Skip to main content
The George Institute for Global Health
  • About us

    About us

    We are on a mission to improve global health. Through rigorous, high-quality research, we’re striving to achieve meaningful and lasting change on a local and global scale. 
    Discover who we are
    • Governance
      • Board of directors
      • Executive leadership team
      • Policies
      • Annual reports and financial statements
    • Our people
      • People at The George Institute
      • Emerging thought leaders
      • Distinguished fellows
    • Affiliates and partners
    • Innovation
    • Careers
    Medical research careers
    We are hiring!

    Careers

    At The George Institute, your work will help find solutions to some of the world’s greatest health challenges.  We are not just a workplace - we are a community united by a shared mission.
    Work with us
  • Our research

    Our research

    Our research finds solutions to some of the world’s biggest health challenges in critical areas including women’s health, planetary health, and food policy. Within each program, individual projects target specific challenges, providing local solutions to improve global outcomes.   
    Learn more about our research
    • Areas of our research
    • Our research projects
    • Clinical and community trials

    Our Research Mega Menu Cards Container

  • Our impact

    Our impact

    Our high quality, rigorous research makes a real difference to people's health, particularly those facing the most barriers.
    Find out more about the impact of our work
    • Stories of our impact
    • Policy statements and recommendations
    • Impact Report

    Impact Mega Menu Cards Container

  • News & media

    News and media

    Stay up to date with the latest breakthroughs, stories, and developments in global health research from The George Institute. Access articles, videos, and updates that spotlight our work across the world.
    Explore the latest news and insights
    • News
    • Events
    • Videos
    • Podcasts

    News and Media Mega Menu Cards Container

  • Support us

    Support us

    Help us make a lasting impact. By supporting our independent research, you fuel life-saving innovations that improve health outcomes for millions around the globe.
    See how you can support global health innovation
    • Donate
    • Ways to give
    • Your impact
    • Get involved

    Support us Mega Menu Cards Container

    Face of a woman looking ahead

    Be a part of our mission for healthier and longer lives

    Our research relies on the generous support of people like you. Show your support for breakthrough medical research today.
    Donate now
Donate

Filters

Filter by date

Associate Professor Puhong ZHANG - 张普洪

Profile

Dr. Zhang Puhong, Senior Research Fellow, Associate Professor and doctoral supervisor of the University of New South Wales.

He is currently the Associate Director of The George Institute for Global Health(China). The main research areas are diabetes management, nutrition and lifestyle, maternal and child health and digital health.

He is currently a member of the Standing Committee of big data branch of Chinese Nutrition Society, a member of the Standing Committee of medical and industrial integration of Chinese Institute of Command and Control, and China leader of Action on Salt China Unit.

In the past 10 years, as the project leader, he has been funded nearly 20 research projects by Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases (GACD), the International Diabetes Federation (IDF), the State Ministry of Science and Technology, the British Medical Research Council (MRC) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), Australian Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and other institutions, with a total scientific research fund of 170 million. The projects cover the vast majority of provinces, cities and autonomous regions in China.

More than 80 scientific research papers have been published in journals including The Lancet, BMJ, PLoS Medicine, Hypertension, Nutrients and JMIR.

He has led the establishment of more than 20 information systems, including “Salt Reduction Promotion”, “EduSaltS Cloud classroom”, “Food prophet”, “SmartDiabetes”, “1000 days”, “mHealth-based Integrated Management for Children with Illness” and Mobilephone-based electronic data collection system”, which are used to support public health education, disease management and the improvement of scientific research.

Cancer

Cancer is a leading global health challenge, with over 20 million new cases diagnosed annually—a number expected to rise significantly in the coming decades.

Treating hypertension with single pill combinations saves lives and money

News / Media release 30 Jul 2025

Mei Ling Yap honoured with 2025 Jeannie Ferris Award for dedication to equity in cancer

News 29 Jul 2025

Professor Alta Schutte

Profile

Alta Schutte is a SHARP Professor and Theme Lead for Cardiac, Vascular and Metabolic Medicine at UNSW Sydney; and Professorial Fellow at The George Institute Australia. She holds honorary appointments at the North-West University and University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa. She is the Past President of the International Society of Hypertension, Company Secretary of the Australian Cardiovascular Alliance, and Co-Chair of the Australian National Hypertension Taskforce.

