New study shows how women are disproportionately affected by COVID
While there is only sparse data surrounding the long-term side effects of COVID-19, but new study by CCRG’s COVID-19 Critical Care Consortium finds evidence that women may suffer worse than men
Multi-million-dollar MRFF grant awarded to take lifesaving artificial heart to market
CCRG congratulates the Chief Investigators of Monash University’s Artificial Hearts Frontiers Program, named as recipients of the third-largest grant in the history of the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund.
CCRG joins UQ’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience
CCRG joins UQ’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience to accelerate translational research
Senior Research Assistant
We are seeking to appoint a new experienced and highly motivated Senior Research Assistant who will play a central role in the administration and organisation of the group.
From Victoria to Queensland, read more about Molly-rose’s postdoctoral research journey
Meet Molly-rose, CCRG’s new postdoctoral research fellow continuing our heart transplantation research programme.
Research Breakthrough Set to Personalise Treatment for Cancer, Heart and Lung Disease
CCRG’s Prof John Fraser named Clinical Director of the Wesley Research Institute’s new Queensland Spatial Biology Centre (QSBC).
PhD candidate wins Best Paper at Australasia computational mechanics conference
CCRG PhD student Dhayananth Kanagarajan has been awarded the Best Research Paper at the Sixth Australasian Conference on Computational Mechanics (ACCM 2023).
Why we need global data to solve global problems
The latest paper by CCRG’s COVID-19 Critical Care Consortium calls for mandatory ethnicity and social determinants for international research projects.
Meet the CCRG’s new Allied Health Researcher, Allison Kearney
For trained psychologist Allison Kearney it was the opportunity to progress her career in project management and research that led her to join the group.
CCRG’s Dr Nchafatso Obonyo wins national APA accolade
Dr Nchafatso Obonyo named as the African Australian Professional of the Year.
Robotic cardiac ultrasound offers world-first care to rural towns
Regional and remote communities will benefit from a world-first cardiac robotic ultrasound, removing the barriers for Queenslanders to access quality cardiac care.
The latest research papers from the Critical Care Research Group
Summary of papers published by the Group Aug-October 2023
PhD candidate wins Young Investigator Award at ISMCS Conference
The ISMCS provides a broad international forum for intensive discussion of research, development, clinical use and social acceptance of rotary blood pumps and all related forms of mechanical circulatory support.
Group-wide recognition for Metro North Health’s Awards Season
CCRG researchers and group-led initiatives have been recognised in both The Prince Charles Hospital Staff Excellence Awards and Metro North Health Research Excellence Awards.
Heart Foundation announces funding for two CCRG biomedical projects
CCRG projects have today been announced as recipients of Vanguard Research Grants from the Heart Foundation, 2 of 4 Queensland-based recipients.
Standing ‘stronger together’ for Allied Health Professions Day 2023
From clinicians to biologists, physiotherapists to engineers, mental health experts to data scientists, CCRG’s multidisciplinary team is what sets us apart. Only by working together can we take ideas and see them fully realised into new treatment methods that improve the lives of critically ill patients.
CCRG flag flies high in Estonia
Critical Care Research Group takes centre stage at the 11th International Baltic Congress of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Congress
In pictures: CCRG welcomes Professor Samson Kinyanjui
CCRG hosts Professor Samson Kinyanjui to celebrate ongoing collaboration with Kenya’s KEMRI Wellcome Trust Research Programme.
Tests that diagnose diseases are less reliable than you’d expect. Here’s why
You feel unwell, and visit your doctor. They ask some questions and take some blood for testing; a few days later they call to say you have been diagnosed with a disease.