children's health state-wide.

Curtin University has responded to comments critical of its plans to establish a medical school.

The Federal and South Australian governments have announced a jointly funded $11.5 million cancer centre for Adelaide’s Lyell McEwin Hospital.

Anti-infective drug development company Biota Holdings has announced it will expand its headquarters in Victoria. The expansion is likely to see a 35 new, highly skilled jobs generated in the state by 2014.

The Federal Government looks likely to its private health means testing legislation through the Parliament, promising to win the government $2.4 billion in savings.

Principal directors of the George Institute for Global Health, Professor Stephen MacMahon and Professor Robyn Norton, have announced Associate Professor Vlado Perkovic as the executive director of the George Institute in Australia.

A research report published in the Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) has found ‘dramatic’ improvement in waiting times in Western Australia.

Pharmaceutical giant GlaxonSmithKline has announced it will invest $60 million in expanding its Boronia site in Victoria, which will generate 58 new jobs by 2017.

The University of Notre Dame Australia’s newly built Melbourne Clinical School at Werribee, Victoria has been officially opened.

A group of Australia’s leading cancer charities has called for a national cancer research plan to better coordinate investment in cancer research.

The Cancer Research Leadership Forum (CRLF) released a white paper, ‘Towards a National Cancer Research Plan’, on the eve of World Cancer Day (4 February).

The paper calls for the development of an all-encompassing national cancer research plan to coordinate investment in research and accelerate progress in cancer control.

Supported by Macquarie Group Foundation, the Cancer Research Leadership Forum is a voluntary coalition of major Australian charities, including Cancer Council Australia, formed in 2009 to fund cancer researchers and research projects, drive efficiencies across the sector and explore collaboration.

In 2011, almost $300 million was awarded to Australian cancer research projects by a range of funders from the public, private and community sectors.

Cancer Council CEO, Professor Ian Olver, said the plan was needed to reduce inefficiencies and gaps in the funding of cancer research.

“A research framework will provide a useful resource to help organisations set priorities for research funding,” Professor Olver said. “It is great to work with other cancer organisations towards a common goal.”

The Minister for Disability Reform, Jenny Macklin has announced funding of $4.9 million over three years to deliver an online video-based initiative to improve access to qualified allied health and education services for families and children with disability in regional and remote communities.

 

The Remote Hearing and Vision Services for Children Initiative will deliver services via the National Broadband Network (NBN) to about 125 additional children in regional and remote Australia, building on the 100 children already supported by the Government.

 

Ms Macklin said the NBN was breaking new ground in service delivery for young children with disability.

 

“The NBN gives children with disability and their families the opportunity to get the best possible start to life, regardless of where they live,” Ms Macklin said.

 

“If there is no specialist close to where they live, a child with disability can access ‘real time’ support and advice through these new online services. For example, a child will be able to meet with a speech pathologist in Brisbane and have a therapy session online through this new video conferencing service.

 

“This will make a real difference in the lives of children with disability and help reduce the stress and pressures on families trying to access specialist services that are only available in large towns and cities.”

 

Ms Macklin and Senator McLucas announced there will be a competitive tender process to deliver the new services shortly.

Diabetes has increased significantly in the Australian population over the past 20 years, but associated deaths continue to trend downward according to a new report released by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

Medication prescribing errors can be reduced by as much as 66 percent with the introduction of electronic prescribing technology in hospitals, new Australia-first research shows.

Premier Anna Bligh has announced that the new Queensland Mental Health Commission will be the most powerful agency of its type in Australia following receipt of the First Report of the Queensland Mental Health Commission Advisory Committee.

The Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences (MIPS), Monash University,  has signed a collaborative agreement with European pharmaceutical company, Les Laboratoires Servier, covering drug discovery and research on G Protein Coupled Receptors (GPCRs), the largest drug target family in the human genome.

The Victorian Minister for Health David Davis has released the Victorian Population Health Survey 2009 which provides a snapshot, based on a detailed survey of around 7,500 adults, of the general health and physical fitness of Victorians.             

The Menzies Research Institute Tasmania is looking for a new Director, following the resignation of Professor Simon Foote who has taken up his new position as Dean of the Australian School of Advanced Medicine at Macquarie University, Sydney.

The Queensland Government has committed to establishing a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit in Townsville, expected to commence operation in July.

 


Premier Anna Bligh said recurrent funding for the unit was estimated to be $8.75 million over the next two years.

 


The unit will initially operate as an integrated unit within the adult ICU before building up to a stand-alone unit. Two paediatric beds will be established in 2012-13, an additional bed in 2013-14, with more beds to follow as services ramp up in response to demand and as recruitment and training continue.

 


Two independent paediatric intensive care specialists currently reviewing paediatric demand at Townsville Hospital, as well as a doctor and a nurse from the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit, will head a steering committee to oversee implementation of the new service.

 


About 30 new staff will be hired including paediatric intensive specialists, new nurses and other staff.

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