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Professor Paul Robinson
Professor

Paul Robinson

Email: 

Overview

Background

Conjoint Professor Paul Robinson is the Deputy Director of the Children’s Health Environment Program within the Child Health Research Centre (CHRC), and Senior Staff Specialist in Respiratory and Sleep Medicine at the Queensland Children’s Hospital. His research program performs translational research outlining the role of peripheral airway function tests in early lung disease detection and ongoing monitoring of established disease.

He has led the development and standardisation of novel measures of lung function across the entire age range from infancy onwards, facilitating the development of commercial equipment available for widespread use. His research focuses on defining the clinical utility of two specific peripheral airway function tests (Multiple breath washout, MBW, and oscillometry) in important obstructive lung diseases (e.g., asthma, cystic fibrosis, and post bone marrow transplant pulmonary graft vs host disease) and in understanding the impacts of environmental exposures. Structure-function relationships have been explored using state-of-the-art imaging techniques, with the aim of also developing new strategies to reduce any radiation exposure associated with these to advance incorporation into clinical care (e.g., ultra-low dose CT).

These novel lung function tools not only in the hospital setting but also in the school and home setting, enabling the successful development of a parent-supervised remote monitoring strategy for asthma which has been shown to reflect clinically meaningful outcomes missed by conventional approaches. In collaboration with industry, this strategy is now being employed in a series of research projects.

Involvement in longitudinal birth cohorts has outlined the early lung function trajectories in health, and the identification of risk factors affecting normal lung development and contributing to the early development of asthma. Studies investigating environmental health have highlighted the adverse effects of ultrafine particle air pollution.

Professor Robinson’s standing as an international expert, both in terms of clinical and research experience, has led to broader leadership roles across national and international levels.

Availability

Professor Paul Robinson is:
Available for supervision

Research interests

  • Asthma

    Understanding mechanisms that underlie risks for developing asthma in susceptible children. Improving diagnosis of early asthma and monitoring of disease once established to prevent exacerbations and reduce risk of poor asthma outcomes.

  • Cystic Fibrosis

    Understanding the mechanisms underlying the development of lung disease early in life and why and how this progresses. Optimising the detection of early lung disease to facilitate earlier effective intervention to improve outcomes.

  • Pulmonary Graft vs. Host Disease

    Understanding the mechanisms underlying the development of respiratory complications following Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation and why and how this progresses. Optimising the detection of early Pulmonary Graft-vs-Host disease to facilitate earlier intervention and improved outcomes.

  • Impact of environmental exposures in early life

    Improving methods of assessing environmental exposures and their effects across the lifespan and understanding how these increase long-tern risk of chronic disease in the lungs and other organ systems

Research impacts

Professor Robinson’s research program has informed a paradigm shift in management of chronic respiratory disease to ignore the reassurance of “normal” conventional lung function (spirometry) and target early lung disease detection arising in the peripheral airways and intervention through proactive (not reactive symptom-driven) strategies for 3 important obstructive lung conditions: (1) cystic fibrosis (CF); (2) asthma; and (3) post haemopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) pulmonary graft-vs-host disease (pGVHD).

Impact is evidenced by >150 published manuscripts of which >80 manuscripts are specific to this research program focus. A lead role on seminal consensus standards have resulted in a >4-times increase in MBW publications since their publication and widespread availability of robust commercial equipment (based on consensus recommendations adopted by all 4 global manufacturers). MBW has been formally as a primary outcome measure for CF intervention studies by independent institutions and integration into >30 international multicentre clinical trials. MBW has played a central role in registration of effective CFTR modulator therapy for young children, with significant projected survival benefits. Advances in oscillometry, including novel remote monitoring approaches targeting enhanced detection of disease exacerbation and prevention, have provided a platform for the first consensus clinical applications document for oscillometry.

