Posts tagged The George Institute for Global Health

Robyn Norton: Closing the data gap is essential for reaching gender equity in health

By Neena Bhandari

Professor Robyn Norton grew up observing her parents’ commitment to equity and social justice in improving people’s lives in Christchurch, gateway to New Zealand’s South Island. It left an enduring impression on her young mind. The women’s movement was reaching its peak during her high school years. She got drawn into thinking about addressing women’s health issues and moved to Sydney, Australia, and enrolled in a Master’s degree in Public Health.

Fast forward to late 1990s. She says, “The global burden of disease was changing, particularly in lower and middle-income countries where Non-Communicable Diseases [NCDs] and injuries were emerging as a leading cause of death and disability. The expertise to manage the emerging epidemic of NCDs and injuries was not available in these countries. Most of the global collaborations between the high income and low-income countries were still focused on maternal and child health and under nutrition”.

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Bruce Neal: Changing the way the world makes, markets and eats food

By Neena Bhandari

Bruce Neal had been working on his doctorate on cardiovascular disease with the George Institute’s co-founder, Stephen MacMahon, in Auckland. It was 1999, Stephen and Robyn Norton were contemplating setting up an Institute focusing on the health consequences of chronic diseases in low and middle-income countries, and invited him to join.

“It was a novel idea to set up an Institute to address cardiovascular diseases and injuries in low-middle income settings. Until that time almost all the big international research institutes working in low- and middle-income countries focused on maternal and child health. So, I seized the opportunity and moved to Sydney”, says Professor Neal, who was born in the port city of Aden in Yemen. He studied medicine at Bristol University in England and worked for four years in the United Kingdom’s National Health Service before moving to New Zealand to begin a research career.

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Rebecca Ivers: Reducing the global burden of injury through effective prevention and trauma care

By Neena Bhandari

Growing up in suburban south Sydney, Rebecca Ivers and her siblings were always encouraged to strive for academic excellence and work towards making a positive difference in people’s lives. She got involved with a group called Student Initiatives in Community Health while doing her undergraduate degree in optometry at the University of New South Wales [UNSW]. It triggered her interest in population and public health and gave her an understanding and interest in inequality.

It was while practising as an optometrist in the Northern Territory that she discovered that few Aboriginal people would come to their clinics. She became keenly interested in the health of Australia’s first people and began working for the Northern Territory Aboriginal Eye Health Committee.

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