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www.monash.edu.au
Professor David Copolov,Senior Advisor – Special Initiatives,Office of the Vice Chancellor
Health and Wellbeing Research Initiatives in the Broader Monash
Context
Peninsula Campus Health & Wellbeing Research Collaboration Day
Monday 13 February 2006
www.monash.edu.au
2
Monash Directions 2025
“By 2025 we will be one of the best
universities in the world, distinctive
because our research-intensive,
international focus enables us to
address important theoretical and
practical challenges, and develop
graduates who will do the same”.
www.monash.edu.au
3
Peninsula campus
• A campus of about 3,000 students• Well developed community engagement• New developments in Physiotherapy, OT and
Health Sciences• A distinctive academic theme of “healthy &
successful living”• Four Faculties represented in a major way :
Business & Economics, Education, IT, Medicine, Nursing & Health Sciences
www.monash.edu.au
4
Monash at a Glance
• Established in 1958 with first student intake in 1961 – youngest member of the Go8 universities
• Annual turnover of $1 billion• 5,400 staff – 5,000 in Victoria• 56,000 students from over 100 countries• International students’comprise 30% of
the student population
www.monash.edu.au
5
Some Characterising Features of Monash University
Twin foci of excellence – teaching and research
A campus based university, with campuses in metropolitan, regional and international locations
A distinctive combination of research, research-led teaching and internationalism
A deep commitment to cross-cultural communication
www.monash.edu.au
6
Campuses and Centres
Campuses
• Victoria– Clayton– Caulfield– Gippsland– Peninsula– Berwick– Parkville
• Malaysia
• South Africa
Centres
• London, UK
• Prato, Italy
www.monash.edu.au
7
Monash University: Consistent performance in rankings
Top 40 World Top 200 THES Nov 04
Top 10 Universities in Asia THES Nov 04
Top 40 Asia Pacific Top 100
Jiao Tong 04
Top 300
World Top 500 Jiao Tong 04
Top 6 Top Int Australian Melbourne IAESR
5 Stars Prestige, demand Good Universities 05
Group of Eight Go8
Top 5 Australian MBA AFR Boss Sept 04
Top 150
World business MBAinfo ranking 05
Top 11 Asia business MBAinfo ranking 05
www.monash.edu.au
8
Research Reputation
• International Profile – Times Higher Education Supplement World Rankings (November 2004)
Comparison Monash world ranking
Ranking within Australia
Top 100 Engineering & IT Universities
18 1
Top 100 Social Science Universities
28 5
www.monash.edu.au
9
Research Reputation
• National profile – Go8 benchmarking(2003)
10/44 departments ranked no 1
30/44 departments ranked in top 4
www.monash.edu.au
10
Medical research precincts in Victoria
• Bundoora 300• Clayton 1400• Heidelberg 400• Parkville 2000
(includes Monash University Faculty of Pharmacy - 300)
• Prahran 700*• Werribee 300
Approx no. researchers
www.monash.edu.au
11
How do we rate?
• Monash is ranked 28th internationally for biomedicine research (Times Higher Education Supplement - THES)
– Youngest university in top 30!
• Group of Eight (Go8) benchmarking– Monash ranks #1 in Biomedical Sciences
www.monash.edu.au
12
Grants and publications
• Monash was Australia’s leading university in securing NHMRC program grants in 2004 & 2005
• In 2004, Monash received the largest program grant ever awarded – ($15.3 million over 5 years)
• Monash 2002-05 Medline publications – Monash 2093 in total
> MUBI: 980 (WEHI: 370)
www.monash.edu.au
13
Concern for relevance and impact
• Industry supported research worth $31.7 million in 2004
• Partner in 22 Cooperative Research Centres
• 15 spin off companies established of which six are listed on the Australian Stock Exchange
www.monash.edu.au
14
Concern for relevance and impact
• IVF• stem cells• advanced materials• anti-flu drug Relenza • anti-malarial drugs about to enter clinical trials• thin-walled structures used on the West Gate Bridge • continuous process for refining lead in Port Pirie• airborne infrared mapping of bushfires• advice on global terrorism• economic models contributed to reforms in various
industries including stevedoring, transport, sugar and electricity
www.monash.edu.au
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Core Strategies
• sustained investment in people and research infrastructure to support high calibre research and research training within our leading departments
• investment in cross departmental ‘Institutes’ to facilitate innovative multi-disciplinary research
• focus on impact through engagement with industry, government and the community
• strategic alliances with leading international institutions
• rapid change within departments that are not performing at the highest level
www.monash.edu.au
16
CROSS-FACULTY/CROSS-DISCIPLINE RESEARCH INITIATIVES
Research Institutes will foster cross-faculty, multi-discipline collaboration and build critical mass tohave national and international impact.
