The Clinical and Public Health Postgraduate Symposium 2018
22–23 November 2018
THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 1
Participants
Contents Participants Page 1
Judges Page 2
Members Page 3
Introduction Page 4
Foreword Page 5
Speakers Page 6
Program
Thursday 22 November Page 9
Friday 23 November Page 11
Poster Presentations Page 13
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Faculty of Medicine (FoM)
School of Public Health (SPH)
UQ School of Clinical Medicine
School of Biomedical Sciences (SBMS)
School of Pharmacy
School of Dentistry
Centre for Child Health Research
Centre for Health Services Research
Mater Research Institute (MRI-UQ)
UQ Diamantina Institute (UQDI)
UQ Centre for Clinical Research (UQCCR)
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute (QIMR)
Primary Care and Clinical Unit
Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital Clinical Unit
Rural Clinical School Research Centre
22–23 November 2018
THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 32 22–23 November 2018
Judging Panel MembersThe Organising committee would like to thank the following judges:
Dr Kirat Chand UQCCR
Dr Bronwyn Clark School of Public Health
Dr Iulia Oancea Clinical Sciences
Dr Bri Fjeldsoe School of Public Health
Mrs Centaine Snoswell Centre for Health Services Research
Dr Nina Hall School of Public Health
Dr Remo Ostini Rural Clinical School Research Centre
Dr Ellen Leslie School of Public Health
A/Prof Simon Reid School of Public Health
Dr Rob Eley School of Biomedical Sciences
A/Prof Diann Eley Clinical units and MD/HDR student cohort
Prof Jason Roberts UQCCR
Prof Mark Davies RBWH Clinical School
Dr Timothy Wells Diamantina Institute
Dr Judith Dean School of Public Health
Dr Katherine Cullerton School of Public Health
A/Prof Marina Reeves School of Public Health
Dr Hannah Thomas UQCCR
Dr Samudragupta Bora Mater Research Institute
A/Prof Lisa Hall School of Public Health
A/Prof James Scott Queensland Health and School of Public Health
Organising Committee MembersZoe Thomson School of Public Health
Samantha Stephens School of Public Health
Jenny Job School of Public Health
Yashna Sagar Mater Research Institute
Carrie Coggon UQ Diamantina Institute
Aakanksha Dixit UQ Centre for Clinical Research
Swathi Ramdave MBBS-PhD program
All committee members are current PhD students
The Committee would especially like to thank Professor Elizabeth Eakin Associate Dean (Research) Faculty of Medicine, for her support and assistance, in developing this new symposium.
SponsorsThis event is made possible thanks to the generous support of our symposium sponsors.
The Faculty of Medicine, The School of Public Health, The Graduate School and The UQ Association for Postgraduate Students.
For more information on how to get to and around the RBWH campus, please refer to:
https://metronorth.health.qld.gov.au/rbwh/maps-and-directions
THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 54 22–23 November 2018
Foreword Welcome to the 2018 Clinical and Public Health symposium.
Medical research is multidisciplinary, and very broad in scope – from the test-tube to patients to populations. Our symposium aims to connect clinical and public health HDR students, their supervisors, academics within the Faculty of Medicine, and external organisations interested in and supporting the research.
We invite you to take advantage of this event to practice your public speaking, receive critical comment and feedback to enhance your research experience and quality, expand your network and learn about and engage with other clinical or public health researchers.
Throughout the two days, a number of keynote speakers will present topics and provide practical advice, relevant both during and after candidature. A panel discussion will be held, focusing on post-PhD career pathways with panellists from a range of backgrounds.
I would like to congratulate the postgraduate student committee, who with support from the Faculty of Medicine, UQ Association for Postgraduate Students and UQ Graduate School have worked to put together an exceptional program. This symposium really is an impressive postgraduate event and we have 53 clinical and public health postgraduates, presenting sessions over the next couple of days.
It is events like this, early in your career, that you form fruitful collaborations and partnerships that last a long time and I encourage you to use this time to learn, share and network with colleagues from UQ, as well as researchers and industry experts, who have joined us from industry and government.
I wish you a productive two days of collaborative conference experience and look forward to participating in the presentations and collaborations,
Professor Charles Gilks, Head of School, School of Public Health.
Professor Charles Gilks Head of School, School of Public Health
Introduction School profile The School of Public Health at The University of Queensland is ranked 1st in Australasia for Public Health by the US News Best Global Universities ranking for 2018 and also ranked 18th in the world by the Shanghai Academic Rankings of World Universities for 2018.