Alta is a leading researcher with extensive experience in clinical trials and population-based studies in the field of blood pressure, hypertension and cardiovascular health. She has been the Chief Investigator of several multidisciplinary studies, published >450 papers in the field, and supervised over 85 postgraduate students. She is Chief Investigator of several Australian-funded trials and is a NHMRC Investigator Grant Leadership Fellow.

She is involved in numerous international consortia, such as the Global Burden of Disease study, the NCD Risk Factor Collaboration, May Measurement Month global blood pressure screening campaign, World Health Organization working groups and the Lancet Commission of Hypertension. She is the senior author of the 2020 International Society of Hypertension Global Hypertension Guidelines. She is Associate Editor of the journal, Hypertension, and has received numerous international awards for her work, most recently the 2022 American Heart Association’s Harriet Dustan Award, and 2023 Peter Sleight Excellence Award in Hypertension Clinical Research from the World Hypertension League.

Dr Cheryl Carcel

Profile

Associate Professor Cheryl Carcel is the Head of the Brain Health Program at The George Institute for Global Health. She also works part-time as a clinical neurologist. Cheryl is an NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellow, an Australian and New Zealand Stroke Organisation Emerging Stroke Clinician and Scientist and a World Heart Federation Emerging Leader in Stroke. Other appointments include editorial board member for Stroke journal, guest editor for Cerebrovascular Diseases journal and World Stroke Organization co-chair for the scientific statement on Sex Differences in Stroke. 

A/Prof Carcel’s research focuses on health equity, in particular working on sex and gender differences, women’s brain health and policies encouraging disaggregation of data by sex and gender. She has extensive experience and interest in clinical trials, stroke prevention and treatment, migraine and cognition as well as supervising and mentoring students and junior colleagues.

Turning the tide short

Turning the tide on drowning Drowning is one of the world’s biggest health challenges claiming around 300,000 lives each year. Over two-thirds of deaths occur in Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific region. As the climate changes, extreme weather events are on the rise and drowning accounts for three-quarters of all deaths in flood disasters. Turning the tide on the drowning epidemic requires urgent action. So we’re working with vulnerable communities in coastal wetland regions of India, including Kerala and the Sundarbans in West Bengal, to understand the scale of the burden and find solutions. STATistics on DROWNING 300,000deathsworldwide 2/3 of drowninghappens in Southeast asia and western pacific regions 12 deaths per dayin west bengal among children under 10 90%of deathsof children aged 1–4 are within 50m of home * Read statistics sources WHO “If we trained 17 years ago, then I could have saved my own child

Turning the tide on drowning

Where there’s water there’s risk Drowning is one of the world’s biggest health challenges claiming around 300,000 lives each year. It casts a particularly long shadow in Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific region where over two-thirds of all global drownings occur. As climate change disrupts weather patterns, extreme events such as floods are on the rise with drowning accounting for three-quarters of all deaths in flood disasters. Climate change compounds the risk of drowning in many parts of the world. Turning the tide on the drowning epidemic requires urgent action. We work with communities that are particularly vulnerable to drowning in coastal, wetland regions of India, including Kerala and the Sundarbans in West Bengal to understand the scale of the burden and find solutions. The drowning trap: children and vulnerable communities Drowning is sometimes referred to as a silent epidemic - unseen, unheard and unaccounted for. The true toll is unknown,

Kidneys as sentinels of environmental change

News / Opinion piece 02 Jul 2025

Professor John Myburgh AO

Profile

Professor John A Myburgh AO, is the Director, Professoriate at the George Institute for Global Health.

He is also Professor of Intensive Care Medicine, University of New South Wales and Senior Intensive Care Physician at the St George Hospital, Sydney.

He holds a National Health and Medical Research Council Leadership Investigator Grant Fellowship and an honorary Professorial appointment at the Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine.

