Mpox Immunity Gap Australia: UNSW Study Urges Action | AcademicJobs
Australian universities uncover mpox immunity shortfall in at-risk men, urging better vaccination strategies to prevent outbreaks. Insights from UNSW Kirby Institute study.
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Scientia Professor Andrew Grulich is a medical epidemiologist and public health physician at the Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney. He graduated with an MBBS from Adelaide University in 1986, completed an MSc in Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in 1990, and earned a PhD in the epidemiology of HIV-associated cancer from UNSW in 1998. He has been a Fellow of the Australian Faculty of Public Health Medicine since 1995 and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences since 2015. Grulich has worked in HIV research for more than thirty years and has been based at the Kirby Institute since 1995, where he serves as Head of the HIV Epidemiology and Prevention Program and Theme Director for Populations and Prevention.
His research focuses on the transmission and prevention of HIV and sexually transmissible infections, with emphasis on biomedical and behavioural prevention strategies including pre-exposure prophylaxis, as well as the epidemiological links between immune deficiency, infection, and cancer, particularly human papillomavirus-related anal cancer. He has contributed to major studies such as the Opposites Attract study on HIV treatment as prevention and the EPIC-NSW study demonstrating population-level impact of PrEP. Grulich has held NHMRC Principal Research Fellowships and an Investigator grant, and he has served on state and federal ministerial advisory committees on HIV prevention policy. He is a member of the Governing Council of the International AIDS Society and past president of the Australasian Society for HIV Medicine.
Australian universities uncover mpox immunity shortfall in at-risk men, urging better vaccination strategies to prevent outbreaks. Insights from UNSW Kirby Institute study.