We aim to be a global leader in improving the health of populations in a changing and inequitable world.
Our School engages in research that is focused on making a real impact on some of the world’s most pressing population and public health challenges. Over the past decade we have established a reputation for research that is comprehensive and influential.
The combined strengths in our research and engagement include:
• Health Promotion
• Climate change and environmental health
• Mental Health
• Blood-borne viruses
• Women’s Health
• Health Systems
We attract more than $13 million in annual research income, Australian Aid initiatives and consultancy and our health research is ranked by the Australian Research Council as the best in Australia and amongst the best in the world. Together with our partners and more than 100 Higher Degree Research students from across the globe, we’re working to make an impact to the world’s biggest public health challenges which continue to intensify.
Our research teams also provide valuable expertise and services to government agencies, healthcare providers, non-profit organisations, and businesses.
For more information visit public-health.uq.edu.au
Map UQnav is a new, free mobile application that contains searchable maps of UQ’s campuses. Enter your destination and UQnav will show you where it’s located: uq.edu.au/uqnav
Studying with us is your opportunity for a career that can take you all over the world, change lives and improve the health of communities. Our teaching programs are relevant to leading and emerging health issues and prepare you to become a future health leader.
Our school’s flagship Master of Public Health (MPH) program is the first in Asia Pacific to achieve Curriculum Validation from the Agency for Public Health Education Accreditation (APHEA). This is one of the leading accrediting bodies for MPH programs in the world. This validation confirms the curriculum adheres to European standards for a modern comprehensive degree and contains the basic structure and core content expected from a Master of Public Health program.
Our Masters programs include:
• Master of Biostatistics
• Master of Environmental Health Sciences
• Master of Epidemiology
• Master of Public Health
For more information on how to get to and around the RBWH campus, please refer to:
https://metronorth.health.qld.gov.au/rbwh/maps-and-directions
Education Centre
THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 76 22–23 November 2018
Dr Britta Wigginton Lecturer in Health Promotion
Dr Britta Wigginton is a Health Promotion Lecturer in the School of Public Health. Her program of research harnesses qualitative methods to explore the intersection of gender, health and the environment. Britta teaches both undergraduate and postgraduate health promotion courses. Britta is passionate about context-sensitive and reflexive qualitative research. She takes this energy into the classroom and her research to advocate for approaches, methods and ways of thinking and being for researchers and practitioners that challenge the status quo and work towards social justice.
Dr Ella Trembizki NHMRC Early Career Fellow
Dr Ella Trembizki is an NHMRC Early Career Fellow at the Microbial Diagnostics and Characterisation group (UQ Centre for Clinical Research). Her research focuses on molecular diagnostics, antimicrobial resistance surveillance and molecular epidemiology of public health important organisms.
Leanne BrennanHigher Degrees by Research Liaison Officer Team Leader (Health)
Leanne Brennan is the Higher Research Degree Liaison Officer Team Leader (Health) at the Graduate School, where she heads a team of 5 Faculty of Medicine Higher Research Degree Liaison Officers (HLO) and 5 Health and Behavioural Science HLO’s. Leanne and her team offer support to students and their supervisory teams from Candidature to Graduation. She has worked for The University of Queensland of Queensland for 20 years and during that time has held roles in both the Faculties she supports. Leanne holds a Certificate in Social and Community Work and Bachelor of Social Sciences from Waikato University in New Zealand.
Dr Rebecca CollPostdoctoral Research-Industry Fellow
Dr Rebecca Coll is a post-doctoral Research-Industry Fellow at the University of Queensland, studying innate immunity and novel anti-inflammatory compounds. Rebecca received her PhD in Immunology in 2013 from Trinity College Dublin and moved to Associate Professor Kate Schroder’s group at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience in 2014. Rebecca’s research focus is inflammasomes – protein complexes at the heart of inflammation and disease – and how these complexes can be targeted therapeutically to prevent damaging inflammation. Rebecca led the biological characterisation of MCC950, a small molecule inhibitor of the NLRP3 inflammasome and an exciting prospect as a new therapy for treating patients with inflammatory diseases
Dr Bronwyn RobsonStudent Counsellor
Dr Bronwyn Robson is a student counsellor at UQ Student Services. Her role there involves supporting students in a wide range of well-being issues such as stress, grief and loss, relationships and managing unhelpful thoughts and feelings. Bronwyn’s approach to counselling is based on a neuropsychotherapy framework, utilising tools from a number of therapeutic methodologies such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Solution Focused Brief Therapy. As someone who has completed a PhD in Evolutionary Genetics, she is particularly passionate about Post Graduate Mental Health, having experienced its rigors for herself.