Works

Search Professor Paul Robinson’s works on UQ eSpace

211 works between 2006 and 2025

61 - 80 of 211 works

2021

Journal Article

Higher exhaled nitric oxide at 6 weeks of age is associated with less bronchiolitis and wheeze in the first 12 months of age

Da Silva Sena, Carla Rebeca, de Queiroz Andrade, Ediane, de Gouveia Belinelo, Patricia, Percival, Elizabeth, Prangemeier, Benjamin, O'Donoghue, Christopher, Terry, Sandrine, Burke, Tanya, Gunning, William, Murphy, Vanessa E., Robinson, Paul D., Sly, Peter D., Gibson, Peter G., Collison, Adam M. and Mattes, Joerg (2021). Higher exhaled nitric oxide at 6 weeks of age is associated with less bronchiolitis and wheeze in the first 12 months of age. Thorax, 77 (11), thoraxjnl-2021. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2021-217299

Higher exhaled nitric oxide at 6 weeks of age is associated with less bronchiolitis and wheeze in the first 12 months of age

2021

Journal Article

As-needed budesonide-formoterol for adolescents with mild asthma: Importance of lung function

Shanthikumar, Shivanthan and Robinson, Paul D. (2021). As-needed budesonide-formoterol for adolescents with mild asthma: Importance of lung function. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, 9 (11), 4178-4178. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2021.07.059

As-needed budesonide-formoterol for adolescents with mild asthma: Importance of lung function

2021

Journal Article

Controlled versus free breathing for multiple-breath nitrogen washout in asthma

Handley, Blake M., Bozier, Jack, Jeagal, Edward, Rutting, Sandra, Schoeffel, Robin E., Robinson, Paul D., King, Gregory G., Milne, Stephen and Thamrin, Cindy (2021). Controlled versus free breathing for multiple-breath nitrogen washout in asthma. ERJ Open Research, 7 (4) 00487-2021, 00487-2021. doi: 10.1183/23120541.00487-2021

Controlled versus free breathing for multiple-breath nitrogen washout in asthma

2021

Conference Publication

Higher exhaled nitric oxide levels in infancy is associated with less bronchiolitis and fewer adverse respiratory outcomes in the first year of life

Sena, Carla Rebeca Da Silva, Andrade, Ediane De Queiroz, Belinelo, Patricia De Gouveia, Percival, Elizabeth, Prangemeier, Ben, O'Donoghue, Chris, Terry, Sandrine, Burke, Tanya, Gunning, William, Murphy, Vanessa E., Robinson, Paul D., Sly, Peter D., Gibson, Peter G., Collison, Adam and Mattes, Joerg (2021). Higher exhaled nitric oxide levels in infancy is associated with less bronchiolitis and fewer adverse respiratory outcomes in the first year of life. ERS International Congress, Virtual, 5-8 September 2021. Sheffield, United Kingdom: European Respiratory Society. doi: 10.1183/13993003.congress-2021.PA3069

Higher exhaled nitric oxide levels in infancy is associated with less bronchiolitis and fewer adverse respiratory outcomes in the first year of life

2021

Conference Publication

Rhinovirus bronchiolitis during infancy and later pre-school lung inhomogeneity

Sena, Carla Rebeca Da Silva, Shaar, Aida, Morten, Matthew, Meredith, Joseph, Kepreotes, Elizabeth, Murphy, Vanessa, Gibson, Peter, Sly, Peter, Whitehead, Bruce, Karmaus, Wilfried, Collison, Adam, Robinson, Paul D. and Mattes, Joerg (2021). Rhinovirus bronchiolitis during infancy and later pre-school lung inhomogeneity. ERS International Congress, Virtual, 5-8 September 2021. Sheffield, United Kingdom: European Respiratory Society. doi: 10.1183/13993003.congress-2021.OA2571

Rhinovirus bronchiolitis during infancy and later pre-school lung inhomogeneity

2021

Journal Article

Multiple breath washout: measuring early manifestations of lung pathology

Stanojevic, Sanja, Bowerman, Cole and Robinson, Paul (2021). Multiple breath washout: measuring early manifestations of lung pathology. Breathe, 17 (3) 210016, 210016. doi: 10.1183/20734735.0016-2021

Multiple breath washout: measuring early manifestations of lung pathology

2021

Journal Article

Update in pediatrics 2020

Forno, Erick, Abman, Steven H., Singh, Jagdev, Robbins, Mary E., Selvadurai, Hiran, Schumacker, Paul T. and Robinson, Paul D. (2021). Update in pediatrics 2020. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 204 (3), 274-284. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202103-0605UP

Update in pediatrics 2020

2021

Journal Article

Nitrogen multiple-breath washout (N2-MBW) - Historical, technical, and clinical aspects 

