
Always fair, encouraging, and motivating.
Creates dynamic and thought-provoking lessons.
Makes learning engaging and enjoyable.
Always patient and willing to help.
Always approachable and easy to talk to.
Dr. Denise Demmer serves as an Associate Lecturer in Curtin Medical School, part of the Faculty of Health Sciences at Curtin University, where she is listed under Medical Radiation Science academic staff. She also functions as an Assessment Officer, involved in implementing the school's written assessment program. Demmer earned her PhD in Medicine, focusing on epidemiology, and a BSc (Hons), with prior affiliations at the University of Western Australia, including the School of Medicine and Pharmacology, Royal Perth Hospital Unit.
Her research spans medical education, adolescent health, body composition assessment, and cardiometabolic risk factors, often drawing from longitudinal cohorts like the Raine Study. In medical education, Demmer co-authored a 2023 study published in Medical Teacher evaluating medical students' experiences with the Senior Citizen Partnership Program, a five-year longitudinal curriculum component at Curtin Medical School designed to enhance attitudes toward elderly care through sustained partnerships. In adolescent reproductive health, she contributed to a 2024 article in the Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology on functional ovulatory menstrual health literacy among adolescent girls, revealing significant knowledge gaps and advocating for targeted interventions. Additional work includes a systematic literature review on school-based interventions to advance adolescents' ovulatory-menstrual health literacy. Earlier publications address fitness and body composition: a 2016 PLOS ONE paper comparing dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) with anthropometry for adolescent body fat measurement, concluding DXA's superior validity; and a 2017 Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism study examining fatness, fitness, and cardiometabolic risk in adolescents, demonstrating fitness's protective role independent of fatness. Other contributions explore muscle fitness trajectories and blood pressure from childhood to late adolescence. With 10 publications and 56 citations on ResearchGate, Demmer's scholarship influences medical training, youth health promotion, and epidemiological assessment methodologies.

Photo by Cheryl Ng on Unsplash
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