Speakers
Dr Ken Dutton-Regester QIMR
Increasing your Visibility and Communicating your Research with Social Media and the Internet
Dr Ken Dutton-Regester is a Research Officer at QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute using genomics to identify therapeutic vulnerabilities in late-stage melanoma. From 2014-2016, Ken used his NHMRC Early Career Fellowship to learn high-throughput functional genomics at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. Ken frequently engages the community about his research in a variety of formats and advocates for early career researchers as past-chairperson of the Associate Member Council for the American Association for Cancer Research. For his outstanding research and exceptional science communication efforts, Ken was awarded a Queensland Young Tall Poppy Scientist Award in 2017.
8 22–23 November 2018
Prof Stewart TrostStewart Trost is a Professor of Child Health in the School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences at Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Australia. He currently serves as the Director of the Institute of Health and Biomedical Research (IHBI) at the Queensland Centre for Children’s Health Research where he leads the Children’s Physical Activity Research Group. Trost’s research interests include measurement of physical activity and sedentary behaviour, psychosocial and environmental determinants of physical activity behaviour, therapeutic exercise for children and youth with chronic health conditions, and community-based interventions to promote physical activity and prevent obesity. Trost is an internationally recognized researcher in the field of measurement of physical activity in children and youth, and has extensive experience developing, testing, and deploying machine learning algorithms for activity recognition and prediction of energy expenditure from wearable sensors.
Dr Kevan JonesKevan used an electron-microscopy to study the infection process of the Fusarium wilt fungus in banana roots, comparing plants treated with silicon with those not receiving an additional silicon treatment.
With two research-intensive schools and fi ve hospital based institutes, we’re positioned to make real breakthroughs and improve the futures of people all over the world. Our educators and researchers are committed to improving global health. There’s a shared ambition to make a diff erence – and that’s exactly what we’re doing.
medicine.uq.edu.au/future-students
Medicineis complex. Our vision for it isn’t.
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THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 1110 22–23 November 2018
Day 1
Thursday 22 November8.45 – 9.00 Registration
9.00 – 9.10 Welcome and opening address Professor Geoff McColl Executive Dean Faculty of Medicine
9.10 – 10.45 Session 19.10- 9.25 Keynote Speaker: Leanne Brennan
Topic: HDR Fundamentals: Development opportunities & candidature management
9.25 – 9.35 Fertility desire and contraceptive need of women living with HIV in Indonesia
Dyah Juliastuti School of Public Health
9.35 – 9.45 Understanding and influencing modifiable risk factors and chronic disease risk among women following treatment for breast cancer
Caroline Terranova School of Public Health
9.45 – 9.55 Healthy Living after Cancer+Text: A text message-delivered, extended contact intervention targeting healthy weight, diet and physical activity behaviour
Jenny Job School of Public Health
9.55 – 10.05 The prevention and management of post-burn scarring in children
Jodie Wiseman Centre of Children’s Health Research
10.05 – 10.15 Helping our clinical geneticists – Improving variant interpretation guidelines for specific neurodevelopmental disorders
Mark Williams Mater Research Institute
10.15 - 10.25 Infection-related mortality following kidney transplantation in Australia and New Zealand
Samuel Chan School of Biomedical Sciences
10.25 – 10.35 Social relationships satisfaction and accumulation of chronic conditions in mid-aged women: A 20-year cohort study
Xiaolin Xu School of Public Health
10.35 – 10.45 Hysterectomy and perceived physical function in mid-life Louise Wilson School of Public Health
10.45 – 11.30 Morning tea and Poster Session 1
11.30 – 12.45 Session 211.30 – 11.45 Keynote Speaker: Dr Ken Dutton-Regester
Topic: Social media for scientists
11.45 - 11.55 Critical ethnography of methamphetamine recovery Samuel Brookfield School of Public Health
