
Overview
Background
Professor Brenda Gannon is an international interdisciplinary leader providing evidence and solutions for health and social care systems, spanning across economics, medicine and social science, in collaboration with academia and industry. She brings extensive experience and expertise in program and policy development related to health, social inclusion, and citizen science, fostering and advancing excellence at the intersection of many disciplines.
Working at the interface of health service delivery, strategic planning and practice influence, and health economics more broadly, across many sectors, enables her research to inform optimisation of health care and workforce organisation. The models are translatable and transferrable across many sectors, including ageing, mental health, child and the working populations.
She is a Professor in the School of Economics and an Affiliate Professor at the Mater Research Institute, The University of Queensland. She is also an affiliate member of CEPAR (ARC Centre for Research Excellence in Population Ageing Research). Since 2022, she is Honorary Adjunct Professor at University of Galway, Ireland. She was Director of Research in the School of Economics from 2018-2023. . She has developed a range of projects on topics of dementia, physical activity and cognition, health and health care utilization, and consumer directed care and home care. She has led and worked extensively on interdisciplinary research with gerontologists,several clinicians and methodologists. Her work has been influential in the development of programs for falls preventions and informing policy on disability and social inclusion, and has positively impacted on the health of many older people across the world. Her work also spans across the lifecyle from birth, and she has worked with clinicians on trials for newborns with breathing difficulities. She is the Health Economics and Epidemiology lead for the Queensland Family Cohort (QFC) Study, the pilot led by Mater Research, and is on the QFC Governance Committee, focusing on maternal mental health, inequalities of opportunity, alcohol use and related health care use and costs.
Professor Gannon’s research carries a dual role, (1) as an applied health economist using big and complex data, utilising health economics theory and concepts to test the validity of causal hypotheses, (2) collaborator across all Faculties leading critical economic evaluations. Her research is funded by her position as chief investigator on projects from the Australian Research Council, National Health and Medical Research Council, MRFF, EU H2020, Health Research Board, Ireland and the National Institute for Health Research, UK. She is the lead economist on projects in dementia, emergency care and paediatric care. All studies incorporate methodological innovations and applied research. She has provided advice to government at senior levels, and had a Ministerial appointment, on the Medical Services Advisory Committee Evaluation Sub-Committee 2017-2021. She sits regularly as a panel member of various NHMRC and MRFF grant review committees and has also previously appointed to the EU Commission grant panels. She has been invited to give several talks at international fora, including a key note talk on ageing and longevity at the National Academy of Medicine, Global Roadmap to Healthy Longevity, in Washington DC. Professor Gannon was an elected Professorial member of the Academic Board at UQ 2018-2022. In 2023, Professor Gannon was elected a Fellow of the Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has been elected as a Council Member of Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences since 2024.
Availability
- Professor Brenda Gannon is:
- Not available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, National University of Ireland
Research interests
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Cognitive impairment
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Aged Care and care for older people
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Dementia
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Economics of ageing and decision making
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Health Economics
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Physical activity, investment and health
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Mental Health
Research impacts
Professor Brenda Gannon is an international interdisciplinary leader providing evidence and solutions for health and social care systems, spanning across economics, medicine and social science, in collaboration with academia and industry. She brings extensive experience and expertise in program and policy development related to health, social inclusion, and citizen science, fostering and advancing excellence at the intersection of many disciplines.
Professor Gannon is an award winning HDR supervisor, mentoring several HDR students and post doctorate students, in UQ and globally, in the International Health Economics Association and Australian Health Economics Society mentoring programs. She has mentored early career researchers into academia, research, consultancy and industry jobs, for example, Deloitte Economics, Monash University, Australian National University, University of York and GSK.
She serves on the International Health Economics Association Student Prize Committee, 2025-28.
Works
Search Professor Brenda Gannon’s works on UQ eSpace
2004
Journal Article
Inter-industry wage differentials in Ireland
Gannon, Brenda and Nolan, Brian (2004). Inter-industry wage differentials in Ireland. Economic and Social Review, 35 (2), 157-182.
2001
Journal Article
The earnings and employment effects of young people's vocational training in Britain
Dolton, P. J., Makepeace, G. H. and Gannon, B. M. (2001). The earnings and employment effects of young people's vocational training in Britain. Manchester School, 69 (4), 387-417. doi: 10.1111/1467-9957.00255
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Brenda Gannon is:
- Not available for supervision
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Essays in Applied Health Economics and Econometrics: The Impact of Non-Communicable Diseases among Women and Children
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Luke Connelly, Professor Gita Mishra
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Doctor Philosophy
Essays in Applied Health Economics and Econometrics: The Impact of Non-Communicable Diseases among Women and Children
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Luke Connelly, Professor Gita Mishra
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Doctor Philosophy
Health Benefits and Economic Consequences of Deep Brain Stimulation on Parkinson's Disease Patients
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Pankaj Sah
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Doctor Philosophy
The economic and social impact of Deep Brain Stimulation
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Pankaj Sah
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Doctor Philosophy
Health Care Costs Associated with Avoidable Hospitalisations
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Isuru Ranasinghe
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Doctor Philosophy
Health Benefits and Economic Consequences of Deep Brain Stimulation on Parkinson's Disease Patients
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Pankaj Sah
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Doctor Philosophy
Health Care Costs Associated with Avoidable Hospitalisations
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Isuru Ranasinghe
Completed supervision
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
Essays in Applied Health Economics and Econometrics: The Impact of Non-Communicable Diseases among Women and Children
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Luke Connelly, Professor Gita Mishra
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Economics of Ageing, Health Outcomes and Workforce Planning
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Christiern Rose, Emeritus Professor Stephen Birch
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2021
Doctor Philosophy
Microeconomic models of physical activity, cognition and health care utilization in the aging population
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Christiern Rose
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Media
Enquiries
Contact Professor Brenda Gannon directly for media enquiries about:
- dementia care
- economics of ageing
- financing of aged care
- health economics
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