He has an extensive research record of accomplishment over 30 years and is regarded as a national and international expert in catecholamine neurophysiology and pharmacology, trials of clinical management of traumatic brain injury, fluid resuscitation and in the development and co-ordination of over 40 clinical trials in Intensive Care Medicine.

He has published over 275 refereed research publications, (including 12 papers in the New England Journal of Medicine) and 45 book chapters and monographs. His current h-index is 44, calculated from 244 publications in SCOPUS, yielding over 15500 citations, with a citation trajectory of 900 to 2200 citations per annum from 2010 to the present.

He has received over $48M grant funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council. In addition to other national and international grants, total cumulative research funding to the present is over A$87M.

He has delivered over 400 presentations at national and international scientific meetings since 1994, including over 50 plenary presentations at major scientific congresses.

He is a Foundation Member and Past-Chairman of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group. He was instrumental in the establishment of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre at the Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine. 

He has made a substantive contribution to education in Intensive Care Medicine, both at undergraduate and postgraduate levels over the last 25 years. He was instrumental in establishing the College of Intensive Care Medicine, serving as a Fellowship examiner for twelve years, on the Board for ten years and as the first elected President from 2010-2012.

He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Science and served on the Council of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine for six years and as Secretary-General from 2017-2019.

In the 2014 Queen’s Birthday honours, he was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for distinguished service to medicine as an intensive care medical practitioner, educator and researcher, and as an international innovator in patient management

Associate Professor Anthony Delaney

Profile

Anthony Delaney is a father of three and husband to a multi-talented anaesthetist. He is a Fellow of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and the College of Intensive Care Medicine. He is a Professorial Fellow in the Division of Critical Care at the George Institute for Global Health, also holding appointments as Associate Professor at Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney and an adjunct Associate Professor at the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, in the Department of Epidemiology and Preventative Health at Monash University. He maintains a clinical role as Senior Staff Specialist in the Malcolm Fisher Department of Intensive Care Medicine at The Royal North Shore Hospital.

Associate Professor Delaney’s major research interests are centred on improving methods of resuscitation of patients with sepsis and septic shock and improving outcomes for patients suffering acute severe brain injuries.

Dr Manoj Saxena

Profile

Manoj continues to practise as an Intensive Care Physician and is based part-time at St. George Public Hospital in Sydney, playing a key role in the intensive care research program with Professor John Myburgh.

His postgraduate qualifications include Fellowship of both the Royal College of Physicians in the United Kingdom and Australia and Fellowship of the College of Intensive Care Medicine.

Research interests include large scale clinical observational and randomised trials.  Further specific areas of research interest include the role of fever in severe infections and acute brain injury, Intensive Care Unit Acquired Weakness and Early Mobility, and Outcome Evaluation in Critical Care Medicine research.

Pagination

  • Previous page
  • Page 95
  • Page 96
  • Page 97
  • Page 98
  • Page 99
  • Next page
globe illustration on desktop globe illustration on mobile
The George Institute for Global Health

    Quick links

    • About us
    • Our research
    • Our impact
    • News & media
    • Contact us

    Acknowledgement of country

    The George Institute acknowledges First Peoples and the Traditional Custodians of the many lands upon which we live and work. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and thank them for ongoing custodianship of waters, lands and skies.

    Our Partners

    The George Institute for Global Health is proud to work in partnership with UNSW Sydney, Imperial College London and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India.

    Registered charity logo
    The George Institute for Global Health is a registered charity. ABN 90 085 953 331

    Stay connected

    Enter your details to subscribe to our newsletter.




    By submitting this form, you are agreeing to our Privacy Policy.


    reCAPTCHA helps prevent automated form spam.
    The submit button will be disabled until you complete the CAPTCHA.


    Disclaimer and policy menu

    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy policy
    • Data sharing policy
    • Whistleblower policy
    • Modern slavery statement
    • Working with children and adolescents' policy
    • Research code of conduct policy
    • PHS awards financial COI policy
    • Sitemap
    Affiliated with UNSW Sydney. In partnership with Imperial College London and Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India.

    Copyright © 2025 The George Institute for Global Health.

    Website by Marameo Design

    Cookie Policy | Privacy Policy