Innovative triple pill significantly lowers blood pressure, study finds
Dr Gill Schierhout
Dr Schierhout has a lead role in developing a program of work at the institute focused on evaluating interventions of public health significance and large-scale programs in health. Her research work is underpinned by qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods expertise and decades of experience conducting evaluations closely with and for health system stakeholders globally and in many different countries in Africa and Asia-Pacific. She has published widely and is lead or chief investigator on a number of grants and commissioned research projects focused on evaluating innovative policy reforms and programs to improve the access and quality of primary care, particularly for disadvantaged groups.
Chronic disease and prevention omission will increase burden: The George Institute responds to 2025-26 Budget
A discussion about the Lancet Commission on Women and Cancer - Dr Ophira Ginsburg and Dr Carinna Hockham
Announcing Dr Janine Mohamed as new Distinguished Fellow
Dr Antonia (Tania) Thodis
Dr Tania Thodis is a research fellow and accredited practising dietitian leading the FareShare Medically Tailored Meals Pilot Program, a joint partnership with Australia’s largest not-for-profit food relief organisation providing millions of meals for vulnerable Australians. A ‘Food Is Medicine’ advocate, Tania is passionate about improving access to nutritious foods and diet quality underpinned by a culturally responsive approach to improve health outcomes of vulnerable and ethnically diverse communities. Clinical and mixed method research experience includes acute and outpatient healthcare settings, facilitating dietary intervention trials testing Mediterranean-style diet and lifestyle interventions as a model for preventing and managing chronic diseases like type 2 diabetes, NAFLD, dementia and cardiovascular disease and a national trial to co-create and test the clinical and cost-effectiveness of culturally responsive, multilingual digital health resources in 10 languages.
Tania has a PhD in nutrition epidemiology (MEDIS-Australia study), which examined associations between lifestyle and sociocultural characteristics of first-generation Greek Australian long-term migrants, their adherence to a Mediterranean diet pattern and successful ageing compared to counterparts living in Greece.
Food industry failing to meet Government’s Health Star Rating targets
Guunu-maana team win 2025 NHMRC Research Quality Award
Creeping rates of poor mental health show depressed, anxious state is ‘new normal’ for half of Australian women
Margie Peden
Margie's work focuses on how to prevent unintentional injuries, particularly in resource-strapped countries.
While road injuries are the biggest issue, Margie's work also canvases other significant problems of drowning, burns and falls, and identifies interventions that could save lives. Her research looks at what works, specifically in developing countries. It will provide evidence on how to prevent injuries before they happen. But it will also hope to look at the post-crash phase, working with nurses – who are the mainstay of healthcare provision in developing countries – to provide optimum treatment management. In some developing countries, traumatic injuries account for up to 70%-80% of the caseloads in emergency rooms. If you can stop these injuries upstream, there are enormous gains for healthcare systems, both financially and in terms of workforce needs.
Representing The George Institute for Global Health and South Africa, Margie is a member of the Commonwealth Road Safety Initiative Expert Panel and together with colleagues from Kenya and Canada leads the data analysis for the reports being developed ahead of the 3rd Ministerial level meeting in Sweden in February 2020 and the CHOG meeting in Rwanda. She is also a member of the Academic Expert Group for this Ministerial meeting, a group responsible for making an independent and scientific assessment of the progress made during the Decade of Action for Road Safety. This report is now available here. The Academic Expert Group will also recommend a road safety strategy for the period 2020-2030. Margie is also Chair of the Global Advisory Board for the Malawi Road Safety Research and Implementation Unit at the University of Malawi.
Prior to working at The George Institute, she was a nurse and an epidemiologist. She worked in a hospital in Cape Town, South Africa for many years before moving to the National Trauma Research Programme at the South African Medical Research Council. After that she was at the World Health Organization for 17 years, coordinating the Unintentional Injury Prevention unit.
Dr Vikash R Keshri
Vikash R Keshri is Senior Research Fellow at the George Institute for Global Health. He has completed MBBS and MD in community medicine from the Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences (MGIMS), Wardha in India, and a short course in Health Policy Analysis from Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
Vikash has around 10 years of experience in public health and health systems besides a couple of years as a clinician. Prior to joining TGI, has worked extensively in various capacity in varied organizations, such as missionary hospital, Department of Community Medicine at MGIMS, FHI 360 for MP health sector reform project, State Resource Unit and Care INDIA in Bihar, the Centre for Health Policy at Asian Development Research Institute, Patna. He has experience of working closely with policymakers and health systems stakeholders in many states in India.
His professional and research interest revolve around health systems and policy research (HPSR), especially policy analysis, governance, human resource for health and organization of health services in resource-constrained settings. At TGI, he is working on improving recovery outcome of Burns survivors with a systems approach applying the HPSR lens.