Kate Hunter

About Dr Kate Hunter

Senior Research Fellow, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program

  • PhD,
  • MPH

Dr Kate Hunter, PhD, MPH is a senior research fellow with Guunu-maana (Heal), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health program at The George Institute and conjoint senior lecturer at the University of NSW. She is elected chair of Kidsafe NSW (2018-current) and an elected Executive member of the Australasian Injury Prevention Network (2019-current). Working at the knowledge interface – bringing together Indigenous and western knowledges - Dr Hunter’s expertise is in applying an equity lens across the injury prevention spectrum through the conduct and evaluation of complex community and hospital-based programs, ensuring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices are central to her work.

Dr Hunter prioritises translational research. She has a track record in scale-up of successful programs, with her research being cited in policy and national guidelines. Dr Hunter is committed to supporting the next generation of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander and non-Aboriginal researchers working in partnership with Aboriginal communities and organisations. She has supervised four Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander PhD candidates to completion.

 

The determinants for death in hospital following moderate to severe traumatic brain injury in Australia

Emergency Medicine Australasia Date published:

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ meanings of home: a systematic scoping review

Housing Studies Date published:

Administration of Burns First Aid Treatment to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in community settings

Burns Date published:

Understanding burn injury among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children - results of a two-year cohort study

Burns Date published:

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