Posted: 2 October 2024
Ten outstanding and versatile research teams have collectively been awarded $50 million to support them in working together to address major problems in human health under the NHMRC’s 2024 Synergy Grants scheme.
Synergy Grants support exceptional multidisciplinary teams of investigators to work together to answer major questions that cannot be answered by a single investigator.
The funding will support new discoveries in a range of health and medical areas, covering the spectrum from basic science to clinical medicine, public health and health services research.
University of Sydney researcher, Associate Professor Veronica Matthews, will lead the Stronger Together As Unified Nations for Community-led Health (STAUNCH) project which aims to strengthen the capacity for self-governance among Australian First Nations.
Built on nearly 20 years of collaborative research, STAUNCH will generate new evidence on Indigenous nation building processes that centre on holistic health and wellbeing solutions and that deal with intersecting challenges collaboratively and effectively. This Synergy project will harness the efforts and expertise of some staunch people to address the complex structural reforms needed to Close the Gap.
Other research projects funded in this announcement include:
Further information on the 2024 Synergy Grants projects can be downloaded on NHMRC’s outcomes of funding rounds web.
Category: News, Member News
BioMelbourne Network respectfully acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the unceded lands and waters of Victoria: the Bunurong, Gunaikurnai and Wurundjeri peoples, on which the BioMelbourne Network and our Victorian members work, and as well as the lands and waters of our members further afield. We pay respect to their Elders past and present. As Australia’s first scientists, we acknowledge the significant contribution that they and other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have made and continue to make to the research and knowledge systems that inform our community and our sector.
We acknowledge that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people continue to live in a spiritual and sacred relationship with this country and recognise our responsibility to continue to work towards reconciliation.