Assoc. Prof Flora Wong |
Two leading Monash staff working to improve the health of
newborn babies have been recognised with academic promotions: Dr Flora Wong and
Dr Suzie Miller are now Associate Professors.
A Consultant Neonatologist at Monash Newborn, MonashHealth,
Associate Professor Flora Wong also holds a NHMRC Career Development Fellowship
through the Department of Paediatrics, Monash University and The Ritchie
Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research.
Associate Professor Wong’s research interests are in newborn
cerebral pathophysiology, cerebral blood flow and oxygenation in relation to
brain injury in newborn infants undergoing intensive care. Her projects aim at investigations of the
mechanisms of newborn brain injury, development of cotside monitoring and
neuroprotective strategies.
“This
promotion is a great acknowledgement of the work over the years and is of
course shared with all my collaborators and members of my research group,” said
Associate Professor Wong.
“It's
also an encouragement for me to continue doing what I love, and I hope to take
on more responsibilities in mentoring junior researchers and clinicians who are
interested in pursuing research.”
As a lead research neonatologist, Associate Professor Wong has led an
international multi-disciplinary team of scientists and clinicians from
neonatology, obstetrics, paediatric cardiology and paediatric pathology, to
conduct translational research using the fetal lamb model. The team has now also performed the
world’s first transhepatic fetal pulmonary valvuloplasty and also atrial septal
stenting in the fetal lamb, as a potential treatment for hypoplastic right and
left heart disease.
Assoc Prof Suzie Miller |
Also at The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research,
Associate Professor Suzie Miller is a theme leader in the field of
Neurodevelopment and Neuroprotection.
Associate Professor Miller is a fetal physiologist who gained specialist expertise in
neurodevelopment during postdoctoral training with the Centre for Perinatal
Brain Protection and Repair at University College London.
In 2010 she was
recruited as a Senior Scientist to The Ritchie Centre to lead a perinatal brain
research program.
“I think this promotion will provide me with increased
opportunities to pursue my research goals and advance the research of my group,
hopefully also to bring in further funding,” said Associate Professor Miller,
who holds an ARC Future
Fellowship.
Associate Professor Miller’s research is focused on
experimental and clinical studies that aim to understand, and inhibit, the
mechanisms that contribute to newborn brain injury
and functional deficits associated with cerebral palsy. This approach has led
to the recent commencement of a world first human clinical trial at Monash Health
to examine melatonin therapy to protect the developing brain in pregnancies
compromised by fetal growth restriction.
“I hope that my promotion might also motivate young women
researchers who are looking to advance their careers while juggling family
commitments,” added Associate Professor Miller, a keen advocate for the role of women in science, and founding member of
the NHMRC’s Women in Health Science Committee.
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