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The George Institute for Global Health
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‘Low sugar’, ‘low carb’, ‘healthy choice’: how the alcohol industry is marketing its way into your wellness routine

News / Media release 03 Mar 2026

Health 10x Accelerator

Since 2019, the Health 10x Accelerator has supported Australia's brightest health and medtech entrepreneurs in developing affordable and scalable solutions to the world's most pressing unmet health and medical needs. Delivered in partnership with UNSW, the 10-week program provides startups with funding, mentorship, and resources to navigate regulatory pathways, refine investment strategies, and scale globally. Key partners and supporters, including Virtus Health, UNSW Tyree Institute of Health Engineering (IHealthE), Platypus MedTech Consulting, Genesys Electronics Design, Randwick Health & Innovation Precinct, Liverpool Innovation Precinct and AstraZeneca, offer additional support in coaching, investment, and specialised expertise. With the support of our partners and collaborators, startups can gain access to state-of-the-art facilities, collaboration spaces, and commercialisation specialists, enhancing their ability to create impactful solutions that transform global health outc

Professor Martin Gallagher

Profile

Martin is Professorial Fellow at the George Institute, Head of the South Western Sydney Campus for the Faculty of Medicine & Health at UNSW, and a clinical nephrologist at Liverpool Hospital.

He has worked extensively within the ANZ Society of Nephrology in renal guidelines, clinical policy and research.

Martin’s research interests include large scale clinical trials to explore ways to improve the outcomes of patients with kidney disease (esp in the setting of acute kidney injury), measurement of health systems and applying research evidence into clinical practice.

 

COVID-19 Preparedness Checklist For Rural Primary Health Care & Community Settings

Policy & Practice Report

EnSWIn: Environmental Support for Walking In India (pilot)

This study includes primary and secondary data collection, and uses surveys, photographs, and in-depth exploration of the perspectives of a subset of selected respondents. The findings will shed light on the association between built environment and physical activity in a wide range of adults living in different zones of the 2 study sites.

Perspectives, practices, and environmental footprints related to menstrual hygiene among girls and women in India – a pilot study [PEnMen-pilot]

Background: Menstrual hygiene management (MHM) is a generally under-researched area in India, although vital to the promotion of women’s health. Although there has been, particularly in recent years, some attention given to the provision of affordable menstrual absorbents, practices of treatment and disposal of the used absorbents have not received adequate attention from policymakers, and implementers, and pose ever-growing challenges to environmental sustainability and the personal health, well-being, and functioning of girls and women, with implications for the accomplishment of several SDGs. Aim: (i) to understand community perspectives, preferences and behavioural control related to treatment and disposal of menstrual absorbents, and the associations that women and girls make between menstrual hygiene practices and personal and environmental health; and (ii) to estimate the environmental footprints of the menstrual hygiene management practices that come up in the data-collection Research M

COVID-19 Preparedness Checklists for Urban Primary Health Care & Community settings

Policy & Practice Report

Self-management and action plans for preventing acute exacerbations due to COPD: evidence summary

Policy & Practice Report

Beta-lactam antibiotics infusion group study - BLING III

Background: Beta-lactam antibiotics are commonly used to treat life-threatening infections in critically ill patients. As a class of antibiotics, beta-lactams are known as time-dependent antibiotics because they have their greatest effect when the antibiotic concentration in the blood remains above a critical level (dependent on the organism) for the duration of the course. Continuous infusion of beta-lactams has been shown to more consistently achieve these time-dependent pharmacodynamic endpoints than the standard practice of bolus dosing. However, the relatively small randomised controlled trials to date have not reported improved clinical outcomes, such as resolution of infection or lower mortality, with the use of continuous infusion A prospective, multicentre, double-blind, double-dummy, phase II RCT (BLING II) was conducted in 25 ICUs in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong. While there was no significant difference in the primary endpoint, it found an absolute difference in hospital mortality

Sweet Transition: Priorities for collaborating to transform the food system in Australia

Policy & Practice Report

Primary prevention of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at the primary healthcare level: rapid policy brief

Policy & Practice Report

The Potential Impact of Salt Reduction in Australia

Policy & Practice Report

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The George Institute for Global Health

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    The George Institute acknowledges First Peoples and the Traditional Custodians of the many lands upon which we live and work. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and thank them for ongoing custodianship of waters, lands and skies.

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    The George Institute for Global Health is proud to work in partnership with UNSW Sydney, Imperial College London and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India.

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