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Conference:
Day 1
6th April 8am - 5:30pm
Day 2
7th April 8am - 5:30pm
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Media Partners:
Endorser:
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Julie Andrews
Group Manager Health Services
Medibank Private
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Julie Andrews is the Group Manager, Health Services at Medibank Private, Australia’s largest and only national private health insurer with more than 3 million members and an annual health service expenditure of $2.8 billion.
Julie has 26 years’ experience in the delivery, management and purchasing of health services, initially as a clinician (physiotherapist), then CEO of community health and primary care services. Prior to joining Medibank Julie was the Executive Director of Community Health and Post Acute Services at Southern Health, a large public health care network in Victoria.
Since joining Medibank in 2000 Julie has held roles in business development, corporate strategy and health purchasing and as Group Manager, Health Services her responsibilities include the development and implementation of Medibank’s medical and ancillary purchasing strategy, member health management and support services and health policy and research functions.
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The Hon. Daniel Andrews
MLA Minister for Health
Vic State Government
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Daniel Andrews was elected to the State Parliament of Victoria in 2002, representing the newly established seat of Mulgrave. He is one of the younger members of the Victorian Parliament and one of the youngest Health Ministers in Australian political history.
Daniel studied at Monash University in Clayton, completing a Bachelor of Arts majoring in politics and history.
After graduating, Daniel worked as an electorate officer for Alan Griffin MP, Federal Member for Bruce.
In 1999 Daniel became a senior official in the Victorian Branch of the Australian Labor Party, serving as Assistant State Secretary and Deputy Campaign Director.
Daniel was appointed as the Parliamentary Secretary for Health in December 2002. In this role he worked closely with the Minister for Health, Bronwyn Pike, in a number of important and challenging policy areas including Ambulance, Mental Health and Community Health services.
On 1 December 2006, following the Bracks Government’s re-election, Daniel was allocated the portfolios of Consumer Affairs and Gaming and Minister Assisting the Premier on Multicultural Affairs.
Daniel took on the health portfolio following the resignation of Premier Steve Bracks on 2 August 2007.
Daniel lives in Mulgrave with his wife Catherine, and their three children.
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Dr. Clive Aspen
Research Director Serious & Continuing Illness Policy & Practice Study (SCIPPS)
University of Sydney
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Clive Aspin, PhD is the Research Director of SCIPPS (Serious and Continuing Illness Policy and Practice Study) at the Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Sydney. SCIPPS is a major qualitative project funded by the NHMRC to provide patient-focussed solutions to the challenges posed by chronic illnesses.
He received his doctorate from the University of Otago in New Zealand and has worked for many years in the area of Maori public health, research management, government policy and community development.
He has extensive international research experience and is working on a project that investigates the resilience of indigenous communities in New Zealand, Australia and Canada with regard to blood borne viruses and sexually transmitted infections. He has a strong interest in HIV and its impact on indigenous communities.
His main research interests are focussed on chronic disease management as it relates to diabetes, cardiovascular disease and chronic pulmonary obstructive disease in order to understand how health systems can improve the ways in which they care for and support people with chronic conditions. The results from this work are expected to provide innovative strategies for bringing about health policy change that will lead to improved quality of care for people living with chronic illnesses.
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Dr Christine Connors
Programme Director
Department of Health and Families
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Christine Connors (FAFPHM MPH DRACOG) is a General Practitioner and public health physician who has been working in the Northern Territory for twenty one years, providing clinical and public health services to remote Aboriginal communities. She has experience working in women’s health, sexual health, infectious diseases, emergency retrievals and chronic diseases. She is currently the Director, Preventable Chronic Disease program, NT Department of Health & Families. This involves developing NT wide policy, clinical guidelines, systems for health services including quality improvement, and training of clinical and allied health staff. Her team works closely with non government and Aboriginal community controlled health services, as well providing direct service provision for DHF remote clinics. She has been involved in public health research with Menzies School of Health Research since 1994 and more recently with the Cooperative Research Centre in Aboriginal Health. Her research interests include “Healthy Skin” East Arnhem Collaborative project, public health research to reduce the prevalence and impact of scabies and streptococcal skin infections. She is one of the Chief Investigators in a quality improvement action research project, Audit and Best Practice in Chronic Disease, a national project working with Aboriginal health services across Australia to improve service delivery and health outcomes in chronic disease.
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Dr. Andrew Cottrill
Medical Director
HCF
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Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here.
