Thursday, 21 April, 2011 - 00:00
Science funds cuts indicate a wider malaise
It’s worth taking note when scientists buck-up against a Labor government.
Fiona Stanley is the founding Director of the Telethon Kids Institute (formerly the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research), established in Perth in 1990. She is a Professor in the School of Paediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western Australia, and the chair of the Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth, a national collaboration of researchers, policy makers and practitioners from a broad range of disciplines. She studied medicine at the University of Western Australia and practised in hospitals for two years before going to the United Kingdom and USA for further training. In 2004, Professor Stanley was honoured as a “National Living Treasure” by the National Trust. She was named Australian of the Year in 2003. She is the UNICEF Australia Ambassador for Early Childhood Development.
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It’s worth taking note when scientists buck-up against a Labor government.
Professor Jonathan Carapetis is stepping into Professor Fiona Stanley’s shoes as director of Perth’s Telethon Institute for Child Health Research.
Perth biotechnology firm Avita Medical has announced major changes to a clinical trial in the US it hopes will improve shareholder confidence.
Deputy Premier Kim Hames will stand down from that role in February next year, but will remain as minister for health and tourism as he prepares for his retirement from politics at the 2017 state election.
Nominations are being sought for the 2016 Western Australian Science Hall of Fame, which recognises the outstanding work of the state’s scientists.
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL: From those who risked their own capital to the corporate cowboys of WA Inc and the ‘hired help’ of today, WA’s corporate story features many powerful personalities. This article is part of a special series to mark Business News' 25-year anniversary.
Home to some of Australia’s most heralded and important research foundations, WA’s relative isolation has done little to dampen the medical research sector’s inspiration for innovation. Here are some of the leading lights dedicated to making the state, and the world, a healthier place to live.
Female researchers and entrepreneurs have powered many of WA’s health care advancements.
The premier has rallied around the state’s corrective services minister amid damning reports of restraining practices used at Banksia Hill Detention Centre.
The state’s commercial health-related research and technology sector has matured.
Prominent Australians have urged Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek to save sacred sites they say are at risk from a new gas export hub in Western Australia.
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Fiona Stanley is linked to 4 organisations which are included in 3 lists - Philanthropic Foundations, Indigenous Corporations and Charitable Organisations.
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