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
FACULTY
Institute 1
Institute 2 Institute 3
www.monash.edu.au
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Interdisciplinary Research Institutes
SCIENCE &
ENGINEERING
MEDICINE
ARTS, HUMANITIES,
SOCIAL SCIENCEGlobalMovements
Health &Wellbeing
MedicalResearch
Transport ResearchAt Monash (TR@M)
Injury Prevention
Sustainability Institute (MSI)
Regional Studies
Ageing & Health
Monash SportResearchNetwork
Advanced Materials, Manufacturing and Nanotechnology
3
1
2
www.monash.edu.au
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Faculty representation for each InstituteInstitute Arts A&D BEC Edu Eng Law IT Med Pha Sci
MSI- Climate
- Water
- Energy
- Transport
Biomedical-Vascular
health
Drug
Discovery &
Delivery
www.monash.edu.au
19
Faculty representation for each Institute
Institute Arts A&D BEC Edu Eng Law IT Med Pha Sci
Health & Wellbeing- Ageing
- Sport
Injury Prevention
nM2
www.monash.edu.au
20
Campus representation for each Institute
Institute Berw Caulf Clayt Gipp Park Pen MUM MSA
MEI- Climate
- Water
- Energy
- Transport
Biomedical-Vascular
health
Drug
Discovery &
Delivery
www.monash.edu.au
21
Campus representation for each Institute
Institute Berw Caulf Clayt Gipp Park Pen MUM MSA
Health & Wellbeing- Ageing
- Sport
Injury Prevention
nM2
www.monash.edu.au
22
Health & Wellbeing Funding
• Strategic Initiatives Funding in 2006 provides seed funding to evaluate the merits for establishing cross-faculty institutes
Healthy Ageing $138,900
Sport $30,000
TOTAL $168,900
www.monash.edu.au
23
www.monash.edu.au
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Different Eras, Different Impacts
J. and S. McKinlay
IMPROVED KNOWLEDGE UTILISATION
www.monash.edu.au
25
Contemporary Medical Practice: Beset by Knowledge Failures
• Medication Adverse Events– Found in 2%-3% of all patients on admission to hospital – Found in 1.3% of patients during their stay in hospital– 50-80% preventable
• Reasons– Unawareness of best-practice recommendations– Difficulties in accessing the patient’s medical record– Failure to alter drug therapy in the face of altered physiology– Disregarding a patient history of allergy to the same medication class– Prescribing the wrong drug name, wrong dose form or
abbreviation– Inadequate monitoring or follow-up– Discontinuity of pre-hospital and post-hospital medications– Poor communication with the patient &/or members of health
team
www.monash.edu.au
26
Faculty ofLaw
Faculty ofEngineering
Cross-Faculty Collaboration
Faculty ofMedicine Nursing& HealthSciences
Faculty ofBusiness
&Economics
Faculty of InformationTechnology
e-Health ResearchInitiative
www.monash.edu.au
27
E-Health Research
Infrastructure
DiscoveryHealth Services
EpidemiologyClinical Trials
DeliveryCoordinated CareQuality and Safety
Disease Surveillance
ConnectivityGrid Computing
Distributed SystemsOntologies
SecurityTrust
Privacy
Data MiningBusiness Intelligence
Systems AnalysisSimulation
Complex SystemsDecision Support
Pervasive ComputingInformation Systems
Resource Mngmt
Evidence-based care
Outcome data Across all of health care
www.monash.edu.au
28
Monash University has not paid sufficientattention to the regional and expertise-relatedstrengths of its campuses – especiallyIts non-Clayton campuses.
