People at The George Institute
We have a diverse team of researchers, operational specialists and global partners who work together to improve global health. With extensive knowledge, they provide key insights into our initiatives and drive practical solutions to make meaningful change on both a personal and policy scale. Meet our passionate, world-class team members who drive our innovative programs.
People at The George Institute - Cloned
Consumer and Community Advisory Committee
About the Consumer and Community Advisory Committee (CCAC)
The George Institute for Global Health, Australia's Consumer and Community Advisory Committee (CCAC) has been providing consumer leadership since December 2021. The Committee functions at the organisational level and works with Institute leaders.
The objective of the CCAC is to ensure the research The George Institute does is relevant, important and makes the biggest difference to the Australian population.
The CCAC has been instrumental in developing a CCI framework and strategy for the Institute. These resources guide the work of the CCI Program, and the development and engagement of the Consumer and Community Network.
Aim1. Inform the Institute’s programs of work including identifying areas of need within the community2. Inform CCI strategies and support functions to facilitate partnerships between researchers, consumers, and community members3. Promote the Institute’s work, ensuring that relevant communic
Meta-research and evidence synthesis unit
Program overview:
The meta-research and evidence synthesis unit is dedicated to improving healthcare and the knowledge ecosystem through:
Meta-research(research on research) : to analyse the philosophical basis, methods, reporting, evaluation, and incentives for research. We also specialise in research priority setting, and core outcome set development.
Evidence synthesis: conducting scoping reviews, evidence gap maps, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, rapid evidence synthesis, and qualitative evidence synthesis.
Capacity building: On evidence synthesis , meta-research, and its application.
Program objectives:
The overarching objectives of this program are to:
To improve the quality of primary research, evidence synthesis, and knowledge translation.
To foster pro-justice and pro-equity approaches in the knowledge ecosystem.
To conduct high quality evidence synthesis using fit for purpose methods to inform policy, and practice.
Health workforce economics
Program overview:
While health workers drive population health outcomes, investments into their training, recruitment and retention often do not align with system goals resulting in wasted resources and worse health. This program investigates sustainable ways to build the workforce needed for universal health coverage. Using methods like discrete choice experiments, economic evaluations and analyses of survey and administrative datasets, we investigate health system incentives, policy interventions and financing models to improve the motivation, retention and training of health workers, reduce corruption and investigate the economic impacts and investment case for greater use of non-physician health workers.
Program objectives:
The program aims to contribute to the development and scale-up of sustainable interventions to tackle global workforce challenges and improve population health.
View projects
Centre for Sex and Gender Equity in Health and Medicine
The health of women and girls, people with variations in sex characteristics (intersex people) and trans and gender-diverse people has been understudied in health and medical research. An almost exclusive focus on male cells, male animals and men in health and medical research has led to poorer health outcomes and evidence gaps for women, intersex people, and trans and gender-diverse people, and inefficient health spending. Women’s health research often focuses only on their sexual, reproductive, and maternal health rather than the leading causes of death and disability for women. Research on intersex and gender-diverse people is even less developed and availability of health data remains a challenge. For some health conditions, we also have very little information on men and boys, given the conditions occur predominantly in women. The Centre for Sex and Gender Equity in Health and Medicine is addressing these inequities through world-class research, advocacy for policy change, and capacity building
Harnessing AI to improve women’s health
The George Institute's Women’s Health Program aims to improve the health of women and girls around the world by adopting a life course and equity approach. We are a global group of researchers, clinicians, policy and advocacy specialists, and communications specialists who are passionate about improving the lives and health of women and girls through conducting high-quality, innovative and cutting-edge research.
AI and women’s health
Artificial intelligence is changing our world with exciting potential to improve women’s health. Some examples include improved diagnosis, prediction of future disease, clinical decision support, health worker training and continuous supportive supervision, and rapid evidence synthesis. However, AI also brings challenges, with the risk of entrenching biases for groups underrepresented in large datasets used to train AI models, the risk of hallucinations, a changing regulatory environment, concerns around the energy required, and safety concerns for use
Clinical and community trials
Designing high quality trials
Our clinical and community trials span a wide range of therapeutic areas, along with innovative approaches in design and conduct.
