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ACADI Update

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Breakout 2: Meeting Room 6
Thursday, August 22, 2024
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Meeting Room 6

Speaker

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Prof Elif Ekinci
Clinician Researcher
University of Melbourne

Chairperson

1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Biography

Professor Elif Ekinci is a clinician scientist, an academic endocrinologist who is working to translate research into improved outcomes for people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Her research is focused on the pathophysiology, prevention, detection and treatment of diabetes and its complications in humans. She is the Weary Dunlop Medical Research Foundation Professorial Fellow in Metabolic Medicine and Dame Kate Campbell Fellow at The University of Melbourne, Department of Medicine, Austin Health. The Dame Kate Campbell Fellowship is given to researchers recognising incredible contributions to the University of Melbourne for outstanding research and wider involvement in our local community and across the globe. She has supervised 12 higher degrees to completion and is currently supervising 12 PhD students. She has over 200 peer reviewed publications in the leading diabetes, obesity and metabolism journals and has an H index of 40. She has attracted over $25 M in research funding and has received multiple awards for her work. She has had an accelerated career trajectory in the past five years, having had career disruptions to care for her three young children previously. She is also the Head of Diabetes at Austin Health, where she co-ordinates the clinical care of inpatients and outpatients with diabetes. She heads diabetes and obesity clinical trials at Austin Health at the Centre for Research and Education in Diabetes and Obesity. Prof Ekinci is the inaugural director of Australian Centre for Accelerating Diabetes Innovations (ACADI). In 2022, ACADI was established through MRFF funding from the Australian Government’s Targeted Translation Research Accelerator (TTRA) program, delivered by MTPConnect. ACADI has been awarded $10million from the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund and received over $13million in cash and in- kind support from its partners. Led out of the University of Melbourne, ACADI will deliver novel interventions for timely diagnosis, prevention and treatment of diabetes and its complications with the access to clinical evaluation, leadership and networks, research commercialisation experience and workforce training. ACADI's design responds to key barriers slowing Australian development of innovations.
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