Clayton – is close to the hub of Victoria’s manufacturing region Gippsland - is in the heart of the LaTrobe Valley
Peninsula – well located to study the health impacts of ageing and social disadvantage
Not just a Cross–Disciplinary Approach; a Cross-Campus one
www.monash.edu.au
29
Mornington Peninsula Shire compared to MelbourneStatistical Division: Demographics
www.monash.edu.au
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Victorian Centre for Low Emission Brown Coal Technology
Monash Sustainability Institute
Climate Water Transport
Brown Coal
Centre
Funding from State government(main stakeholder)
Funding from Federal Government
competitive schemes
Contributions from Monash University
(time and infrastructure)
EnergyFossil fuelsRenewables
Funding from industry on project-by-project
basis
www.monash.edu.au
31
Victorian Centre for Low Emission Brown Coal Technology
Program 1 Advanced gasification & combustion technologies Program 2 Advanced dewatering technologies Program 3 Frontier technologies for high-value products Program 4 Exportable fuels from brown coal Program 5 Economic, social and environmental assessment of technologies
Research Development Demonstration Commercialisation
Brown coal structure and
reactivity
Novel concepts of brown coal
technologies
Proof of the key aspects of
technologies
Solutions to the problems in the design, operation and
retrofitting of demonstration and commercial plants
Ou
tpu
t
Ou
tpu
t
R&D in the Centre
Industrial application
www.monash.edu.au
32
www.monash.edu.au
33
Monash University Biomedical Institute (MUBI)
• 770 researchers• Research strengths include
– Infectious diseases– Cancer– Foetal and neonatal stem cells– Neuroscience– Cardiovascular disease– Drug development– Structural Biology
www.monash.edu.au
34
Monash Directions 2025
“By 2025 we will be one of the best
universities in the world, distinctive
because our research-intensive,
international focus enables us to
address important theoretical and
practical challenges, and develop
graduates who will do the same”.
www.monash.edu.au
35
www.monash.edu.au
36
www.monash.edu.au
37
www.monash.edu.au
38
XToday’s Agenda (Melinda to re-jig)9.00 to 9.15 Introduction
Professor Phillip Steele Pro Vice Chancellor – Campus Co-ordination and Academic Director Berwick and Peninsula
Review of last workshop, outcomes and progressEmerging vision for the campus
9.15 to 12.15 Faculty and Centre presentationsQuick recap on last time, plus what’s newOpportunities for collaboration, including with health and well-being (inc healthy ageing)
12.15 to 1.30 Lunch
1.30 to 2.00 University perspective Professor Edwina Cornish Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research
University research goals and objectivesOpportunities for the campus
2.00 to 4.00 Plenary session – identifying research opportunities for the campus
www.monash.edu.au
39
Roadmap for Power Generation Technologies
Past R&D This Centre
We have understood some key features of the gasification behaviour of
brown coal.
We have developed some conceptual power generation processes based on gasification.
Several drying technologies have been developed to
varying extent.
Experimental and modelling studies of the gasification
behaviour of brown coal
Process development of near zero CO2 emission
technologies.
Issues and solutions for the use of dried brown coal in the
existing power plants.
Future
Oxy-fuel combustion
Semi-demonstration
study
Large reduction in CO2 emissions
Near-term CO2 emissions
Full demonstration &
commercialisation
Commercial trials
www.monash.edu.au
40
Aim of Today
• Update on health and wellbeing research activities
• Identify opportunities for cross faculty / campus research collaboration?
• Identify opportunities for the development of health & wellbeing research
www.monash.edu.au
41
Welcome
• Colleagues from Monash Peninsula • Colleagues from Monash Berwick• Colleagues from elsewhere in Monash• Colleagues from other agencies – local
government, (mel to list)
www.monash.edu.au
42
Vision for Peninsula campus
• A campus of about 4,000-4,500 students• A distinctive academic theme of “healthy &
successful living”• Multi-disciplinary: Business & Economics,
Education, IT, Medicine, Nursing & Health Sciences• Research intensive: 10% HDR, at least one major
research centre• Well developed community engagement• Well developed outreach & pathways
www.monash.edu.au
43
Developments during 2005• New academic disciplines being established
– physiotherapy, – occupational therapy, – health science / social work– sport and outdoor recreation
• Frankston Aquatic, Health& Wellness Opportunity Analysis completed– A $30m community aquatic, health & wellness centre with aquatic &
leisure, teaching facilities (Monash & TAFE), student placement, multi-disciplinary clinic and research centre
– Epidemiological study– Multi-disciplinary clinic?– A research centre?
