Professor Paul Zimmet AO giving a tour of the cutting edge diabetes translational research laboratory to Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt, Julia Banks MP and donor families of the Meydans and Jreissatis #diabetes #ccsdiabetes. See more:
|
|
1 Sept 2017
Photo and Tweet of the week: 2017 Diabetes Department launch
What's on at CCS 4-8 September 2017
![]() |
| Mr Andrej Terzic is presenting on 5 Sep 2017 |
CCS staff and students can see details of both public and local events (including professional development courses, trade fairs and Graduate Research Student calendars) and deadlines, at the CCS intranet's Announcements page
See CCS seminar index: www.med.monash.edu.au/cecs/events/seminars.html
What's on at CCS 4-8 September 2017
| Mon | 04/09/2017 | ► | 12:30 | Alfred Psychiatry Grand Round Presentation |
| Tue | 05/09/2017 | ► | 10:00 | Department of Diabetes Student Journal Club |
| ► | 11:00 | PhD Confirmation of candidature seminar: Mr Andrej Terzic | ||
| ► | 14:00 | PhD Pre-Submission Review: Mr Annas Al-Sharea | ||
| Wed | 06/09/2017 | ► | 11:30 | Immunology Seminar: Kylie Quinn |
| Thur | 07/09/2017 | ► | 11:30 | Cutting Edge Journal Club: TBA |
| ► | 12:00 | The Alfred Grand Round: Hospital care of patients with opioid addiction & pain | ||
| ► | 17:00 | HDR Social Evening AMREP Postgrad social night |
AMREP EMCR retreat 26-27 October: Registrations close 29 Sep 2017
![]() |
| Professor Robin Bell at a previous AMREP EMCR retreat |
Registration link
Find out more about our event below or at our website: http://www.med.monash.edu.au/cecs/ecr/retreat.html
The forgotten male cancers: 2 Nov Public Lecture by Professor T. Clark Gamblin
![]() |
| Professor T.Clark Gamblin, visiting Fulbright Scholar, is giving a public lecture 2 Nov 2017 at the Alfred Medical Research and Education (AMREP) centre. RSVP here for catering purposes |
You
are invited to a public lecture by an internationally renowned surgeon,
Professor T. Clark Gamblin, on the forgotten but lethal male cancers,
including those of the pancreas, liver and oesophagus.
Details
- Date: Thursday, 2 November 2017
- Time: 5.30 pm drinks and canapes for 6.00 pm start. Lecture followed by Q&A session.
- Venue: AMREP Lecture Theatre, adjacent to the Baker Institute at 75 Commercial Road, Melbourne 3004, 200 metres east of the main Alfred Hospital entrance. See map.
- Cost: Free
- RSVP: CLICK HERE. Please RSVP by Monday 30 October 2017 for catering purposes
- Enquiries: Jacki.Sievers@monash.edu ph +61 3 9903 0190 or Daphne.Vogiagis@monash.edu ph +61 3 9903 30611
Recent CCS publications: 25 Aug - 1 Sep 2017
| Five members of Jody Haigh's group are on the recent publication investigating T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia |
- Allergy, Immunology and Respiratory Medicine (AIRMed)
- Australian Centre for Blood Diseases (ACBD)
- Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine
- Diabetes
- Gastroenterology
- Haematology
- Immunology and Pathology
- Infectious Diseases
- Melbourne Sexual Health Centre (MSHC)
- Monash Alfred Psychiatry research centre (MAPrc)
- Medicine
- Surgery
Bacterial resistance raises doubts about pneumonia antibiotic use
![]() |
| Professor Allen Cheng is an infectious diseases physician at the Alfred |
by Anne Crawford
Monash University scientists reviewing an antibiotic commonly used to treat pneumonia have concluded that it may no longer be reliable as a monotherapy for serious infections due to bacterial resistance.Macrolide antibiotics, which include erythromycin, clarithromycin and azithromycin, are an important class of antimicrobials for pneumococcal diseases.
However, a report by Professor Allen Cheng from the Department of Infectious Diseases, and Senior Adjunct lecturer Dr Adam Jenney found that macrolide, most commonly used in combination with effective antibiotics such as penicillin or cephalosporins, may not be reliable as monotherapy for serious pneumococcal disease.
Studies show emotion plays role in chronic low back pain
![]() |
| Sin-Ki Ng is a PhD student at the Monash Alfred Psychiatry research centre |
by Anne Crawford
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a debilitating disease, adversely affecting quality of life and wellbeing, potentially leading to depression, long-term disability, time off work due to pain and reduced productivity. Yet its underlying mechanisms remain unclear.Now a review of available data by Central Clinical School PhD student Sin-Ki Ng and others at the Monash Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre (MAPrc) suggests that emotional and cognitive processes may be the core contributor to it.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