Gustafsson, P., Kjellberg, S. and Robinson, P. D. (2021). Nitrogen multiple-breath washout (N2-MBW) - Historical, technical, and clinical aspects . Atemwegs- und Lungenkrankheiten, 47 (8), 349-365. doi: 10.5414/ATX02577

Nitrogen multiple-breath washout (N2-MBW) - Historical, technical, and clinical aspects 

2021

Journal Article

Tobramycin and Colistin display anti-inflammatory properties in CuFi-1 cystic fibrosis cell line

Sheikh, Zara, Bradbury, Peta, Reekie, Tristan A., Pozzoli, Michele, Robinson, Paul D., Kassiou, Michael, Young, Paul M., Ong, Hui Xin and Traini, Daniela (2021). Tobramycin and Colistin display anti-inflammatory properties in CuFi-1 cystic fibrosis cell line. European Journal of Pharmacology, 902 174098, 174098. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174098

Tobramycin and Colistin display anti-inflammatory properties in CuFi-1 cystic fibrosis cell line

2021

Journal Article

Exposure to stress and air pollution from bushfires during pregnancy: Could epigenetic changes explain effects on the offspring?

Murphy, Vanessa E., Karmaus, Wilfried, Mattes, Joerg, Brew, Bronwyn K., Collison, Adam, Holliday, Elizabeth, Jensen, Megan E., Morgan, Geoffrey G., Zosky, Graeme R., McDonald, Vanessa M., Jegasothy, Edward, Robinson, Paul D. and Gibson, Peter G. (2021). Exposure to stress and air pollution from bushfires during pregnancy: Could epigenetic changes explain effects on the offspring?. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18 (14) 7465, 1-12. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18147465

Exposure to stress and air pollution from bushfires during pregnancy: Could epigenetic changes explain effects on the offspring?

2021

Journal Article

Improved agreement between N2 and SF6 multiple-breath washout in healthy infants and toddlers with improved EXHALYZER D sensor performance

Sandvik, Rikke M., Gustafsson, Per M., Lindblad, Anders, Robinson, Paul D. and Nielsen, Kim G. (2021). Improved agreement between N2 and SF6 multiple-breath washout in healthy infants and toddlers with improved EXHALYZER D sensor performance. Journal of Applied Physiology, 131 (1), 107-118. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00129.2021

Improved agreement between N2 and SF6 multiple-breath washout in healthy infants and toddlers with improved EXHALYZER D sensor performance

2021

Journal Article

Maternal asthma is associated with reduced lung function in male infants in a combined analysis of the BLT and BILD cohorts

de Gouveia Belinelo, Patricia, Collison, Adam M., Murphy, Vanessa E., Robinson, Paul D., Jesson, Kathryn, Hardaker, Kate, de Queiroz Andrade, Ediane, Oldmeadow, Christopher, Martins Costa Gomes, Gabriela, Sly, Peter D., Usemann, Jakob, Appenzeller, Rhea, Gorlanova, Olga, Fuchs, Oliver, Latzin, Philipp, Gibson, Peter G., Frey, Urs and Mattes, Joerg (2021). Maternal asthma is associated with reduced lung function in male infants in a combined analysis of the BLT and BILD cohorts. Thorax, 76 (10), 996-1001. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2020-215526

Maternal asthma is associated with reduced lung function in male infants in a combined analysis of the BLT and BILD cohorts

2021

Conference Publication

Multiple Breath Washout Experience in CFTR-Related Metabolic Syndrome at a Tertiary Cystic Fibrosis Centre

Singh, J., Blaxland, A., Bailey, B., Fitzgerald, D. A., Selvadurai, H., Pandit, C., Towns, S. and Robinson, P. D. (2021). Multiple Breath Washout Experience in CFTR-Related Metabolic Syndrome at a Tertiary Cystic Fibrosis Centre. International Conference of the American-Thoracic-Society (ATS), Electr Network, May 14-19, 2021. NEW YORK: AMER THORACIC SOC.

Multiple Breath Washout Experience in CFTR-Related Metabolic Syndrome at a Tertiary Cystic Fibrosis Centre

2021

Conference Publication

Phenotyping of Asthma Exacerbations Using Day-to-Day Variability in Oscillometry Measures in Children

Robinson, P. D., Peiris, S., Wong, A., Blaxland, A., King, G. and Thamrin, C. (2021). Phenotyping of Asthma Exacerbations Using Day-to-Day Variability in Oscillometry Measures in Children. International Conference of the American-Thoracic-Society (ATS), Electr Network, May 14-19, 2021. NEW YORK: AMER THORACIC SOC.