• Director, Health & Wellbeing Research established– Research audit– Some collaborative research proposals and projects
www.monash.edu.au
44
Epidemiological Study:Frankston Mornington Peninsula Region
• Cardiovascular disease• Cancel disease• Mental disease• Neurological & sense disorders• Chronic respiratory disease• Injuries• Asthma
www.monash.edu.au
45
Epidemiological Study:Frankston Mornington Peninsula Region
• Scope for Preventive Interventions:– Nutrition education– Physical activity– Community connectedness
• Prevention Research centre model – participatory research– Establish benchmark of current health promotion / disease
prevention– Assess need for health promotion / disease prevention– Develop intervention strategies– Work with partners on implementation strategies– Evaluate and improve
www.monash.edu.au
46
Actions from Last Research Collaboration Day
1. Research support at Peninsula
2. Establishment of a ‘Wellness” Research Centre/Institute
3. A conference to build up knowledge on the integration of research into courses
4. A place and a process to develop and explore collaborative ideas
5. Running or hosting research conferences at the campus
6. Developing a higher profile for campus research
7. Research directory
8. Preparation for the implementation of the Research Quality Framework (RQF)
9. Internships and professional education
www.monash.edu.au
47
Higher degree by Research Students
33512003
36682004
28342002
16222001
9162000
MastersPhDYear
Source: Statistical Services Pivot Tables
33652005
www.monash.edu.au
48
Research quantum (2000-2004 –2005?)
138,70066,4002099Income/ FTE (T&R)
4.51.60.8Weighted publications/ FTE (T&R)
0.980.53.03Weighted completions/ FTE (T&R)
23.823.64?Completions/ HDR (%)
Top Go8MonashPeninsulaCriteria
Source: TARDIS, Statistical Services Pivot Tables
www.monash.edu.au
49
9.30 to 12.30mel to re-jig Faculty and Centre presentations
Education (including Sport and Outdoor Recreation) – (Marie Hammer, Robyn Zink)Information Technology (Asad Khan)MUCAPS (Amee Morgans)Nursing and Health Science (including Physio, OT and Social Work) – (Margaret O’Connor, Jenny Keating, Louise Farnworth)Science (Tom Jeavons)Business and Economics (Ron Edwards)National Centre for Australian Studies (David Dunstan)
www.monash.edu.au
50
10.20 to 10.35 Morning Tea
www.monash.edu.au
51
Australian University Education in the Global Setting
• Australia with a population of 20 million has 9% share of the global market in cross-border tertiary study
• 18.7% of Australia’s students are foreign (cf UK 11.3%, USA 3.5%)
• 228,555 foreign students undertake degree level higher education in Australia
www.monash.edu.au
Victorian Centrefor Low Emission Brown
Coal Technologies
in Monash University
December 2005
www.monash.edu.au
53
Summary Slide
• A proposal to establish• Opportunities and challenges• Monash: The best place for the Centre• Functions of the proposed Centre• Research programs of the proposed
Centre• Roadmap for power generation
technologies
www.monash.edu.au
54
Summary Slide (cont.)
• Expected key outcomes• Structure and funding of the proposed
Centre
www.monash.edu.au
55
Monash: The best place for the Centre
Monash is the only Victorian university with:• energy technology as a priority research area,
• world-class researchers in brown coal science and technology,
• specialised research facilities backed by excellent general research infrastructure (including synchrotron),
• a campus in the Latrobe Valley, ideal for a strong partnership among university, government, industry and the region, and
• productive brown coal research alliance with top research organisations in Japan, Germany, China and USA.