11.55– 12.05 Children and families’ experiences of adhering to scar treatments
Jessica Killey Centre for Health Services Research
12.05 – 12.15 Smoking and age at natural menopause: Pooled analysis of over 200,000 women
Dongshan Zhu School of Public Health
12.15 – 12.25 Presence of inhibitory antibodies in patients with Escherichia coli urosepsis
Carrie Coggon Diamantina Institute
12.25 – 12.35 End of life hospital costs for a matched dementia and non-dementia cohort
Megan McStea Centre for Health Services Research
12.35 – 12.45 The human peripheral blood CD4+ T cell response to islet autoantigenic peptides
Yassmin Musthaffa Diamantina Institute
12.45 – 13.15 Lunch
Program
13.15 – 14.40 Session 313.15 – 13.30 Keynote Speaker: Professor Stewart Trost
Topic: Getting Published and How to Get Cited
13.30 – 13.40 Standardised outcomes in nephrology (SONG): establishing a core vascular access outcome measure for trials in haemodialysis
Andrea Viecelli School of Medicine
13.40 – 13.50 Income, gender and forms of intimate partner violence Zohre Ahmadabadi School of Public Health
13.50 – 14.00 Mental health of parents of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder in Central Vietnam - Preliminary findings
Dzung Ho Mater Research Institute
14.00 – 14.10 Reduced fat-free mass at birth is a predictor of childhood obesity
Abirami Ratnasingham UQ Centre for Clinical Research
14.10 – 14.20 Maternal pre-eclampsia and offspring ADHD at 7- and 10-years: ALSPAC Birth Cohort Study
Berihun Dachew Institute for Sociual Science, UQCCR
14.20 – 14.30 Seasonal association between ambient ozone and hospital admission for respiratory in Hanoi, Vietnam
Thi Mai Ly Loung Child Health Research Centre
14.30 – 14.40 Prospective assessment of the coronary artery bypass grafting patient immune profile
Alexis Perros School of Medicine
14.40 – 15.30 Afternoon tea and Poster Session 2
15.30 – 16.30 Session 415.30 – 15.40 Psychotropic medication use in adults with intellectual
disability in Queensland, Australia from 1999 to 2016Menghuan Song Mater Research Institute
15.40 – 15.50 Systems thinking in TB elimination through screening and management of LTBI in primary care in Australia
Madhumati Chatterji Primary Care and Clinical Unit
15.50 – 16.00 A systematic literature review of efficiency measurement in residential aged care facilities
Alice Tran Centre for Health Services Research
16.00 – 16:10 In vitro - in vivo relationships (IVIVR) for transdermal delivery of nicotine transdermal delivery systems (TDS)
Hanumanth Cheruvu Diamantina Institute
16.10 – 16.20 Improving treatment of brain metastases using theranostic nanomedicines
Malcolm Lim UQ Centre for Clinical Research
16.20 – 16.30 The effect of premenstrual syndrome on postpartum depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Sifan Cao School of Public Health
16.30 - 16.45 Award Presentations16.30 – 16.45 Award presentations & closing
THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 1312 22–23 November 2018
Day 2
Friday 23 November8.45 – 9.00 Registration
9.00 – 9.10 Welcome and opening address Professor Elizabeth Eakin Associate Dean (Research) Faculty of Medicine
9.10 – 10.35 Session 19.10 - 9.25 Keynote Speaker: Dr Kevan Jones
Topic: Mentoring and Student Supervisor Relationship
9.25 – 9.35 Association between dietary patterns and keratinocyte skin cancers in organ transplant
Emily Shao School of Public Health
9.35 – 9.45 What is the relationship between co-administration of cannabis with tobacco and persistence of frequent cannabis use?
Abdullah Alghamdi School of Public Health
9.45 – 9.55 “Is it going to serve me or is that going to hurt me?”: exploring how women describe their experience with food and weight following a breast cancer diagnosis
Zoe Thomson School of Public Health
9.55 – 10.05 Communicable diseases prevalence among refugees and asylum seekers: systematic review and meta-analysis
Haitham Taha School of Public Health
10.05 – 10.15 Towards using standardized in vitro methods for topical product bioequivalence studies
Maryam Dabbaghi Diamantina Institute
10.15 – 10.25 The Chest Pain DECoDeR study: Data extraction for a chest pain clinical data registry
Siegfried Perez Faculty of Medicine
10.25 – 10.35 The design of a mobile application to examine the effectiveness of gamification in diabetes management: can studies of mobile technology be blinded?