Phenotyping of Asthma Exacerbations Using Day-to-Day Variability in Oscillometry Measures in Children

2021

Conference Publication

The Feasibility of Measuring Airway Derecruitment in Paediatric Patients with Asthma

Jeagal, E., Wong, A., Bayfield, K., Nilsen, K., Thamrin, C., King, G., Chapman, D. G. and Robinson, P. D. (2021). The Feasibility of Measuring Airway Derecruitment in Paediatric Patients with Asthma. International Conference of the American-Thoracic-Society (ATS), Electr Network, May 14-19, 2021. NEW YORK: AMER THORACIC SOC.

The Feasibility of Measuring Airway Derecruitment in Paediatric Patients with Asthma

2021

Journal Article

Time to get serious about the detection and monitoring of early lung disease in cystic fibrosis

Bayfield, Katie J., Douglas, Tonia A., Rosenow, Tim, Davies, Jane Carolyn, Elborn, Stuart J., Mall, Marcus, Paproki, Anthony, Ratjen, Felix, Sly, Peter D., Smyth, Alan R., Stick, Stephen, Wainwright, Claire E. and Robinson, Paul D. (2021). Time to get serious about the detection and monitoring of early lung disease in cystic fibrosis. Thorax, 76 (12), 1-11. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2020-216085

Time to get serious about the detection and monitoring of early lung disease in cystic fibrosis

2021

Journal Article

Reply: Fixed breathing protocols in multiple-breath-washout testing: Truly an option in children?

Verbanck, Sylvia, Schuermans, Daniel, Paiva, Manuel, Robinson, Paul D. and Vanderhelst, Eef (2021). Reply: Fixed breathing protocols in multiple-breath-washout testing: Truly an option in children?. European Respiratory Journal, 57 (3) 2000189, 2100189. doi: 10.1183/13993003.00189-2021

Reply: Fixed breathing protocols in multiple-breath-washout testing: Truly an option in children?

2021

Journal Article

Rhinovirus bronchiolitis, maternal asthma, and the development of asthma and lung function impairments

Da Silva Sena, Carla R., Morten, Matthew, Meredith, Joseph, Kepreotes, Elizabeth, Murphy, Vanessa, Gibson, Peter, Robinson, Paul, Sly, Peter, Whitehead, Bruce, Karmaus, Wilfried, Collison, Adam and Mattes, Joerg (2021). Rhinovirus bronchiolitis, maternal asthma, and the development of asthma and lung function impairments. Pediatric Pulmonology, 56 (2), 362-370. doi: 10.1002/ppul.25165

Rhinovirus bronchiolitis, maternal asthma, and the development of asthma and lung function impairments

2021

Journal Article

Mitigating increased variability of multiple breath washout indices due to tidal breathing

Verbanck, Sylvia, Schuermans, Daniel, Paiva, Manuel, Robinson, Paul D and Vanderhelst, Eef (2021). Mitigating increased variability of multiple breath washout indices due to tidal breathing. European Respiratory Journal, 57 (2) 2002765, 2002765. doi: 10.1183/13993003.02765-2020

Mitigating increased variability of multiple breath washout indices due to tidal breathing

2021

Journal Article

Cord blood group 2 innate lymphoid cells are associated with lung function at 6 weeks of age

Martins Costa Gomes, Gabriela, de Gouveia Belinelo, Patricia, Starkey, Malcolm R, Murphy, Vanessa E, Hansbro, Philip M, Sly, Peter D, Robinson, Paul D, Karmaus, Wilfried, Gibson, Peter G, Mattes, Joerg and Collison, Adam M (2021). Cord blood group 2 innate lymphoid cells are associated with lung function at 6 weeks of age. Clinical and Translational Immunology, 10 (7) e1296. doi: 10.1002/cti2.1296

Cord blood group 2 innate lymphoid cells are associated with lung function at 6 weeks of age