Excellence in R&D of clean brown coal
technologies
Commitment & FundingExpertise, facilities and link
with industry
www.monash.edu.au
56
Functions of the proposed Centre
Victorian Centre for Low Emission Brown Coal
Technologies
Victorian State Government (& Australian Federal Government)
Other Australian and overseas research
organisations
Industries & region
Training of graduates as future scientists and engineers
Fundamental support for commercial
demonstration activities
Un-biased advice to
governments, industries and communities
R&D of clean brown coal technologies for reduced
CO2 emission, including co-utilisation with biomass
Interface for national and international collaboration
Sustainable development of Victoria
www.monash.edu.au
A proposal to establish
The Victorian Centrefor Low Emission Brown Coal Technologies
at Monash University
December 2005
www.monash.edu.au
58
Opportunities and challenges
Energy source
Specialised raw material
ElectricityHydrogenLiquid fuels
Chemicals
High value products• disposable catalysts• nano particles
Employment and regional development
Cheap, clean and reliable energy
High-tech manufacturing industry
Exports
Carbon tax Victorian brown to stay underground
Losses of • industry• employment• energy security
Investment in RDDC of
brown coal technologies
Brown coal
Lack of further technology
development
www.monash.edu.au
59
Research programs of the proposed Centre
Research
RDDC Chain of Low Emission Brown Coal Technologies
Development Demonstration Commercialisation
Solutions to the problems in the design, operation and
retrofitting of demonstration and commercial plants
Brown coal structure and
reactivity
Novel concepts of brown coal
technologies
Proof of the key aspects of
technologies
Victorian Centre for Low Emission Brown Coal Technology Program 1 Advanced gasification and combustion technologies Program 2 Advanced dewatering technologies Program 3 Frontier technologies for high-value products Program 4 Exportable fuels from brown coal Program 5 Economic, social and environmental assessment of technologies
www.monash.edu.au
60
Roadmap for power generation technologies
Past R&D This Centre
We have understood some key features of the
gasification behaviour of brown coal.
We have developed some conceptual power
generation processes based on gasification.
Several drying technologies have been developed to
varying extent.
Experimental and modelling studies of the gasification
behaviour of Brown coal
Process development of near zero CO2
emission technologies
Future
Oxy-fuel combustion
Semi-demonstration
study
Large reduction in CO2 emissions
Near-term CO2 emissions
Full demonstration &
commercialisation
Commercial
trials
Issues and solutions for the use of dried brown coal in the existing power plants.
www.monash.edu.au
61
Expected key outcomes
The key outcomes from this Centre will be low emission brown coal technologies and graduates knowing the technologies:
• for power generation based on advanced gasification and combustion technologies:
– aimed at near-term and long-term CO2 reduction,– key technology aspects proved at semi-demonstration scale
• for the production of commodity chemicals and high-value (exportable) products, especially:
– environmentally benign disposable catalysts,– nano materials,– coal-derived products for agricultural application, and– exportable fuels derived from brown coal
www.monash.edu.au
62
9.30 to 12.30 mel to re-jigFaculty and Centre presentations
> Quick recap on last time> What’s new> Opportunities for collaboration> Linkages with health and well-being theme
(inc healthy ageing)
www.monash.edu.au
63
12.45 to 1.30 Lunch
www.monash.edu.au
64
1.30pm to 2pmUniversity perspective
Mel to re-jig Professor Edwina Cornish
Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research
> University research goals and objectives> Opportunities for the campus
www.monash.edu.au
65
2.00 to 4.00Plenary session
• Should we try to set some research objectives for 2006?
• How do we develop our research collaboration with Peninsula Health, Vic Health and other agencies?
• Should we pursue establishing a wellness research centre?
• Other questions and comments?
www.monash.edu.au
Monash University:
A hub of medical research in
South-East Melbourne
www.monash.edu.au
67
But…
www.monash.edu.au
Health & Wellbeing
www.monash.edu.au
Monash University at a Glance
www.monash.edu.au
70
Sir John Monash 1865-1931
Engineer
Corps Commander of the Australian Forces in WW I
Head of the Victorian State Electricity Commission
www.monash.edu.au
71
New MIMR Research Labs
www.monash.edu.au
72
New MUBI Research Labs
www.monash.edu.au
73
The Myth:
The majority of medical research in Victoria is conducted in Parkville.
www.monash.edu.au
74
The Reality:
Monash University is
an equally significant contributor to
Victorian medical research.