Our focus includes the following:
Enhancing diversity in clinical trialsClinical trials often underrepresent women, First Nations people, and diverse communities. The George Institute works to address barriers, report on diversity, and implement co-designed strategies to reflect real populations. Communities are involved throughout the process, ensuring trials are relevant and impactful.
Integrating planetary health in clinical trialsClimate change affects health, and trials can help address its impacts on air, water, and temperature. The George Institute also reduces its own carbon footprint, ensuring research is environmentally responsible. We strive to answer critical health questions with minimal environmental impact.Learn more
Innovation decentralised trialsDecentralised trials let participants join fro
Health systems science
statistics on health systems science
5billionpeople lack access to essential health services worldwide
1in 5health policies and interventions are distributed equally across social groups
Supporting global health systems equity and progression
The George Institute’s Health Systems Science Program utilises a global multidisciplinary approach to research. Our projects are designed to investigate different health systems and interventions and assess their costs, challenges and effectiveness. With this deeper understanding of how health systems function we can effect deeper change at every level of the health systems sector.
Our programs target key areas to achieve towards specific outcomes:
To drive global healthcare equity
To evaluate and address technological, economic and systemic impacts
To provide effective and researched reform strategies
To identify and address global healthcare workforce challenges
Our focus a
Emerging thought leaders
Our emerging thought leaders are passionate about driving change and taking on current challenges to improve health worldwide. As early and mid-career professionals, they offer new perspectives and innovative ideas to push boundaries and make advancements in health research, treatments and policy. Meet our emerging thought leaders and discover how they are making meaningful change.
2024 Cohort
Alice WittResearch and Policy Fellow, The George Institute for Global HealthMore info about Alice WittResaercg and Policy Fellow, The George Institute for Global HealthAlice Witt is a Research and Policy Fellow based in the UK office. She works on the MESSAGE (Medical Science Sex and Gender Equity) project, a policy initiative to improve how biomedical, health and care research accounts for sex and gender. Through this work, she engages with stakeholders across the UK research sector to co-design key policy documents and support research funders to implement new sex and gender policies. The
Our multilateral relationships
Our multilateral relationships harness the power of combined action, collaborating with others to address the world's leading causes of death and disability.
ECOSOC Consultative StatusAs an organisation with Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Consultative status, The George Institute has access to not only ECOSOC, but also to its many subsidiary bodies, to the various human rights mechanisms of the United Nations, ad-hoc processes and special events organized by the President of the General Assembly. Consultative status is granted by ECOSOC upon recommendation of the Committee on NGOs, which is composed of 19 Member States.Learn more
UNFCC Observer StatusAs a UNFCC Observer, The George Institute may be among other participant categories at meetings and conferences in the UNFCCC process. Representatives of observer organizations represent a broad spectrum of interests.Learn more
WHO Civil Society Working Group on Climate and Health memberAs a member of WHO Civil Society Working
Emerging thought leaders - 2022 cohorts
Our emerging thought leaders are passionate about driving change and taking on current challenges to improve health worldwide. As early and mid-career professionals, they offer new perspectives and innovative ideas to push boundaries and make advancements in health research, treatments and policy. Meet our emerging thought leaders and discover how they are making meaningful change.
Amanpreet KaurResearch Fellow, The George Institute for Global HealthMore info about Amanpreet KaurDr Amanpreet Kaur is a registered clinical psychologist with M.Phil. and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from NIMHANS, Bengaluru. Her areas of focus at The George Institute are reducing stigma related to mental health, improving mental health awareness and care, and development and implementation of psychosocial interventions. Amanpreet’s research interests include mindfulness and mindfulness-integrated psychological interventions, tele-medicine, palliative care, psycho-oncology, caring of carers, and development o