Funding

Current funding

  • 2025 - 2026
    Think ZINC: Zinc immune-related Needs in Cystic fibrosis
    Cure4CF Foundation Research Grants
    Open grant
  • 2025
    Home-based monitoring with Oscillometry in paediatric Asthma: Improving our understanding of asthma control and behaviour during exacerbations
    Asthma Australia Incorporated
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2025
    MBW LCI Overread Services in support of VX22-445-122
    Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2028
    VX22-121-106
    Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    MBW Training and LCI Overread Services in Support of VX20-455-112
    Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    MBW Training and LCI Overread Services in Support of VX21-121-105
    Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2027
    Translatable Evidence To Improve Lung Health Outcomes In First Nations People: A Cohort Study From Birth to 6 Years (NHRMC CTCS Grant administered by University of Melbourne)
    University of Melbourne
    Open grant
  • 2022 - 2025
    The GOAL Trial: Vascular Surgery (QACRF grant administered by Metro South Hospital)
    Metro South Hospital and Health Service
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2023 - 2024
    ARCT-032-01: Phase 1/1b study of ARCT-032 in Healthy Adult Subjects and Adults with Cystic Fibrosis
    Arcturus Therapeutics Inc
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Paul Robinson is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Remote monitoring of Paediatric Asthma to Improve Asthma Diagnosis and Control

    Childhood asthma mortality remains substantial, and rates of hospitalisation are increasing globally in young children. This is driven by poor asthma control (which affects 50% of asthmatics) and ongoing exacerbations (which affects 25%). Of the 40,000 admissions each year, 80% are preventable! Current symptom-based management approaches fail – limited by poor perception/reporting by children and parents - and conventional spirometry/peak flow is insensitive or too challenging for this setting. In addition, the preschool age range is a critical period in asthma pathogenesis: symptoms emerge, airway structure changes, and a window for intervention exists before permanent lung function deficit is established by early school age. Preschool symptom-based diagnostic and/or predictive tools (for later asthma) perform poorly and ignore lung function due to spirometry’s limitations. Improved ability to differentiate early asthma phenotypes is a priority of international societies.

    This research program consists of a series of projects to analyse existing, and collect new, data to define the clinical utility of a unique remote home-based monitoring strategy focused on the day-to-day variability of a novel and sensitive lung function test. Studies will investigate its ability to correctly identify evolving asthma, detect loss of asthma control and provide an early signal of an impending asthma exacerbation to improve long term asthma outcomes.

  • Improving detection of Pulmonary Graft-vs-Host Disease to facilitate earlier intervention

    Chronic Graft-vs-Host Disease affects 60% of Haematopoeitic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT) survivors by 6 years after their transplant, affecting multiple organs including skin, liver, gastrointestinal tract and lungs. Gold standard for pulmonary GVHD diagnosis is abnormal spirometry and subsequent CT-based imaging. Pulmonary GVHD is estimated to affect 20% of all subjects post HSCT yet this incidence is a gross underestimate due to the insensitivity of spirometry to detect peripheral lung changes. This leads to late diagnosis, poor response to treatment, and poor prognosis (5-year mortality is 85%). Better tools to detect and monitor pulmonary GVHD are urgently required.

    This research program builds on previous work highlighting the potential utility of novel peripheral airway function test in this setting. It will analyse both local data and pooled international data across 12 international centres (including both paediatric and adult data) to define the utility of these tools to provide an earlier diagnosis of pulmonary GVHD to facilitate earlier invention and improve outcomes. It will also explore novel applications of these tests to enhance detection further in the initial period post HSCT to predict and detect those at risk.

  • Remote monitoring of Paediatric Asthma to Improve Asthma Diagnosis and Control

    Childhood asthma mortality remains substantial, and rates of hospitalisation are increasing globally in young children. This is driven by poor asthma control (which affects 50% of asthmatics) and ongoing exacerbations (which affects 25%). Of the 40,000 admissions each year, 80% are preventable! Current symptom-based management approaches fail – limited by poor perception/reporting by children and parents - and conventional spirometry/peak flow is insensitive or too challenging for this setting. In addition, the preschool age range is a critical period in asthma pathogenesis: symptoms emerge, airway structure changes, and a window for intervention exists before permanent lung function deficit is established by early school age. Preschool symptom-based diagnostic and/or predictive tools (for later asthma) perform poorly and ignore lung function due to spirometry’s limitations. Improved ability to differentiate early asthma phenotypes is a priority of international societies. This research program consists of a series of projects to analyse existing, and collect new, data to define the clinical utility of a unique remote home-based monitoring strategy focused on the day-to-day variability of a novel and sensitive lung function test. Studies will investigate its ability to correctly identify evolving asthma, detect loss of asthma control and provide an early signal of an impending asthma exacerbation to improve long term asthma outcomes.

