Experts

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Professor Wendy Oddy is a nutritional epidemiologist and investigates the impact of diet and nutrition, particularly during the first few years of a child’s life, on various diseases in the population. ‘If you put poor quality fuel in your car, it won’t go very well,’ she says. ‘This is just common sense. But what is striking is how nutrition in early infancy affects a person’s health throughout the life-course.’Professor Oddy draws upon data from the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study, also known as the Raine Study. This study was established between 1989 and 1991 to determine how events during pregnancy and childhood influence health in later life. It involved nearly 3,000 pregnant women with regular follow-ups to track the health of the infants through childhood and into adulthood.
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Louise Newman is Professor of Psychiatry and Director of University Centre for Women’s Mental Health, Royal Women’s Hospital. In January 2011 she was appointed as a Member in the General Division of the Order of Australia.She is a practising infant psychiatrist with expertise in the area of disorders of early parenting and attachment difficulties in infants. She has undertaken research into the issues confronting parents with histories of early trauma and neglect. Her current research is focussing on the evaluation of infant-parent interventions in high-risk populations, the concept of parental reflective functioning in mothers with borderline personality disorder and the neurobiology of parenting disturbance.
After completing a Neuroscience degree at the University of Manchester, Tim widened his interests to include all things medical. As News Editor at MNT, Tim leads a team of fantastic writers and editors, who all work to bring you the latest medical research from peer-reviewed journals on a daily basis. When he gets the chance, he enjoys playing the drums in a metal band, birdwatching, attending medieval jousts, and wrestling with his children.
Dr. Rick Nauert has over 25 years experience in clinical, administrative and academic healthcare. He is currently an associate professor for Rocky Mountain University of Health Professionals doctoral program in health promotion and wellness. Dr. Nauert began his career as a clinical physical therapist and served as a regional manager for a publicly traded multidisciplinary rehabilitation agency for 12 years. He has masters degrees in health-fitness management and healthcare administration and a doctoral degree from The University of Texas at Austin focused on health care informatics, health administration, health education and health policy. His research efforts included the area of telehealth with a specialty in disease management.
Dr Esther Myint graduated, in 1979, from the Institute of Medicine 1, Rangoon, Burma, and received her qualifications in general pathology, in 1985, from the same institute. She won a scholarship from WHO to study for her MSc in immunology at the University of Birmingham, UK, awarded in 1992. Dr Myint was retrained in anatomical pathology at John Hunter Hospital, Newcastle, and the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, and received her FRCPA Fellowship in 2011. Dr Myint has considerable undergraduate and postgraduate teaching experience and is currently an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Western Sydney and The University of Notre Dame. She is a member of the overseas-trained specialist assessment committee of the Royal College of Pathology, Australasia, and commits herself to the education programs of pathology by the RCPA. Dr Myint joined Douglass Hanly Moir Pathology in May, 2014.
Dr Michael Musker has 30 years practice experience in mental health nursing, and has written publications on the genetics of depression, bullying, and precision medicine in depression. He arrived in Australia in 2001 and was employed as a Lecturer in Forensic Mental Health for the University of Adelaide. Mike has led on a number of research projects on depression, chronic fatigue syndrome, bullying, and mental health disorders. He completed his PhD at the University of Adelaide whilst working as the Advanced Clinical Services Coordinator of the Forensic Mental Health Service of South Australia. The research training focused on perpetrator induced traumatic stress and included interviewing forensic mental health patients and prisoners about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and other comorbid disorders. He is currently a senior research fellow in the Mental Health and Wellbeing team at South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute.
I am a general practitioner. I divide my career between clinical practice and academic work. I am particularly interested in evidence-based medicine and prevention (especially of cardiovascular disease).
Meaghan Mobbs, M.A. is a West Point graduate, Afghanistan Veteran, and former Army Captain who is currently an advanced Clinical Psychology doctoral student at Columbia University, Teachers College. Mobbs is also a David O’Connor Fellow, Tillman Military Scholar, and a Noble Argus and National Military Family Association Scholarship recipient.
I have special expertise in psychology and psychiatry, obstetrics and gynaecology and paediatrics, as well as having a great interest in general medicine.
Carole Tanzer Miller is a writer for MedicalXpress