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Dr Gary Deed
National President
Diabetes Australia
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Dr Gary Deed was appointed National President of Diabetes Australia in November 2006. But his involvement with Diabetes Australia pre-dates this by over 10 years. Dr Deed became a Board member of Diabetes Australia - Queensland in 1995, becoming President in 2001. During this time he was asked to join the Diabetes Australia’s National Board, and, until his appointment, was Vice-President of Diabetes Australia.
Dr Deed has a particular interest and passion in advocating and lobbying for better health outcomes for and on behalf of people with diabetes in Australia.
Dr Deed is a general practitioner is living with type 1 diabetes and is committed to his role as President of the national peak body for diabetes in Australia.
Dr Deed has been involved in advocacy for people with diabetes since 1995 when he joined the diabetes Australia Queensland Board. He has been further involved in National Advocacy with close liaison and support for the Parliamentary Diabetes Support group, and on Commonwealth committees addressing public Health initiatives in chronic disease and diabetes.
Dr Deed is also the Chair of the Health Research Ethics Committee and Academic Board member of the Australian College of Natural Medicine and President of the Australasian College of Nutritional and Environmental Medicine. He is a member of the Complementary Medicines Evaluation Committee of the Therapeutic Goods Administration. He is a Patron of MINDD which is a not for profit in support of children with Autism and Behavioural disorders.
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Michael Edwards
Chief Executive Officer
Napean Division of General Practice
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Previously had a 40 year career within Defence both in uniform and in Public Service. He was an Electronic & Communications Technical specialist (RAN), and as a civilian member of Department of Defence transitioned through to an Executive Level (Technical). As the Guided Weapons Support Manager, he had national responsibility, managing several diverse Technical and Administrative departments and then as the inaugural Human Resource Manager with the Joint Ammunition Logistics Organisation.
He left the Department of Defence as Head of Support Group within Defence Material Organisation in January 2002 and joined the Nepean Division of General Practice as CEO. He continues to maintain involvement in the electronics as Chair of the eCHO group, along with Healthelink and secure messaging.
He is of Fellow of Australian Society of Association Executives, Certified Member Australian Human Resource Institute, and Officer Member of Institute of Engineers (Aust) and member of the Institution of Explosives Engineers.
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Deb Goldfinch
CEO
Melbourne General Practice Network
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Deb Goldfinch has had an extensive career in the Not for Profit and Health Sectors with a focus on change management. In Deb’s 8 years in the Health industry she has implemented business restructures and developed corporate strategies to take organisations to their next level.. In her current role as CEO of Melbourne General Practice Network she has participated in a Department of Health and Ageing Consultative Panel and has developed an integrated program of focussed service delivery to General Practice that operates across MGPN from staff through to the board with excellent results for all stakeholders.
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Prof. Kathleen Griffiths
Co-Director Centre for Mental Health Research
Australian National University
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Kathy Griffiths is Director of the Depression and Anxiety Consumer Research Unit, and co-Director of ehub: emental health research and development at the Centre for Mental Health Research at the Australian National University. She is the author of approximately 120 academic articles, books and chapters and she has co-developed a number of mental health websites for consumers including the multi-award winning MoodGYM (moodgym.anu.edu.au) and BluePages (bluepages.anu.edu.au), as well as e-couch (ecouch.anu.edu.au) and BlueBoard (blueboard.anu.edu.au). Her research interests are in the area of e-mental health (including large scale randomized controlled trials of internet applications), prevention and mental health literacy, stigma in depression, and mental health consumer priorities and needs.
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Dr. Paul Gross
Director
Institute of Health Policy Studies
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Dr. Paul Gross is Director of the Institute of Health Economics and Technology Assessment (IHETA) in Australia and Greater China, and its associated consultancy Health Group Strategies Pty Ltd.
He was Commissioner of the National Hospitals and Heath Services Commission in the Whitlam (Labor) and Fraser (Coalition) governments from 1974-1978; Special Adviser in the Social Welfare Policy Secretariat, Australia’s first guest scholar at the Brookings Institution, a government appointed director of Australia’s fourth largest health insurer from 1988 to 1995; and a member of the NSW Health Council in its review of the NSW hospitals and health services in 1999/2000.
IHETA is currently involved in consultancies in Australia and Asia, including:
• evaluation of the potential role of genomics and nanotechnology in national prevention strategies
• evaluation of the impact of chronic disorders on the patterns of care of Australian veterans;
• evaluation of the potential impact of self-care in national prevention strategies; and
• evaluation of economic incentives for obesity prevention and lifestyle change via Medicare, Broader Health Cover, workplace tax incentives and new health savings accounts.
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Tony Healey
National Co-Ordinator
Asthma Friendly Schools Programme
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As National Coordinator for the Asthma Friendly Schools program based in SA, I work with Project Coordinators in each state and territory of Australia to manage the national roll-out of the program.
