Tag: RART

  • WAHTN awarded Federal Budget funds for the Rapid Applied Research Translation program

    Today the Australian Government’s Minister for Health, Hon. Greg Hunt MP, has announced eight national translation research centres, including the Western Australian Health Translation Network (WAHTN), will receive more than $33 million for research into health care practices and interventions. The funding will focus on people with, or at risk of, developing chronic conditions.

    The WAHTN has been awarded $4.14 million in the latest round of the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) as part of the Rapid Applied Research Translation (RART) program. This round of RART grants was targeted to primary care research, with an emphasis on multidisciplinary care and public health interventions which address lifestyle factors which lead to chronic disease. This builds on $1.97 million previously awarded to WAHTN in 2018, totalling $6.1 million provided by the Australian Government over three years.

    Commenting on the successful funding application, Executive Director of WAHTN, Professor Gary Geelhoed, said “The awarding of these funds to WAHTN and to similar bodies around Australia, comprising the Australian Health Research Alliance (AHRA), confirms the ongoing commitment of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and MRFF to the importance of these entities in promoting medical research and its timely application.”

    The grant will provide funding for 12 research projects from WAHTNs Health Service Translational Research Projects (HSTRP) initiative, three Targeted Translational Research (TTR) Fellowships and several National System Level Initiatives, which are projects carried out across the nine AHRA Centres throughout Australia.

    The TTR Fellowships align with WAHTNs aim to support our emerging research talent. Along with building and strengthening the research workforce within WA and enhancing our capacity and capability to undertake high quality translational research. The Fellowships will be targeted to the research areas of:

    • Wound Care
    • Biostatistics

    The HSTRP program attracted 68 applications from the public and private health sector, PathWest and the WA Primary Health Alliance. The large number of quality applications made the process highly competitive. It also provided an encouraging snapshot of the strength and breadth of translational health research occurring in WA hospital and primary health settings. The successful projects, listed in the table below, will be supported by $2.84 million in MRFF funding, with matched funding from the health services.

     

    Read the Australian Government’s media release 

     

    The successful HSTRP recipients are:

    Recipient Project Title Health Service
    Dr Christopher Brennan-Jones PCH Ear Portal: Improving access to specialist ENT and Audiology services in metropolitan Perth Child and Adolescent Health Service
    Dr André Schultz Implementation of solutions to improve follow-up for Aboriginal children hospitalised with lower respiratory tract infections Child and Adolescent Health Service
    Prof Graham Hillis Community based education and exercise training in heart failure: Harnessing an existing resource to bridge a gap East Metropolitan Health Service
    Prof Christobel Saunders Measuring the cost of continuous improvement in care-cancer at Royal Perth Hospital – a ‘proof-of-concept’ East Metropolitan Health Service
    Assoc Prof Paul Cohen Getting the MOST out of follow-up: a randomised controlled trial to compare three-monthly nurse-led telephone follow-up, including monitoring serum CA125 and patient reported outcomes using the MOST (Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment concerns) with routine clinic-based follow-up, following completion of first-line chemotherapy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer North Metropolitan Health Service
    Prof Michael Millward Integrating Tumour Mutational Burden (TMB) testing for appropriate selection of immuno-oncology therapy in metastatic melanoma fit for the modern era North Metropolitan Health Service
    Prof Girish Dwivedi High Performance Medicine through Artificial Intelligence in the Emergency Department South Metropolitan Health Service
    Assoc Prof Andrew Maiorana Primary Care Adherence to Heart Failure guidelines IN Diagnosis, Evaluation and Routine management (PATHFINDER) Study South Metropolitan Health Service
    Dr Wei-Sen Lam TeleTrials in WA: A feasibility study to develop and pilot a TeleTrials framework to bring clinical trials closer to home for country patients WA Country Health Service
    Ms Jo Moore A community and health system partnership to prevent hospitalisation and improve outcomes through a Compassionate Communities Model of End of Life Care WA Country Health Service
    Prof Desiree Silva Embedding E-Health (Pregnancy Lifestyle, Activity, Nutrition (PLAN)) into routine clinical practice pathways to provide a healthy start to life Ramsay Health Care
    Mr Richard Varhol Unlocking the potential of health system integration through data linkage: Combining primary and secondary data across the continuum of care to support policy development and clinical management of chronic disease in WA WA Primary Health Alliance
  • Federal Budget win for WAHTN

    The Federal Government has announced it will continue to support medical and health research by investing a significant amount of funds into the national Alliance of Advanced Health Research Translation Centres, which includes WAHTN. The Australian Health Research Alliance has been awarded $218 million in funding for Rapid Applied Research Translation over the next ten years.

     

    This funding and long-term investment represents a major endorsement of the Translational Research Centres and our leading role in accelerating the translation of research into policy and practice for greater health impact. The funding will support collaboration and our efforts toward enhancing integration across healthcare, research and education.

     

    Executive Director of WAHTN, Professor Gary Geelhoed has said “We’re extremely happy that the federal budget included continued funding of the national Advanced Health Research Translation Centres. It shows an ongoing commitment by the federal government to these Centres and recognises their increasing importance to healthcare in Australia. It will allow WAHTN to continue our leading role in promoting, supporting and translating medical research into better healthcare for all West Australians”

     

    Working together through partnership, commitment and engagement we can continue our journey delivering better healthcare through research.

     

    Find out more info

  • Rapid Applied Research Translation (RART) Grant Applications Open for Round 3

    The Western Australian Health Translation Network (WAHTN) in partnership with the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) is offering grants to support translational research, innovation, education and training to improve the healthcare of Western Australians.

    Round 3 applications for Rapid Applied Research Translation (RART) grants are now open. WAHTN is offering to fund up to 12 projects with a maximum of $250,000 per project (i.e. $125, 000 per annum) in the following two categories:

    • WA Health – Health Service Provider Applications:
      • Open to the five WA Health, Health Service Providers (HSPs) listed below for 10 projects (two each)
        • North Metro Health Service (NMHS)
        • South Metro Health Service (SMHS)
        • East Metro Health Service (EMHS)
        • Child and Adolescent Health Service (CAHS)
        • WA Country Health Service (WACHS)
      • Applications must be submitted by the Coordinating Principal Investigator to the HSP’s nominated Central Research Office via email by 5pm, Friday 1 March 2019
    • PathWest, WA Primary Health Alliance or Private Health Sector Applications:
      • Funding to support two projects
      • Applications must be submitted directly to WATHN via email at mailto: info@wahtn.org by 5pm, Friday 1 March 2019

    Projects must have the ability to produce outcomes of value to the health system and align with the MRFF 2018 – 2020 Priorities and the MRFF RART program priorities

    For further information:

  • MRFF Funding opportunities and current projects

    Please find below a list of MRFF Funding opportunities that are current and on the near horizon. WAHTN and Australian Health Research Alliance (AHRA), of which WAHTN is a member, encourages collaboration and communication between researchers.   Please send in your nominations from academics/researchers/clinicians and others who may be interested to lead collaborative/be involved in projects suggested by the MRFF or other funding bodies.

    Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Opportunities

    Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Rapid Applied Research Translation (RART) Impact Grants