Anthony Deacon Centre for Online Health
10.35 – 10.50 Morning tea
10.50 – 12.45 Session 210.50 – 11.30 Panel: Dr Britta Wigginton, Dr Ella Trembizki, Dr Rebecca Coll and Dr Monica Ng
Topic: What to do next? Early Career Pathways Panel Discussion
11.30 – 11.40 Iris freckling as a marker of cutaneous melanoma risk: a case-control study
Antonia Laino Diamantina Institute
11.40 – 11.50 Prevalence and patterns of mental health illnesses in amphetamine-type stimulant users versus non-users
Malithi Thoradeniya School of Public Health
11.50 – 12.00 Human placenta-derived exosomal miRNA can modulate insulin sensitivity and systemic glucose homeostasis in normal pregnancy and gestational diabetes mellitus
Soumya Nair UQ Centre for Clinical Research
12.00 – 12.10 Applying system dynamics modelling to analyse the interactions between household level water, sanitation and hygiene, and nutrition on stunting in children in rural Lao PDR.
Tari Bowling School of Public Health
12.10 – 12.20 Complement Component 3 is Downregulated in Cancer-Derived Exosomes
Kekoolani Visan Queensland Institute for Medical Research
12.20 – 12.30 Exosomal Proteins and miRNAs as Biomarkers for Early Stage Epithelial Ovarian Cancer
Shayna Sharma UQ Centre for Clinical Research
12.30 – 12.40 Maternal sleep disordered breathing increases the risk of adverse intrapartum outcomes, operative delivery and poor neonatal outcomes
Nicole Robertson Mater Research Institute
12:45- 14:00 Lunch
14.00 – 15.25 Session 314.00 – 14.15 Keynote Speaker: Dr Bronwyn Robson
Topic: Adding Balance to your Postgraduate Studies
14.15 – 14.25 Interleukin-22 suppresses intestinal inflammation through epithelial cell restoration
Md Moniruzzaman Mater Research Institute
14.25 – 14.35 Examination of troponin testing following implementation of the IMPACT protocol, an accelerated chest pain assessment strategy
Ariel Ho Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital
14.35 – 14.45 Mobile pregnancy apps, decreased fetal movement and self-assessment of risk
Lisa Daly Mater Research Institute
14.45 – 14.55 Prevalence of the cardiovascular health status in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Yang Peng School of Clinical Medicine
14.55 - 15.05 Unravelling transmission of Neisseria gonorrhoeae through the use of whole genome sequencing
Cameron Buckley UQ Centre for Clinical Research
15.05 – 15.15 Sense of Safety: a whole person approach to care of distress in primary care
Johanna Lynch Primary Care Clinical Unit
15.15 – 15.25 Neuromechanical coupling within the triceps surae muscle group and its consequence on force sharing
Marion Crouzier School of Biomedical Sciences
15.25 – 15.40 Afternoon tea
15.40 - 16.40 Session 415.40 – 15.50 Being a stem cell donor for a chronically-ill family member:
adult donors’ experiences and unmet supportive care needsNienke Zomerdijk School of Medicine
15.50 – 16.00 Systemic administration of azithromycin as an adjunct to non-surgical periodontal therapy in stage III and IV periodontitis- a randomized controlled trial
Srinivas Sulugodu Ramachandra School of Dentistry
16.00 – 16:10 Examining the evidence on the links between microfinance initiatives and non-communicable disease outcomes in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic literature review
Gabriela Fernando School of Public Health
16.10 – 16.20 Using EEG and MRI at term equivalent age in very preterm infants to predict cognitive outcome
Annice Kong UQ Centre for Clinical Research
16.20 – 16.30 Genetic engineering of tumour-infiltrating monocytes to inhibit metastatic breast cancer
Moustafa Sherif Diamantina Institute
16.30 - 16.55 Award Presentations16.40 – 16.55 Award presentations & closing
1When medical evidence is not enough: reflection of the longitudinal impact of Women’s Health Initiative study on hormone therapy use in Australia
RIFANI BHAKTI School of Pharmacy
2 An integrates systems analysis of miRNA target network associated with natural killer cell activation
GAYATHRI THILLAIYAMPALAM UQ Diamantina Institute
3Comparison of sensitivity of cancerous and non-cancerous lines to determine suitability for in-vitro cytotoxicity screening of pharmaceutical excipients with potential topical applications
FARZANEH FOROUZ School of Biomedical Sciences
4 Metagenomic analysis of the gut microbiota of healthy Australian subjects consuming diets with different levels of prebiotic content
NIDA MURTAZA School of Biomedical Sciences
5 The classification of naevus distribution patterns in the Brisbane naevus morphology study
KAITLIN NUFER UQ Diamantina Institute
6 26 novel genome-wide loci in a European ancestry population UPEKHA LIYANAGE QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
7 Diabetes in pregnancy: Is there a better way to assess fetal wellbeing? ALISON LEE-TANNOCK School of Biomedical Sciences
8 Low dose aspirin (LDA) affect exosomes release from placental BeWo cells including protein content changes
SUCHISMITA DUTTA UQ Centre for Clinical Research
9 Spatial patterns of hospitalisations in the Queensland geographical areas over a 15-year period
JAVIER CORTES RAMIREZ Centre for Children’s Health Research
10 Media content analysis of a Philippine national drug policy FRANCES HUNT Faculty of Medicine
11 Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) in sterile paracetamol-induced hepatotoxicity
SALEH ALABBAS Mater Research Institute
12 Instrumented tools to assess individual muscle mechanical properties in children: a systematic review
MIRAN GOO School of Biomedical Sciences
13 Using microsampling for clinical dosing studies in critically ill patients SUZANNE PARKER UQ Centre for Clinical Research