My working background is predominantly in the education sector including teaching in SA and overseas and Curriculum Officer for the Education Department of SA. I worked as a Senior Policy Officer for the Department of Human Services managing active8, a youth development program, for the Office for Youth. I have also been a small business operator.
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Dr. June Heinrich,
CEO
Baptist Community Services
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As National Coordinator for the Asthma Friendly Schools program based in SA, I work with Project Coordinators in each state and territory of Australia to manage the national roll-out of the program.
My working background is predominantly in the education sector including teaching in SA and overseas and Curriculum Officer for the Education Department of SA. I worked as a Senior Policy Officer for the Department of Human Services managing active8, a youth development program, for the Office for Youth. I have also been a small business operator.
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Sheila Holcombe
Chief Executive Officer
Blue Mountains Division of General Practice
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Sheila Holcombe was appointed as the Chief Executive Officer, Blue Mountains Division of General Practice on 1 November 2006. Prior to joining the Division Sheila worked for the Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA) from 1992-2005 in the areas of Disability Programs, implementation of the Medicare Agreements, national public hospital programs, private health insurance reform, evidence based medicine and data linkage. During her employment with DoHA she also undertook secondments to the Consumers’ Health Forum in 1996-97 as the GP Policy Officer and to the Medical Benefits Fund of Australia (MBF) as their Research and Development Manager from 2002-2003.
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Prof. Rod Jackson
Head Section of Epidemiology & Biostatistics School of Population Health
University of Auckland
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Rod Jackson is Professor of Epidemiology and Head of Epidemiology & Biostatistics at the School of Population Health, University of Auckland, New Zealand. He is medically trained, has a PhD in Epidemiology and is a member of the Australasian Faculty of Public Health Medicine. He teaches epidemiology and evidence-based health care to undergraduates and postgraduates, both in New Zealand and internationally. His main research interest for over 25 years has been the epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases. He is one of the architects of New Zealand risk-based clinical guidelines for managing CVD risk and is currently leading the PREDICT programme which uses a web-based clinical decision support system to get evidence, about CVD risk and risk management, into and out of primary care practice simultaneously. He is the author of approximately 200 peer-reviewed papers.
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Dr John Lang
MD employer/DM service provider
Good Health Solutions
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John has been at the forefront of corporate health management in Australia for over twenty years. During this time John has been instrumental in the development and delivery of many of the largest, most innovative and successful programs in the country.
During his 20 years in the corporate health industry, John managed Australia’s leading Health Management Organisations (HBA, National Mutual, Mayne Health and HCG Managing Health) to market leader status, based on a deserved reputation for innovative, high quality services and programs. Early in 2005, John amalgamated all these business under one corporate entity – Good Health Solutions.
John is an author (Re: Life, 2003), presenter, academic, sportsman, musician and business leader. His passion for health, and particularly prevention of disease, had led him to the top of his field.
John continues to develop innovative health solutions for Australian companies and leads the charge for evidence based programs which deliver measurable outcomes in key business metrics such as illness absence, productivity, attraction, retention and workcover claims.
John has presented extensively in Australia, throughout Asia and the US in relation to Health, Absence and Productivity, and continues to champion the ROI potential of evidence based employee health and wellness programs.
John was instrumental in the establishment of the peak body for service providers in the corporate health arena – HAPIA (The Health & Productivity Institute of Australia). John was elected unopposed as president of HAPIA, a group whose mission is to represent the interests of the corporate health and wellness providers.
John is a husband and father of two exceptionally nice children, a keen runner (17 Marathons), martial artist, water and snow skier as well as an accomplished guitarist.
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Sean Lowry
Statewide Co-ordinatior CHIC Initiative
Queensland Health
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Sean has over 14 years experience in the public and private health sectors throughout Queensland. Originally from a cardiac and musculoskeletal rehabilitation background, he has worked extensively in the corporate sector in health promotion and more recently has been involved in implementing State and Commonwealth programs including the Sharing Health Care Initiative and the Queensland Strategy for Chronic Disease.
Prior to holding his current position as Statewide Coordinator of the Connecting Healthcare in Communities – CHIC Initiative, he worked as the Northern Area Chronic Disease Coordinator in Cairns and established the partnership based Healthier Great Green Way Initiative in Innisfail.
Sean has presented numerous papers at national and international symposiums and continues to provide strategic policy advice on state and nationwide advisory groups in primary health care. His is the current guest editor of the special partnership edition of the Australian Journal of Primary Health.