www.monash.edu.au
75
MUBI Research Achievements
• Science Minister’s Prize for ‘Life Scientist of the Year’ to Professor Jamie Rossjohn
• World leading foetal research group– miscarriage prevention, premature infant lung
health, foetal alcohol syndrome
• Monash Immunology & Stem Cell Laboratories – regenerating blood, pancreas, kidney, lung
• Malaria Vaccines
www.monash.edu.au
76
Monash Health Research Precinct
• Based at the Monash Medical Centre– Site of Monash Institute of Medical
Research (300 researchers)– Site of Prince Henry’s Institute (150
researchers)• Provides a ‘bench to bedside’ approach• Stage 1 building recently completed
– $17.5 million, including a State Government contribution $2 million
www.monash.edu.au
77
Monash Institute of Medical Research (MIMR)
• A joint initiative with Southern Health• 300 researchers• $28 million research revenue (2005)• 7 Research Centres
– Ritchie Centre for Baby Health Research– Functional Genomics & Human Disease– Inflammatory Disease– Reproduction & Development– Urological Research– Women’s Health– Monash Institute of Health Services Research
www.monash.edu.au
78
MIMR Research Achievements
• IVF• SIDS• Male infertility• Prostate research• Inflammatory disorders• Maternal-foetal inter-relationships• Angiogenesis
www.monash.edu.au
79
• CRCs for Biomedical Imaging, Oral Health Sciences, Vaccine Technology, Chronic Inflammatory Diseases and Innovative Dairy Products
• ARC Centre of Excellence for Structural and Functional Microbial Genomics
• Victorian Bioinformatics Consortium• Australian Stem Cell Centre• Australian Synchrotron• Andrology Australia• A number of biotechnology companies including: ES
Cell International Pte Ltd, CNSBio Pty Ltd, Cortical Pty Ltd, Pulmosonix Pty Ltd
MUBI & MIMR Partnerships
www.monash.edu.au
80
The Future Starts Here
• Monash University is a major centre for stem cell research– Located in STRIP and incorporating:
> Australian Stem Cell Centre (ASCC)> Monash Immunology & Stem Cell Laboratories
(MISCL)> Stem Cell Sciences Ltd
– Stem Cell Commercialisation> ES Cell International Pte Ltd > Nephrogenix Pty Ltd
www.monash.edu.au
81
Innovation to Wealth Creation
• Commercialisation of Intellectual Property– 18 spin-out/start ups
-Combined market capitalisation ~$1Billion (2004) – Two US biotech patents granted to Monash (2004)
• STRIP (Science, Technology, Research & Innovation Precinct)
– Stage 1 completed (17 tenants)
• High-Tech Manufacturing Region– Includes >30 biotech, pharmaceutical & health services
companies in the City of Monash
www.monash.edu.au
82
Projects Under Development
• Asia Pacific Centre for Science & Wealth Creation
• John Monash Science High School• European Molecular Biology Laboratories:
Node at Monash– Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute
• CSIRO – Collaborations in tissue engineering &
molecular sciences• Synchrotron - On line in 2007
www.monash.edu.au
83
Looking to the future
• MUBI Research Labs– STRIP stage 2/3 under development
• MIMR– Stage 2 research labs under development
www.monash.edu.au
84
Thanks
• Attendees• Speakers• Organisers
www.monash.edu.au
85
Opportunities and ChallengesElectricityHydrogenLiquid fuels
Chemicals
High value products, e.g.• disposable catalysts• nano particles
Employment and regional development
Cheap, clean and reliable energy
High-tech manufacturing industry
Exports
Brown Coal
Investment in RDDC of
brown coal technologies
Lack of further
technology development
Carbon taxVictorian
brown coal to stay
underground
Losses of • industry• employment• energy security
Energy source
Specialised material
www.monash.edu.au
86
Why a Centre in Monash University?• energy technology as a priority research area,
• world-class researchers in brown coal science and technology,
• specialised research facilities backed by excellent general research infrastructure (including synchrotron),
• a campus in the Latrobe Valley, ideal for a strong partnership among university, government, industry and the region, and
• productive brown coal research alliance with top research organisations in Japan, Germany, China and USA.
