22 October 2020
The University of South Australia has won almost $550,000 in research funding from the Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation to support seven research projects focussed specifically on improving the physical and psychological health of children.
The projects include new proton radiation techniques to more safely treat children with brain cancer, new treatments for childhood epilepsy, tracking down the genetic factors that contribute to medulloblastoma (kids’ brain cancers), the development of fibre-clay hybrid materials to promote gut health and inhibit childhood obesity, employing virtual reality as a teaching aid for independence in children with intellectual disabilities and a project looking at the factors that help young people who have witnessed domestic violence, go on to create healthy relationships.
Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation Executive Director, Greg Ward says the wide range of grants take research from the most sophisticated biological and genetic investigations, through to the most complex and nuanced understanding of relationships and how they impact children’s health and well-being longer term.
“Increasingly we want to support research that looks at the whole child, from illnesses and conditions that can put them at risk, right through to the psycho-sociological factors that influence healthy life outcomes,” Ward says.
University of South Australia Vice Chancellor Research and Enterprise, Prof Marnie Hughes-Warrington says the support provided by the Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation is invaluable.
“The Foundation has a proud philanthropic tradition and its support of vital university research, targeted at key childhood diseases, continues to fund important work in enduring childhood illnesses, such as cancer and epilepsy and rapidly emerging problems, such as obesity.
“The partnerships the Foundation forges with university research teams, by funding high potential research, is supporting children in myriad ways to survive, and longer term, to live healthier lives.
“At UniSA, we are grateful to have their support.”
The full list of successful projects includes:
Media contact: Michèle Nardelli | office: +618 8302 6611 mobile: 0418 823 673 email: michele.nardelli@unisa.edu.au