Professor Segelov and Mr Michael Wang, Director of Exchange and Cooperation, Shanghai Renji Hospital |
Director of Oncology at Monash University and Monash Health Professor
Eva Segelov has recently returned from a successful visit to Renji Hospital and
Shanghai Jia-Tong School of Medicine in China, where she was invited as a guest
lecturer and discussed future opportunities for research collaborations and
student exchange.
Founded in 1844, Renji Hospital was the first hospital to
practice western medicine in Shanghai, and is affiliated with one of China’s
leading universities, the Shanghai Jia-Tong School of Medicine.
“To understand the scale of the Chinese health system, Renji
Hospital employs more than 4000 medical staff, has 2000 beds and had 4.26
million episodes of outpatient and Emergency Department attendances in 2016,”
said Professor Segelov.
“Renji Hospital has an enormous tissue bank, multiple other
resources and potential opportunities relating to their huge patient base.”
“They also have a different distribution of disease so see
many more patients with various conditions than we do here in Australia.”
Professor Segelov said the purpose of her visit was to
establish research collaborations and potential medical, research and nursing
student exchanges between Monash University and Renji Hospital / Shanghai
Jia-Tong School of Medicine.
“I was invited by their International Office to deliver a
lecture on ‘Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention and Control’ to the students doing
the all-English combined Canadian/Chinese medical degree at the Ottowa Shanghai
Jia-Tong School of Medicine, from which successful students will graduate with
dual Canadian/Chinese full medical qualifications,” said Professor Segelov.
“After my lecture we had a particularly interesting
philosophical discussion regarding public policy decisions faced by China’s
rapid industrialisation and modernisation.”
“I also toured the huge campus and met with the
Vice-President of Renji Hospital, and the research group of Professor Chen with
whom we hope to establish a collaboration studying the role of the HPV virus in
squamous cancer of the oesophagus,” said Professor Segelov.
Professor Segelov’s visit included a meeting with Renji
Hospital’s Head Nurse and a discussion about nursing exchanges opportunities as
well as research into issues such as cultural change in attitudes to nursing. Currently there are almost no male nurses in
China.
“Monash Nursing academics have been approached and at this
early stage are enthusiastic for progressing opportunities; a teleconference
for all interested parties will be set up in the near future,” said Professor Segelov.
If you are interested in joining this or discussing opportunities, please contact Professor Segelov (eva.segelov@monash.edu).
No comments:
Post a Comment