Kate Hunter

About Dr Kate Hunter

Senior Research Fellow, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Program

  • PhD,
  • MPH

Dr Kate Hunter, PhD, MPH is a senior research fellow with Guunu-maana (Heal), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health program at The George Institute and conjoint senior lecturer at the University of NSW. She is elected chair of Kidsafe NSW (2018-current) and an elected Executive member of the Australasian Injury Prevention Network (2019-current). Working at the knowledge interface – bringing together Indigenous and western knowledges - Dr Hunter’s expertise is in applying an equity lens across the injury prevention spectrum through the conduct and evaluation of complex community and hospital-based programs, ensuring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices are central to her work.

Dr Hunter prioritises translational research. She has a track record in scale-up of successful programs, with her research being cited in policy and national guidelines. Dr Hunter is committed to supporting the next generation of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander and non-Aboriginal researchers working in partnership with Aboriginal communities and organisations. She has supervised four Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander PhD candidates to completion.

 

Implementing healthcare decolonisation for Indigenous people: a systematic review

International Journal for Equity in Health Date published:

How deep does it really burn? Social and emotional implications of paediatric burn injuries and care on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families

Burns Date published:

Informed consent processes with First Nations peoples undergoing surgery or invasive procedures: a scoping review

BMC Medical Ethics Date published:

‘Better together’: codesign of Aboriginal unintentional child injury prevention programme

Injury Prevention Date published:

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