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Prof. Graeme Miller
Medical Director Family Medicine Research Centre
University of Sydney
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Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here.
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Prof Rob Moodie
Chair
National Prevention Health Taskforce
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Rob Moodie is Professor of Global Health at the Nossal Institute for Global Health at the University of Melbourne. Between 1998 and 2007 he was the CEO of VicHealth. He is the Chair of the National Preventative Health Task Force.
Since 1979 he has worked for Save the Children Fund, Medicins Sans Frontieres, Congress, the Aboriginal Health Service in Alice Springs, the Burnet Institute and for the World Health Organization, and the joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
Rob chairs the Technical Panel to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s HIV prevention program in India. He also chairs the Melbourne Storm Rugby League Club.
He is married to Anne, a physiotherapist and they have two children Nick 23 and Penny 21. He writes regularly in the media and is co-editor/author of four books, including Hands on Health Promotion. His most recent book is Recipes for a Great Life written with Gabriel Gate.
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Tim Morphy
General Manager
Healthways Australia
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Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here.
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Matt O'Brien
Chief Executive Officer
Diabetes Australia
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Mr Matthew (Matt) O’Brien was appointed to the position of CEO of Diabetes Australia in August 2007. Prior to this he was the General Manager, Finance and Corporate Services of Diabetes Australia for the period March 2006 – June 2007. During his employment with Diabetes Australia, Matt played a key role in developing the overall negotiating strategy which underpinned discussion with the Commonwealth that delivered the National Diabetes Services Scheme Head Agreement containing significantly increased funding for Diabetes Australia, the value of the contact being approximately $750 million. He also lead a strategic planning process for Diabetes Australia resulting in a much stronger focus on people with diabetes and a clear articulation of the direction for the organisation for the ensuing 3 year period.
Prior to his employment with Diabetes Australia, Matt was employed by Airservices Australia for the period January 1992 – March 2006 in various positions including National Infrastructure Manager working in the domestic environment and Director of International Business Development for air traffic control in the Airport Services Group.
Matt has a Bachelor of Commerce with Merit (Accounting and Economics), a Graduate Diploma in Employment Relations and is a Certificated Practising Accountant Biography goes here. Biography goes here.
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Prof. Ian Olver
CEO
Cancer Council Australia
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Ian Olver graduated from the University of Melbourne in 1976 being subsequently awarded an MD in 1991 for a project on clinical trial methodology. He is a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (FRACP), its Chapter of Palliative Medicine (FAChPM) and is a member of the Royal Australian College of Medical Administrators (MRACMA). He completed a PhD from Monash University in bioethics in 1997, exploring life and death issues and a Certificate of Ministry at the Adelaide College of Divinity.
He trained in medical oncology at Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne and the University of Maryland Cancer Centre in Baltimore. He worked for 6 years at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute where he jointly developed the oncology clinic at Bendigo Base Hospital and then moved to Adelaide becoming the Clinical Director, Royal Adelaide Hospital Cancer Centre and the first Cancer Council SA Professor of Cancer Care at the University of Adelaide and is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine. There he established the first oncology clinic in Alice Springs and developed a telemedicine link for multidisciplinary cancer care between Adelaide and Darwin. In May 2006 he was appointed CEO Cancer Council Australia, a Clinical Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Sydney and is an Honorary Associate, Department of Medical Oncology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.
He has published over 170 articles in journals, 16 book chapters and 2 books: Conquering Cancer. Your Guide to Treatment and Research. and Is Death Ever Preferable to Life? After serving on several ethics committees in Victoria and South Australia, he currently chairs the Cancer Institute NSW Research Ethics Committee for multi-centre cancer trials, The Medical Oncology Group of Australia Ethics Committee and sits on the American Society of Clinical Oncology Ethics Committee. Having previously served on The Australian Drug Evaluation Committee (ADEC) and the Cancer Strategies Group of the Australian Government and chaired the Medical Oncology Group of Australia he now serves on the Board of the National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre, the executive of the Clinical Oncological Society of Australia and the Advisory Board of Cancer Australia.
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Prof. Ron Penny
Senior Clinical Advisor
NSW Health
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Professor Penny is Emeritus Professor of Medicine, University of NSW and Senior Clinical Advisor, NSW Department of Health. He currently serves as Co-Chair of the Chronic Aged and Community Health Priority Task Force and is a member of the NSW Health Care Advisory Council, the NSW General Practice Council and the Physicians Taskforce. He is a Commissioner for the National Health and Hospital Reform Commission and was Chairman of the Justice Health Board from 1991 – 2007.