Expertise, facilities and
link with industry
Commitment & Funding Excellence in R&D of clean brown
coal technologies
www.monash.edu.au
87
Functions of the Proposed Centre
Victorian Centre for Low Emission Brown Coal
Technologies
Victorian State Government (& Australian Federal Government)
Other Australian and overseas
research organisations
Industries & region
Training of graduates as
future scientists and
engineers
Fundamental support for commercial
demonstration activities
Un-biased advice to
governments, industries and communities
R&D of clean brown coal technologies for reduced CO2 emission, including
co-utilisation with biomass
Interface for national and international collaboration
Sustainable Development of Victoria
www.monash.edu.au
88
Expected Key OutcomesThe key outcomes from this Centre will be low emission brown coal technologies and graduates knowing the technologies:
for power generation based on advanced gasification and combustion technologies:
• aimed at near-term and long-term CO2 reduction,• key technology aspects proved at semi-demonstration scale.
for the production of commodity chemicals and high-value (exportable) products, especially:
• environmentally benign disposable catalysts,• nano materials,• coal-derived products for agricultural application, and• exportable fuels derived from brown coal.
www.monash.edu.au
89
Monashe-Health Research
A Collaborative Research Initiative
www.monash.edu.au
90
Medications, Tests, Radiology
Total estimated savings in Australia: $2 billion+
$2,023 5%
$26,930 60%
$4,718 11%
$10,420 24%
From ADEReduction
From Medication
From Laboratory
From Radiology
Estimated Cost Savings from Order Entry Decision Support (USA Annual, Total US$44 billion)
Center for Information Technology Leadership (March 2003)
www.monash.edu.au
91
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
Demand Reduction ($m)
Inpatient Public
Inpatient Private
Ambulatory
Medications
Diabetes
COPD
CHFAsthm
a
Pneumonia
Potential for Demand Reduction ($m pa)
Adverse Drug Event
Disease Management
Demand Reduction
Total estimated savings in Australia: $4.5 billion
HealthConnect Indicative Benefits Report, Final Version, DMR Consulting, February, 2004.
www.monash.edu.au
92
Quality and Safety
• Adverse events in 16% of hospital admissions• 7+ extra hospital days per event• 18,000 deaths per annum• 50,000 suffer permanent disability
Over 50% preventable
• Diabetes– 940,000 Australians over 25 have diabetes – 500,000 don’t know it– Over 30% of avoidable acute episodes
– be avoided
www.monash.edu.au
93
Opportunity
• e-Health is emerging as a major focus of industry and government worldwide– Major new investments by Cisco, IBM, SAP, Oracle, Microsoft,
etc.– EU e-Europe 2005 program, US National Health Information
Infrastructure– Major Australian initiatives: HealthConnect, National e-Health
Transition Authority, major $1 billion federal initiative in preventative care
• Significant social benefits– Higher quality, safer, more efficient, more accessible care– Australian healthcare savings: $6bn per annum– Export opportunity: $1.25 billion per annum
• Leading-edge research needed to achieve benefits
www.monash.edu.au
94
Faculty ofLawFaculty of
EngineeringFaculty ofBusiness
Economics
Faculty ofInformationTechnology
Strong Links to Industry
Monash University
HealthTechnologies
Alliance
Industry Government
Research InstitutionsHealthcare
Organisations
ResearchOutcomes
ResearchFunding
Industry &Government
Projects
Faculty ofMedicine,Nursing &
HealthSciencese-Health
ResearchInitiative
www.monash.edu.au
95
Accomplishments to Date
• Strong cross-faculty collaboration established– Information Technology; Medicine, Nursing and Health Science;
Engineering; Business and Economics; and Law– Initial multidisciplinary research programs and participants identified
• Health Technologies Alliance (HTA) formed– Major hospitals: Austin Health, Melbourne Health, Peter Mac,
Southern Health– Major global enterprises: IBM, SAP, Cisco, Intel, British Telecom,
Telstra– Various Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)– Major medical bodies (RACGP, RACP)– $20+ million industry and research commitment over 5 years
• External collaborations initiated– International collaborations: Harvard, CMU, CNR (Italy), DFKI
(Germany), ITC-IRST (Italy)– National collaborations: CSIRO e-Health Research Centre, UNSW
Centre for Health Informatics
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Largest higher education providers of international education, 2004
University and State Number of international students 2004
Proportion of all university students 2004
International student fee revenues 2003
Proportion of all university revenues 2003
% $s million %
Monash U (Victoria) 17,077 30.6 138.3 17.9 RMIT UT (Victoria)* 15,132 39.0 111.9 21.7 Curtin UT (WA)* 14,319 39.7 95.0 24.2 Central Queensland U 10,460 46.8 78.2 38.2 U South Australia * 10,257 31.5 49.1 16.0 U Sydney (NSW) 9806 21.2 102.2 11.7 U New South Wales 9481 23.5 118.6 16.0 U Melbourne (Victoria) 9215 22.0 137.3 14.9 Macquarie U (NSW) 8725 29.2 69.8 22.8 Charles Sturt U (NSW)* 8429 23.5 12.3 6.0 U Southern Queensland 8333 32.8 18.2 15.1 U Wollongong (NSW) 7940 37.6 49.1 20.7 U Technology, Sydney 7369 23.7 63.0 20.3 Griffith U (Queensland) 7261 21.9 58.9 16.4 Total Australia 228,555 24.2 1700.9 13.8
* more than 40 per cent of international enrolments offshore.