    This program of research includes projects suitable for PhD, honours or masters students.

    For more information, contact Professor Paul Robinson at paul.robinson@uq.edu.au.

  • Assessing the impact of a Complex Asthma model of care to service all eligible Queensland children

    A significant driver of the huge healthcare burden of asthma is children with difficult-to-treat or severe asthma (5-10% of childhood asthma, termed collectively as “Complex Asthma”). A recent survey of Australian and New Zealand paediatric tertiary services has highlighted the lack of a standardised approach to services and issues adequately identifying these children affected to ensure access to recommended models of care. At Queensland Children’s hospital (QCH) we have established a unique multidisciplinary team (MDT) service, involving nine different medical teams: Respiratory, Allergy & Immunology, Psychology, Psychiatry, Adolescent Medicine, Speech Pathology, Physiotherapy, ENT and Social work. The research program will focus on evaluating the effectiveness of this approach through i) the creation of a complex asthma database to assess health outcomes, describe key factors predicting those outcomes and enable a cost-effectiveness analysis, ii) the evaluation of currently employed screening questionnaires to correctly identify important co-morbidities, and iii) using the established Project ECHO platform at QCH, the creation of a community of practice and an education module to educate and empower non-tertiary community-based services to better identify and contribute to ongoing management the impact of which will be formally assessed. This work coincides with the establishment of a national Australian and New Zealand Paediatric Severe Asthma Registry (led by QCH staff) which will enable benchmarking of outcomes to data collected at other tertiary centres.

    This program of research includes projects suitable for PhD, honours or masters students

    For more information, contact Professor Paul Robinson at paul.robinson@uq.edu.au

  • Improving detection of Pulmonary Graft-vs-Host Disease to facilitate earlier intervention

    Chronic Graft-vs-Host Disease affects 60% of Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT) survivors by 6 years after their transplant, affecting multiple organs including skin, liver, gastrointestinal tract and lungs. Gold standard for pulmonary GVHD diagnosis is abnormal spirometry and subsequent CT-based imaging. Pulmonary GVHD is estimated to affect 20% of all subjects post HSCT yet this incidence is a gross underestimate due to the insensitivity of spirometry to detect peripheral lung changes. This leads to late diagnosis, poor response to treatment, and poor prognosis (5-year mortality is 85%). Better tools to detect and monitor pulmonary GVHD are urgently required.

    This research program builds on previous work highlighting the potential utility of novel peripheral airway function test in this setting. It will analyse both local data and pooled international data across 12 international centres (including both paediatric and adult data) to define the utility of these tools to provide an earlier diagnosis of pulmonary GVHD to facilitate earlier invention and improve outcomes. It will also explore novel applications of these tests in a new prospective cohort to enhance detection further in the initial period post HSCT to predict and detect those at risk.

    This program of research includes projects suitable for PhD, honours or masters students.

    For more information, contact Professor Paul Robinson at paul.robinson@uq.edu.au.

  • Defining early lung function and respiratory health trajectories in First Nations infants

    Disparities in health for indigenous communities are a global issue. The Strong Families Study is a First Nations peoples co-designed cohort to support improved perinatal and early childhood outcomes. It is the largest birth cohort study of its kind to date and the first inclusive of mothers, partners, and their children. This research program will focus on identifying important events happening within the first year of life that determine respiratory health and lung function trajectories in recruited infants. The projects will focus on pre-natal and post-natal factors determining i) baseline offspring lung function at 6 weeks, ii) lung function trajectories determined by respiratory function tested at 6 weeks and 12 months and iii) respiratory health defined by episodes of wheeze and bronchiolitis within the first 12 months of life. Relationships observed within this cohort will be compared to those within other important birth cohorts both nationally (Barwon Infant Study) and internationally (Drakenstein study, South Africa).

    This program of research includes projects suitable for PhD, honours or masters students. Experience working with first nations communities, with children and in lung function techniques is desirable.

    For more information, contact Professor Paul Robinson at paul.robinson@uq.edu.au.

Media

Enquiries

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