He is also Medical Director of Good Health Solutions, a company dedicated to health promotion in the workplace, and a director in several public companies.
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Paul Preobrajensky
Area Performance Manager
NSW Health
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Glenn Rees
National Executive Director
Alzheimers Australia
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Glenn Rees has worked at senior levels in the British and Australian Public Services. In Britain he worked as Private Secretary to senior Ministers, in the Cabinet Office and in Economic Departments. In Australia since 1976 he has worked in program and policy areas including Prime Minister and Cabinet, Employment and Training, Aged Care, Disabilities, Housing and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission. He was Chair of the Nursing Homes and Hostels Review in 1986 and was involved in implementing the first wave of aged care reforms. He has been National Executive Director of Alzheimer's Australia for 8 years during which time Dementia has been made a National Health Priority.
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Prof. James Tatoulis
Chief Medical Officer
Heart Foundation
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James Tatoulis is Director of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Cardiac Services at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne Health and Professor of Surgery in the University of Melbourne. He has been a cardiac surgeon for 30 years, and performed over 10,000 heart operations.
His research interests include coronary artery and heart valve surgery, and the use of blood products in heart surgery.
He is actively involved in teaching and training, and has trained over 50 heart surgeons (20 Australian and 30 from overseas).
He has served on Government, and Ministerial Committees advising on new medical technologies, medical workforce, and strategic planning for cardiac services.
He has a strong interest in population health, and health economics particularly through his role as the Chief Medical Adviser for the National Heart Foundation of Australia and in translating research and clinical advances into practice through promotion of treatment guidelines and community awareness programs.
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Greg Tweedly
CEO
Victorian WorkCover Authority
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Greg was appointed Chief Executive Officer in February 2003, after rejoining the VWA as Acting CEO from September 2002. Greg held senior positions with the Transport Accident Commission from 1996 – 2002 including Chief Operating Officer responsible for all Claims Management functions.
Greg previously worked for the Victorian WorkCover Authority (and its predecessor the Accident Compensation Commission) in numerous senior positions including Chief Financial Officer and later Director responsible for the regulation of the Victorian Workers Compensation system.
Pre 1990, Greg held senior financial positions at V/Line and the Melbourne Metropolitan Board of Works (MMBW).
Greg has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Melbourne University and is currently a Director of the Victorian Trauma Foundation, and the Personal Injury Education Foundation.
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Jane Verity
Founder and CEO
Dementia Care Australia
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Jane Verity is a world leader and pioneer in the emotional care of people with dementia. She has the vision and courage to challenge the status quo and create a world of dementia care that ignites the human spirit. Jane is the Founder and CEO of Dementia Care Australia.
Jane is the creator of the Spark of Life; a non-pharmacological, systematic approach to dementia adopted by aged care facilities in Australia and overseas. Jane works with CEO’s and upper management to implement the Spark of Life as a culture enrichment program.
Originally from Denmark and now living in Australia, Jane is an occupational and family therapist, a master practitioner in Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) and holds the highest international accreditation as a professional speaker. Jane has authored two internationally published books and contributes regularly to national and international dementia journals.
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Bert Vrijhoef
Director Research & Development Integrated Care
University Hospital Maastricht
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BERT VRIJHOEF, Ph.D., is director of research at the University Medical Hospital Maastricht’s Department of Integrated Care, as well as associate professor at Maastricht University’s Department of Health Care and Nursing Science. In addition, he is leading a new research program, “Redesigning Health Care,” at the Maastricht Care and Public Health Research Institute, and is a board member of the International Disease Management Association. Vrijhoef has previously worked as program director of Master Health Care Studies and is program director of Master Health Services Innovation at Maastricht University. Vrijhoef’s research focus is on innovations in health services for long-term conditions as part of care-coordination interventions, and he has authored over 50 peer-reviewed journal articles, with publications in the International Journal of Health Care Quality, British Medical Journal, International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, Diabetic Medicine, and Journal of Clinical Epidemiology.
In 2007, he was awarded Leading Researcher in Faculty of Health Sciences, and he has previously received awards from the Federation of Patients and Consumer Organizations in the Netherlands and the Dutch National Organization for Health Research and Development. Vrijhoef holds a Ph.D. from Maastricht University, and a M.Sc. from Erasmus University Rotterdam. Vrijhoef is a 2008-09 Comonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow in Health Care Policy and Practice. Based in Seattle with Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound he is studying the integration of the building blocks for high quality chronic care delivery.
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Dr Chris Wallace
General Manager Benefits Management
HCF
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Jennifer Watts
Lecturer Health Economics
Monash University
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Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here. Biography goes here.
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