PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Abbott, Tony

Period of Service: 18/09/2013 - 15/09/2015
Release Date:
23/10/2013
Release Type:
Media Release
Transcript ID:
23052
Location:
Melbourne
Federal Government Delivers Funding for New Medical Research Discoveries

The Federal Government has announced more than $559 million in funding to help Australian health and medical researchers generate new health discoveries.

The funding will support 963 grants across three National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) research support schemes and five fellowship schemes.

The investment in these innovative projects is aimed at finding better treatments for many common diseases such as cancer, diabetes, asthma, arthritis and cardiovascular disease as well as finding new ways of tackling mental illness, dementia and indigenous health.

The Federal Government is committed to ensuring that Australia remains a world leader in medical research.

Investing and supporting medical research is one of the best long-term investments in health that a government can make.

Ongoing, long-term funding of medical research improves quality of life and life expectancy and, at the same time, takes pressure off the hospital system.

Australia is among the top five countries in the world in producing scientific articles per capita and in the past decade alone, Australia’s health and medical research sector has produced three Nobel Prize winners.

It is only through sustained investment that we can retain our scientific talent, generate health discoveries and fully reap the benefits of health and medical research.

Medical research is an essential part of the Federal Government’s plan to build a more diverse, world-class five pillar economy.

This round of funding includes 652 project grants worth $423.5 million and will support investigator-initiated research projects in clinical, biomedical, public health and health services research.

Six partnership projects worth $4.5 million will support researchers and policy makers to identify tailored, evidence-based solutions that improve health practice. Twelve European Union Collaborative Research Grants worth $4 million will also support Australian researchers working in multinational research collaborative projects.

In addition, 293 fellowships totalling $126.9 million will help to build a strong cohort of future researchers.

For information on NHMRC grants awarded to successful researchers: http://www.nhmrc.gov.au/grants/outcomes-funding-rounds

23052