14 Obesity prevention interventions in Saudis children – what is worth noting?
HMIDAN ABDULLAH ALTURKI Centre for Children’s Health Research
15 Targeted nanoemulsion system for the delivery of glycolipid and antigen to dendritic cells for cancer immunotherapy
ALLIE PUI YENG LAM UQ Diamantina Institute
Poster Session 110.45-11.30 – Thursday 22nd November 2018
1 INSIST Indigenous network suicide intervention skills training RICHARD HENSHAW School of Medicine
2 The mucosa-associated microbiome in paediatric Crohn’s Disease patients
JING JIE THE UQ Diamantina Institute
3 Early-life cognitive consequences of genetic predisposition to late-onset neurodegenerative diseases
BRITTANY MITCHELL QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
4A low fetal cerebroplacental ratio confers a greater risk of intrapartum fetal compromise and adverse neonatal outcomes in low risk multiparous women at term
JESSICA TURNER Mater Research Institute
5 Enhancing detection of antibiotic-resistant Mycobacterium abscessus complex: an emerging pathogen in patients with cystic fibrosis
AMANDA BORDIN UQ Centre for Clinical Research
6 Genetic epidemiology of non-suicidal self-harm ADRIAN CAMPOS GONZALEZ QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
7 Impact pf air pollution on respiratory health to 4 years of age in Australian children
LINPING LYN CHEN Centre for Children’s Health Research
8Do age and gender modify the effect of neighbourhood greenspace on the mental health of adults? A protocol for Systematic Literature Review
TAFZILA AKTER MOULY School of Public Health
9 Bile salt hydrolase genes in human Methanobrevibacter and Methanosphaera spp
JAMES VOLMER UQ Diamantina Institute
10 Mapping perinatal education SHERIDAN GUYATT Mater-UQ
11 Deep sequencing of microbial communities in cystic fibrosis airways TANIA DUARTE Institute for Molecular Bioscience
12 Interventions to optimise prescribing in older people with dementia: a systematic review
LEILA SHAFIEE HANJANI Centre for Health Services Research
13 Whole genome sequence analysis of patients with suspected hereditary cancer
AIMEE DAVIDSON QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
14 Array and whole genome sequencing-derived homologous recombination deficiency score: how do they compare
MARC XAVIER DE LUCA Centre for Clinical Research
15 High risk practices of companion animal veterinarians and veterinary nurses in Australia
ANGELA WILLEMSEN School of Public Health
16SGLT2 inhibitor improves lipid and glucose metabolism by restoring insulin and growth hormone balance in hyperphagic obese prediabetic mice
ZHENGXIANG (JASON) HUANG School of Biomedical Sciences
17 Phenotypic and genotypic analysis of amelanotic and hypomelanotic melanoma patients
JENNA RAYNER UQ Diamantina Institute
Poster Session 214.40-15.30 – Thursday 22nd November 2018
14 22–23 November 2018 THE CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM 15
16 22–23 November 2018
UQ Student Employability [email protected] employability.uq.edu.au/find-a-job
18 Morphologic insights and PDL-1 expression in metaplastic tumours: a rare and aggressive breast cancer type
EMARENE KALAW UQ Centre for Clinical Research
19 A LC-MSMS assay to investigate the pharmacokinetics of meropenem in critically ill patients receiving renal replacement therapy
YARMARLY GUERRA VALERO UQ Centre for Clinical Research
20 Functional assessment of candidate melanoma susceptibility genes VAISHNAVI NATHAN QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
21 To read or not read: sex-limitation models of Australian individual school achievement
HENRIETTE DOHNT QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
22 Evaluating the spatial relationship of Wnt5a and Notch4 in human melanoma tissue
KATHERINE ROBBINS UQ Diamantina Institute