U = University. UT = University of Technology. RMIT = Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.
Source: DEST, 2005
Simon Marginson, 2005
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Monash as a provider of international education – 2004 (Marginson, 2005)
Monash had 17,077 international students, more than any other Australian university
30.6% of all students
Their fee revenues ($170 m –for 2004) represented 18% of all university revenues
www.monash.edu.au
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Demographics of international students2004/2 & 2005/1 by Nationality - All Campuses
THAILAND2%
CHINA31%
INDONESIA10%
MALAYSIA10%
HONG KONG8%
INDIA7%
SINGAPORE5%
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA5%
VIETNAM3%
JAPAN2%
SRI LANKA1%
GERMANY1%
KOREA SOUTH1%
TAIWAN1%
NORWAY1%
MAURITIUS1%
ENGLAND1%
BANGLADESH1%
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IDP choice factors for Australia (GSM 2003)
High quality education 94%
World recognised 89%
Safe environment 89%
Affordable cost of living 83%
Employment overseas 82%
English speaking 81%
Employment at home 80%
Affordability of tuition 79%
Culturally tolerant 79%
Life experience 78%
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Why do international students come to Monash?
• Well known education brand• Committed to academic excellence• Professional recognition of some qualifications
in our key markets• Premium price position• Strong BusEco and IT profile• World class research• Location• Perceived choice – 400 courses and 75 double
degrees
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Establishing Institutes and Centres
Purpose of Initiative• Build a community of researchers to engage in the
highest quality research• Foster cross-departmental and cross-faculty
collaboration to encourage innovative interdisciplinary research
• Retain key researchers in an increasingly competitive environment
• Enable Monash to build the necessary ‘critical mass’ to have national and international impact
• Realise the strategic advantages and opportunities offered by the regional and international spread of Monash’s campuses through the establishment of campus nodes
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Establishing Institutes and Centres continued
Benefits to Monash• Will attract key national and international researchers
and students across disciplines• Increase revenue through increased HDR load and
completions and strategic positioning of Monash to attract additional research funding
• Provide research nodes at Monash’s international campuses
• Enhance Monash’s national and international reputation as a leader in chosen research areas
• Generate new research opportunities through interactions with industry, the community and the State and Federal Governments
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UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INSTITUTESInstitutes being developed or under consideration
• Institute for Advanced Materials, Manufacturing and Nanotechnology• Monash Environmental Institute (MEI)• Institute for Injury Prevention• Transport Research at Monash (TR@M)• Brown Coal Research Centre• Monash Ageing Research• Monash Institute for Regional Studies• Monash Institute for Global Movements• Monash Institute for Medical Research
www.monash.edu.au
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Structure and funding of the proposed Centre
Monash Sustainability Institute
Climate Water Transport
Brown Coal
Centre
Funding from State government(main stakeholder)
Funding from Federal Government
competitive schemes
Contributions from Monash University
(time and infrastructure)
EnergyFossil fuelsRenewables
Funding from industry on project-by-project
basis